Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Quality Assurance Guide Cert2
Quality Assurance Guide Cert2
Quality Assurance Guide Cert2
Information Guide
4 Am. National Standards Institute Am. Std. Code for Info. Interchange
A
5 Analysis of Means Appearance item
10 Batch Bias
13 BS 7799 Bx Life
14 c-chart Cascading
33 Dissatisfiers Durability
34 Effect Empowerment
63 n Nonconformity
N
64 Non-Destructive Testing and Eval. Numerical Evaluation of Metrics
65 Objective Operations
O
66 Original Equipment Manufacturer Ownership
70 Policy Probability
90 Scorecard Severity
96 Stratification Supermarket
6. Addendums
7. Bibliography
Definitions, Terms and Acronyms were taken from existing terminology standards with references.
Bill Harbin
DN: cn=Bill Harbin, o=BND
Technical director TechSource, ou=BND TechSource,
BND TechSource – Kuching, Malaysia email=harbin_bill@yahoo.com, c=US
Date: 2010.03.17 10:24:06 +08'00'
CQI - ASQ Certified Quality Inspector (more); Continuous Quality Improvement (more)
CY - Calendar Year
Quality Acronyms – Page 7 (Return to Index)
DD - Defect Density
DM - Defect Management
DMAIC (R) -Define, Measure, Analyze, Implement and Control (Realize) (more)
DP - Dual Phase
ES - Engineering Specification
FA - Failure Analysis
FSNP - Forming Storming Norming Performing (in team problem solving efforts) (more)
IQ - Installation Qualification
OQ - Operational Qualification
PDCA (E. Deming) or PDSA (W. Shewhart) - Plan Do Check (Study) Act (more)
Assumptions (more)
PM - Preventive Maintenance
PO - Purchase Order
PPM - Parts Per Million - defects per one million parts (more)
PQ - Performance Qualification
QP - Quality Procedure
QSIT - Quality System Inspection Technique (US Food & Drug Administration)
SC - Significant Characteristic
SCAMPER - Substitute, Combine, Adapt, Modify, Put (to other uses), Eliminate,
Reverse (more)
SP - System Procedure
TBD - To Be Determined
Zadatch) (more)
WI - Work Instructions
3 K’s - kiken (dangerous), kitanai (dirty), kitsui (stressful) - Japanese words referring to
excessive strain).
3 R’s - The three fundamental steps of recording, recalling and reconstructing which
5 P’s - Plant, Product, People, Policies, Procedures (can be used in a for fishbone)
5W2H - Who, What, When, Where, Why & How and How Many (root cause analysis)
DIN - Deutsches Institut für Normung e.V. (DIN; in English, the German Institute for
Standardization) (http://www.din.de/cmd?level=tpl-home&languageid=en)
ISO-14001 - Standard that sets out how you can go about putting in place an effective
Environmental Management System (EMS)
ISO/TS 16949 - An ISO technical specification which aligns existing US, German,
French and Italian automotive quality system standards within the global automotive
industry
Quality Definitions – Page 1 (Return to Index)
Abilene paradox
A paradox in which a group of people collectively decide on a course of action that is
counter to the preferences of any of the individuals in the group. It involves a common
breakdown of group communication in which each member mistakenly believes that
their own preferences are counter to the group's, and therefore, does not raise
objections. A common phrase relating to the Abilene paradox is "rocking the boat".
Accelerated test
Test in which the applied stress level is chosen to exceed that stated in the reference
conditions in order to shorten the time required to observe the stress response of the
item, or to magnify the response in a given duration. To be valid, an accelerated test
must not alter the basic modes and/or mechanisms of failure.
Acceptance criteria
Specification criteria for acceptance of individual product or service characteristics.
Sometimes, as in acceptance sampling, the term "acceptance criteria" is used for a set
of several characteristics rather than an individual characteristic.
Acceptance inspection
Inspection to determine whether an item or lot delivered or offered for delivery is
acceptable.
