|
|||||
Total
Quality Management
MGT510
VU
Lesson#
05
TOTAL
QUALITY MANAGEMENT AND GLOBAL
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
Bringing
TQ to Life at ABC Engineering
Company:
ABC
is a contract manufacturer of precision sheet
metal and machined components
for
telecommunications
semi-conductor, and medical
equipment industries. Some of the ways it
exemplifies
the
principles of TQ are described
below.
Customer
Focus
ABC
made a strategic decision to carefully
select customers that support
its valuesparticularly a
systematic
approach to business and performance
management, desire for long-term
partnerships, and
global
leadership. Management and Tam Leaders
work with each customer to
establish current
requirements
and future needs, and each
customer is assigned a three-person
Customer Service team
that
is on call 24 hours a day for
day-to-day production
issues.
Process
Orientation
Processes
such as prototype development,
scheduling, production setup,
fabrication, assembly, and
delivery
have process owners responsible for
maintaining the process to customer
requirements. A
Quality
Assurance team member works
with manufacturing teams to
create process
documentation.
Continuous
Improvement and
Learning
Teams
use a structured approach to evaluate and
improve their processes,
documenting them, and
presenting
a status report of improvements to senior
leaders and the ABC Steering
Committee. Teams
benchmark
competitors, "best practice" companies,
and customers to learn from
others.
Empowerment
and Teamwork
Production
and delivery processes are
designed around cell manufacturing. Teams
are responsible for
knowing
their customer's requirements and producing
according to those requirements. Teams
are
empowered
to change targets recommended
during strategic planning if they
believe it will help
them
achieve
higher performance, as well as to
schedule work, manage
inventory, and design the layout
of
their
work areas.
Management
by Fact
Team
analyzes defect data, customer-reported problems, and
control charters generated
during
production
to identify problems and opportunities
for improvement. Every
business goal and project
has
defined
methods for measurement, and senior
leaders meet weekly to
review company performance and
ensure
alignment with directions and
plans.
Leadership
and Strategic
Planning
Senior
Executive Leaders. (SELs) and the
Leadership Committee (LC)
set the strategic direction of the
company,
and communicate and reinforce values and
expectations through performance
reviews,
participation
in improvement or strategic projects, regular
interactions with customers and
team
members,
and recognition of team member
achievements.
All
this has contributed to an
annual average increase in
sales growth of 35 percent from
1995 to 2000,
and
high levels of customer and
employee satisfaction, and quality
and operational performance.
TQM
and Strategic Focus
19
Total
Quality Management
MGT510
VU
The
nature of TQ differs from common
management practices in many
respects.
1.
Strategic
Planning and
Management
In
traditional management, financial
and marketing issues such as
profitability, return on
investments,
and market share drive strategic
planning. Quality planning
activities are delegated
to
the "quality control" department.
Long-term quality initiatives
are viewed as being costly
and
not
contributing to the ultimate performance
measure profit. Quality
planning and strategic
business
planning are indistinguishable in
TQ. Quality goals are the
cornerstone of the business
plan.
Measures such as customer
satisfaction, defect rates, and
process cycle times receive as
much
attention in the strategic plan as
financial and marketing
objectives.
2.
Changing
Relationship with Customers and
Supplier
In
traditional management, quality is
defined as adherence to internal
specifications and
standards.
Quality is defined as adherence to
internal specifications and
standards. Quality is
measured
only by the absence of defects.
Inspection of people's work by
others is necessary to
control
defects. In TQ, quality is
defined as products and services beyond
present needs and
expectations
of customers. Innovation is required to
meet and exceed customers'
needs.
Traditional
management places customers
outside of the enterprise and within the
domain of
marketing
and sales. TQ views everyone
inside the enterprise as a customer of an
internal or
external
supplier, and a supplier of an external
or internal customer. Marketing concepts
and
tools
can be used to assess
internal customer needs and to
communicate internal supplier
capabilities.
3.
Organizational
Structure
Traditional
management views an enterprise as a
collection of separate, highly
specialized
individual
performers and units, loosely linked by a
functional hierarchy. Lateral
connections
are
made by intermediaries close to the
top of the organization. TQ views
the enterprise as a
system
of interdependent processes, linked
laterally over time through
a network of
collaborating
(internal and external) suppliers and
customers. Each process is
connected to the
enterprise's
mission and purpose through a hierarchy
of micro-and macro processes.