Acceptance number
The maximum number of defects or defectives allowable in a sampling lot for the lot to
be acceptable.
Acceptance sampling
Sampling inspection in which decisions are made to accept or not to accept a lot (or
other grouping of product, material, or service) based on the results of a sample or
samples selected from that lot.
Accreditation
Certification by a recognized body of the facilities, capability, objectivity, competence
and integrity of an agency, service or operational group or individual to provide the
specific service or operation needed.
Accreditation body
An organization with authority to accredit other organizations to perform services such
as quality system certification.
Accredited registrars
Accredited Registrars are qualified organizations certified by a national body to perform
audits to the QS9000 standard and to register the audited facility as meeting these
requirements for a given commodity.
Accuracy
The closeness of agreement between an observed value and an accepted reference
value. Also see “precision”.
Adverse event
Healthcare term for any event that is not consistent with the desired, normal or usual
operation of the organization; also known as a sentinel event.
Affinity diagram
A way to organize facts, opinions, ideas and issues into natural groupings as an aid to
diagnosis on a complex problem. A large number of ideas are generated and then
organized into groupings to reveal major themes.
Agile manufacturing
Tools, techniques, and initiatives that enable a plant or company to thrive under
conditions of unpredictable change. Agile manufacturing not only enables a plant to
achieve rapid response to customer needs, but also includes the ability to quickly
reconfigure operations and strategic alliances to respond rapidly to unforeseen shifts in
the marketplace.
Alignment
Actions to ensure that a process or activity supports the organization’s strategy, goals
and objectives.
Andon board
A production area visual control device, such as a lighted overhead display. It
communicates the status of the production system and alerts team members to
emerging problems (from andon, a Japanese word meaning “light”). It is one of the main
tools of Jidohka. An example of visual management or visual control.
Appearance item
A product that is visible once the vehicle is complete. Certain customers will identify
appearance items on the engineering drawings. In these cases, special approval for
appearance (color, grain, texture, etc.) is required prior to production part submissions.
Quality Definitions – Page 6 (Return to Index)
Apportionment
Synonymous with the term Reliability Apportionment, which is the assignment of
reliability goals from system to subsystem in such a way that the whole system will have
the required reliability.
Appraisal cost
The cost of ensuring an organization is continually striving to conform to customers’
quality requirements.
Approved drawing
Is an engineering drawing signed by the engineer and released through the customer's
system.
Approved material
Approved Materials are materials governed either by industry standard specifications
(e.g., SAE, ASTM, DIN, ISO, etc.) or by customer specifications.
Arrow diagram
A planning tool to diagram a sequence of events or activities (nodes) and their
interconnectivity. It is used for scheduling and especially for determining the critical path
through nodes. Also see “ Arrow Diagram Example”.
AS9100
An international quality management standard for the aerospace industry published by
the Society of Automotive Engineers and other organizations worldwide. It is known as
EN9100 in Europe and JIS Q 9100 in Japan. The standard is controlled by the
International Aerospace Quality Group. Also see “JIS Q 9100”.
Assessment
A systematic evaluation procedure of collecting and analyzing data to determine the
current, historical or projected compliance of an organization to a standard. This process
includes a document review, an on-site audit, and an analysis and report. Customers
may also include a self-assessment, internal audit results and other materials in the
assessment.
Assignable cause
A name for the source of variation in a process that is not due to chance and therefore
can be identified and eliminated. Also called “special cause”.
Quality Definitions – Page 7 (Return to Index)
Attribute
The property a unit has of being either bad or good. That is, the quality characteristic of
a unit is either within the specified requirements or it is not.
Attribute data
Attributes data are qualitative data that can be counted for recording and analysis.
Examples include the presence or absence of a required label, the installation of all
required fasteners. Attributes data are not acceptable for production part submissions
unless variables data cannot be obtained. The control charts based on attribute data are
percent chart, number of affected units chart, count chart, count-per-unit chart, quality
score chart, and demerit chart.