Every
process
contains sub processes and is
also contained within a
higher process. This structure
of
processes
is repeated throughout the
hierarchy.
4.
Organizational
Change
Once
a traditional organization has
found a formula for success,
it keeps following
ti.
Management's
job is to prevent change, to
maintain the status quo. In TQ the
environment in
which
the enterprise interacts is changing constantly. If
the enterprise continues to do what it
has
done in the past, its future performance
relative to the competition will
deteriorate.
Management's
job, therefore, is to provide the
leadership for continual improvement
and
innovation
in processes and systems, products, and
services. External change is
inevitable, but a
favorable
future can be shaped.
5.
Team
work
In
traditional management, individuals and
departments work for
themselves. Individuals
are
driven
by short-term performance measures, have narrowly
defined jobs, and rarely
see how
they
fit into the whole process
or system. Little communication and
cooperation exists between
design
and manufacturing, manufacturing and
marketing, and sales / service and design. In
TQ
individuals
cooperate in team structures
such as quality circles, steering committees,
and self-
20
Total
Quality Management
MGT510
VU
directed
work teams. Departments work
together toward system
optimization through
cross-
functional
teamwork.
The
adversarial relationship between union
and management is inevitable in
traditional
management.
The only room for
negotiation is in areas such as
wages, health, and safety. In
TQ
the
union is a partner and a stakeholder in
the success of the enterprise. The areas
for
partnership
and collaboration are broad,
particularly in education, training, and
meaningful
involvement
of employees in the improvement of processes
that they affect and that
affect their
work.
6.
Motivation
and Job Design
Motivation
untraditional management is often
akin to McGregor's Theory X
model of
motivation:
worker dislike work and
require close supervision and
control. TQ organizations
support
the premise of Theory Y: workers
are self-motivated, seek
responsibility, and exhibit a
high
degree of imagination and creativity at
work. TQ managers provide leadership
rather than
overt
intervention in the processes of their
subordinates, who are viewed as
process managers
rather
than functional specialists. People
are motivated to make
meaningful contributions to
what
they believe is an important and
noble cause, of value to the enterprise
and society.
In
traditional management, competition is
inevitable and inherent in human nature.
Performance
appraisal,
recognition, and reward
systems place people in an internally
competitive
environment.
Individualism is reinforced to the
detriment of teamwork. Competitive
behavior
one
person against another or one group against another
is not a natural state in
TQ. TQ
reward
systems recognize individual as well as
team contributions and reinforce
cooperation.
7.
Management
and Leadership
Traditional
management views people as
interchangeable commodities, developed to
meet the
perceived
needs of the enterprise. People are
passive contributors with
little autonomy-doing
what
they are told and nothing
more. TQ views people as the enterprise's
true competitive
edge.
Leadership
provides people with
opportunities for personal growth
and development. People
are
able
to take pride and joy in
learning and accomplishment, and the ability of the
enterprise to
succeed
is enhanced. People are active
contributors, valued for
their creativity and
intelligence.
Every
person is a process manager
presiding over the transformation of
inputs to outputs of
greater
value to the enterprise and to the
ultimate customer.
Competitive
Advantage on basis of Quality
Strategy
·
A
firm has many options in
defining its long-terms goals and
objectives, the customers it
wants
to
serve, the products and services it
produces and delivers, and the design of the
production and
service
system to meet these
objectives. Strategic planning is the
process by which the
members
of
an organization envision its
future and develop the necessary
procedures and operations to
carry
out that vision. Strategy
the result of strategic planning is the
patter of decisions that
determines
and reveals a company's goals, polices, and plans to
meet the needs of
its
stakeholders.
An effective strategy allows a business
to create a sustainable
competitive
advantage.
Quality
as a Strategy
The
concept of strategy has different
meanings to different people.
James Brian Quinn
characterizes
strategy
as follows:
A
strategy is a pattern or plan that
integrates an organization's major goals,
policies, and action
sequences
into a cohesive whole. A well
formulated strategy helps to marshal and
allocate an
21
Total
Quality Management
MGT510
VU
organization's
resources into a unique and
viable posture based on its
relative internal
competencies
and shortcomings, anticipated changes in
the environment, and contingent
moves
by
intelligent opponents.
Formal
strategies contain three elements:
1.
Goals
to be achieved,
2.
Policies
that guide or limit action,
and
3.