Audit
The on-site verification activity, such as inspection or examination, of a process or
quality system, to ensure compliance to requirements. An audit can apply to an entire
organization or might be specific to a function, process or production step.
Autonomation
A form of automation in which machinery automatically inspects each item after
producing it and ceases production and notifies humans if a defect is detected. Toyota
expanded the meaning of jidohka to include the responsibility of all workers to function
similarly—to check every item produced and, if a defect is detected, make no more until
the cause of the defect has been identified and corrected. Also see “jidohka”.
Availability
The ability of a product to be in a state to perform its designated function under stated
conditions at a given time.
Average chart
A control chart in which the subgroup average, X-bar, is used to evaluate the stability of
the process level. Also see “Control Chart Examples”.
Quality Definitions – Page 8 (Return to Index)
A3 report
The A3 report is a tool used for problem solving in the course of work. The name "A3"
describes the size of paper on which the report is written. The steps of the report include
identifying a problem, understanding the current condition, determining the root cause,
developing a target condition, implementation plan, and follow-up plan. These steps are
all written and drawn (not typed) out on a single piece of A3 paper.
Axiomatic design
A systems design methodology using matrix methods to systematically analyze the
transformation of customer needs into functional requirements, design parameters, and
process variables.
Quality Definitions – Page 9 (Return to Index)
Baka-yoke
A Japanese term for a manufacturing technique for preventing mistakes by designing
the manufacturing process, equipment and tools so an operation literally cannot be
performed incorrectly. In addition to preventing incorrect operation, the technique
usually provides a warning signal of some sort for incorrect performance. Also see
“poka-yoke”.
Balanced array
In an experiment the array of factors and levels must be balanced. To satisfy this there
must be:
1. Equal numbers of levels in each column.
2. The Sum Product of each pair of columns equals zero (taking levels as '+' and '-').
Balanced plant
A plant in which the capacity of all resources is balanced exactly with market demand.
Balanced scorecard
A framework which translates a company's vision and strategy into a coherent set of
performance measures. A balanced business scorecard helps businesses evaluate how
well they meet their strategic objectives. It typically has four to six components, each
with a series of sub-measures. Each component highlights one aspect of the business.
The balanced scorecard includes measures of performance that are lagging (return on
capital, profit), medium-term indicators (like customer satisfaction indices) and leading
indicators (such as adoption rates for, or revenue from, new products).
Baldrige award
See “Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award”.
Bartlett test
A form of F-test for more than 2 samples of data. Used for showing equal variances for
normal data. Bartlett's test is sensitive to departures from normality. That is, if your
samples come from non-normal distributions, then Bartlett's test may simply be testing
for non-normality. The Levene test and Brown-Forsythe test are alternatives to the
Bartlett test that are less sensitive to departures from normality.
Baseline measurement
The beginning point, based on an evaluation of output over a period of time, used to
determine the process parameters prior to any improvement effort; the basis against
which change is measured.
Quality Definitions – Page 10 (Return to Index)
Batch
A definite quantity of some product or material produced under conditions that are
considered uniform.
Bathtub curve
The sum of all reliability failures over time. Consists of the effects of early life failures,
useful life failures and wear out failures.
Bayes’ theorem
A formula to calculate conditional probabilities by relating the conditional and marginal
probability distributions of random variables.
Bayesian inference
A numerical estimate of the degree of belief in a hypothesis before and after evidence
has been observed.
Benchmarking
A technique in which a company measures its performance against that of best in class
companies, determines how those companies achieved their performance levels and
uses the information to improve its own performance. Subjects that can be
benchmarked include strategies, operations and processes.
Benchmark data
The results of an investigation to determine how competitors and/or best-in-class
companies achieve their level of performance.
Benefit-cost analysis
An examination of the relationship between the monetary cost of implementing an
improvement and the monetary value of the benefits achieved by the improvement, both
within the same time period.