Action
sequences, or programs, that accomplish the
goals.
Effective
strategies develop around a
few key concepts and thrusts
that provide focus. The
essence of
strategy
is t build a posture that is so strong in selective
ways that the organization can achieve
its goals
despite
unforeseeable external forces that
may arise.
The
traditional focus of business strategies
has been finance and
marketing. These parallel
two of the
principal
sources of competitive advantage i.e.
cost and differentiation.
Total quality with a focus
on
people
leads t improvements in both
areas. Therefore, quality
can be viewed as a strategy in
itself.
The
role of quality in business strategy
has taken two significant
steps since 1980. First,
many firms
have
recognized that a strategy driven by
quality can lead to
significant market advantages.
Second, the
lines
between quality strategy and generic
business strategies have become
blurred to the point where
TQ
principles are integrated
into most businesses' normal
business planning; that is, TQ is a
basic
operating
philosophy that provides the
foundation for effective
management
For
most companies, integration of TQ
into strategic business planning is the
result of a natural
evolution.
For most new companies
or those that have enjoyed a
reasonable measure of success
quality
takes a back seat to increasing sales,
expanding capacity, or boosting
production. Strategic
planning
usually focuses on financial and
marketing strategies.
As
a company begins to face increasing competition and
rising consumer expectations,
cost-cutting
objectives
take precedence. Some
departments or individuals may
champion quality
improvement
efforts,
but quality is not
integrated in the company's strategic
business plan. In the face of
market
crises,
which many U.S. firms
experienced in the 1970s and 1980s, top
management begins to realize
the
importance of quality as a strategic
operating policy. In many
cases, however, quality is
considered
separate
from financial and marketing
plans. Companies that aspire to
world-class status reach the
highest
level of evolution where quality
becomes an integral part of the
overall strategic plan and is
viewed
as a central operating
strategy.
Competitive
advantage denotes a firm's ability to
achieve market superiority over
its competitors. In the
long
run, a sustainable competitive advantage
provides above-average performance. A strong
competitive
advantage has six characteristics:
1.
It
is driven by customer wants
and needs. A company provides
value to its customers
that
competitors
do not.
2.
It
makes a significant contribution to the
success of the business.
3.
It
matches the organization's
unique resources with the
opportunities in the environment.
No
two companies have the same
resources; a good strategy uses them
effectively.
4.
It
is durable and lasting and
difficult for competitors to copy. A
superior research and
development
department, for example, can
consistently develop new products or
processes
to
remain ahead of competitors.
5.
It
provides a basis for further
improvement.
6.
It
provides direction and motivation to the
entire organization.
As
each of these characteristics
relates to quality, quality
can be an important means of
gaining
competitive
advantage. Let us see how
total quality contributes to
competitive advantage.
22
Total
Quality Management
MGT510
VU
·
Discuss
cost leadership, differentiation, and
people as principal sources of
competitive
advantage,
and their relationship to
quality;
·
Relate
quality to the achievement of higher
profitability;
·
Describe
the importance of quality in meeting
customer expectations in product design,
service,
flexibility
and variety, innovation, and rapid
response; and
·
Discuss
empirical results showing the
impact of quality on business
results.
Sources
of Competitive Advantage
The
classic literature on competitive
strategy suggests that a firm
can posses' two basic types
of
competitive
advantage: low cost and
differentiation.
Cost
Leadership
Many
firms gain competitive advantage by
establishing themselves as the low-cost
leader in an industry.
These
firms produce high volumes of mature
products and achieve their competitive
advantage through
low
prices. Such firms often enter
markets that were established by other
firms. They emphasize
achieving
economies of scale and finding
cost advantages from all
sources. Low cost can
result from
high
productivity and high capacity
utilization. More importantly,
improvements in quality lead
to
improvements
in productivity, which in turn
lead to lower costs. Thus a strategy of
continuous
improvement
is essential to achieve a low-cost
competitive advantage.
To
achieve cost leadership for high
volume products, companies use a
variety of approaches:
·
Early
manufacturing involvement in the design of the
product both for
make-versus-buy
decisions
and for assurance that the
production processes can achieve
required tolerances.
·
Product
design to take advantage of automated equipment by
minimizing the number of parts,
eliminating
fasteners, making parts symmetric
whenever possible, avoiding rigid and
stiff parts
and
using one-sided assembly
designs.
·
Limited
product models and customization in
distribution centers rather than in the
factory.
·
A
manufacturing system designed for a
fixed sequence of operations. Every
effort is made to
ensure
zero defects at the time of shipment.
Work-in-process inventory is reduced as
much as
possible,
and multi skilled, focused
teams of employees are
used.
A
cost leader can achieve above-average performance if
it can command prices at or
near the industry
average.
However, it cannot do so with an inferior
product. The product must be
perceived as
comparable
with competitors or the firm will be
forced to discount prices
well below
competitors'
prices
to gain sales. This can
cancel any benefits that
result from cost
advantage.
Differentiation
To
achieve differentiation, a firm must be
unique in its industry along
some dimensions that are
widely
valued
by customers. It selects one or more
attributes that customers
perceive as important and
positions
itself
uniquely to meet those
needs. For instance, Dell's
direct business model was
the first of its kind
in
the
computer industry and continues to be a principal
source of the company's
success.
Often,
a firm with a differentiation strategy
can command premium prices
and achieve higher profits.
Juran
cites an example of a power
tool manufacturer that improved
reliability well beyond that
of
competitors.
Field data showing that the
differences in reliability resulted in
significantly lower
operating
cost were publicized, and the company was
able to secure a premium
price.
However,
a firm that uses
differentiation as its source of
competitive advantage must make its
products
or
systems difficult to copy.
Often this involves culture,
habits, and sunk costs. For example,
why
23
Total
Quality Management
MGT510
VU
doesn't
every company copy Dell's
superior direct business
model? Dell's approaches are
hardly a
secret;
even Michael Dell has
written a book about it.
Competitors have copied its Web site
with
stunning
precision, but they face
far greater difficulty copying the
supporting
activitiespurchasing,
scheduling,
and logisticsthat Dell
has built around its
direct model over several
decades. Competitors
are
burdened by long-standing relationships
with suppliers and distributors and by a
different culture.7
People
The
competitive advantage resulting from an
organization's people can
drive low cost and
differentiation.
For example, over several
decades, Southwest Airlines has
been the most profitable
U.S.
carrier.
It has fewer employees per aircraft
and flies more passengers per
employee. Much of its
cost
advantage
comes from its very
productive, motivated, and unionized
workforce.9 Is
its competitive
advantage
low cost, or is it the people? It would
appear that the real driver
of Southwest's competitive
advantage
is its people. Herb
Kelleher, former CEO, once
stated, "It's the intangibles
that are the
hardest
things for competitors to imitate. You
can get on an airplane. You can get
ticket-counter space,
you
can get baggage conveyors.
But it is our esprit de
corp.the culture, the
spiritthat is truly our
most
valuable
competitive asst." Providing a
work environment that foster
cooperation, initiative, and
innovation;
educating and training the workforce;
and enhancing the factors that affect
well-being,
satisfaction,
and motivation are very
difficult for competitors to copy.
This is a significantly
different
philosophy
from the work environment
that came into being
during the Industrial
Revolution.
The
Importance of Quality to Competitive
Advantage
The
role of quality in achieving
competitive advantage was demonstrated by
several research studies
during
the 1980s. PIMS Associates, Inc., a
subsidiary of the Strategic Planning
Institute, maintains a
database
of 1,200 companies and studies the
impact of product quality on corporate
performance.11
PIMS
researchers have found
that
·
Product
quality is the most important
determinant of business
profitability.
·
Business
offering premium quality products
and services usually have
large market shares
and
were
early entrants into their
markets.
·
Quality
is positively and significantly related
to a higher return on investment
for almost all
kinds
of products and market situations. PIMS
studies have shown that firms
with products of
superior
quality can more than triple
return on sales over products
perceived as having
inferior
quality.
·
A
strategy of quality improvement usually
leads to increased market
share, but at a cost in
terms
of
reduced short-run
profitability.
·
High
quality producers can
usually charge premium
prices.
The
value of product in the marketplace is
influenced by the quality of its design.
Improvements in
performance,
features, and reliability will
differentiate the product from
its competitors, improve a
firm's
quality reputation, and
improve the perceived value of the
product. This allows the company
to
command
higher prices and achieve an
increased market share.
This, in turn, leads to
increased revenues
that
offset the added costs of
improved design and provides sustainable
basis for the
competitive
advantage.
24
Table of Contents:
|
|||||