Best practices
A superior method or innovative practice that contributes to the improved performance
of an organization, usually recognized as best by other peer organizations.
Bias
A systematic error which contributes to the difference between a population mean of
measurements or test results and an accepted reference value. It is the difference
between the observed range of measurements and a reference (known) value.
Quality Definitions – Page 11 (Return to Index)
Big Q, little q
A term used to contrast the difference between managing for quality in all business
processes and products (big Q) and managing for quality in a limited capacity—
traditionally only in factory products and processes (little q).
Bimodal distribution
A statistical distribution having two modes - indicating a mixing of two populations such
as different shifts, machines, workers, etc.
Binomial distribution
The distribution of a binomial response variable, one which has two possible outcomes -
yes, no; pass, fail, etc.
Blemish
An imperfection severe enough to be noticed but that should not cause any real
impairment with respect to intended normal or reasonably foreseeable use. Also see
“defect”, “imperfection” and “nonconformity”.
Block diagram
A diagram that shows the operation, interrelationships and interdependencies of
components in a system. Boxes, or blocks (hence the name), represent the
components; connecting lines between the blocks represent interfaces. There are two
types of block diagrams:
1. A functional block diagram, which shows a system’s subsystems and lower level
products and their interrelationships and which interfaces with other systems.
2. A reliability block diagram, which is similar to the functional block diagram but is
modified to emphasize those aspects influencing reliability.
They are heavily used in the engineering world in hardware design, software design,
and process flow diagrams. Also see “Block Diagram Example”.
Blocking
A technique used in classical DOE to remove the effects of unwanted noise or variability
from the experimental response so that only the effects from the control factors are
present in the response data.
Quality Definitions – Page 12 (Return to Index)
Bottleneck
Any resource whose capacity is equal to or less than the demand placed on it.
Bottom line
The essential or salient point; the primary or most important consideration. Also, the line
at the bottom of a financial report that shows the net profit or loss.
Boundary diagram
Graphical illustration of a process or product and its interfaces to other parts, processes,
sub-systems and systems. Also see “Boundary Diagram Example.”
Box plot
A box plot, also known as a box and whisker diagram, is a basic graphing tool that
displays centering, spread, and distribution of a continuous data set. Also see “Box and
Whisker Plot Analysis”.
Brainstorming
A method to get ideas from persons who are potential contributors. No criticism or
discussion of ideas is allowed until all the ideas are recorded. The ideas are critically
reviewed after the brainstorming session.
Breakthrough improvement
A dynamic, decisive movement to a new, higher level of performance.
Brown–Forsythe test
The Brown and Forsyth test statistic is the F statistic resulting from an ordinary one-way
analysis of variance on the absolute deviations from the median.
Quality Definitions – Page 13 (Return to Index)
BS 7799
A standard written by British commerce, government and industry stakeholders to
address information security management issues, including fraud, industrial espionage
and physical disaster. Might become an International Organization for Standardization
standard.
Bulk materials
Products that do not have the characteristics of formed parts when received, but
become part of the product during the manufacturing process.
Business process
Series of logically related activities or tasks (such as planning, production, sales)
performed together to produce a defined set of results. Also called “business function”.
Business process mapping
Refers to activities involved in defining exactly what a business entity does, who is
responsible, to what standard a process should be completed and how the success of a
business process can be determined.
Bx Life
The time at which x% of parts are expected to have failed. For example, B5 Life = time
at which 5% of parts have failed.
Quality Definitions – Page 14 (Return to Index)
c-chart
See “count chart”.
Calibration
The comparison of a measurement instrument or system of unverified accuracy to a
measurement instrument or system of known accuracy to detect any variation from the
required performance specification.
Capability
The total range of inherent variation in a stable process determined by using data from
control charts.
Capability index
The ratio of tolerance to 6 sigma, or the upper specification limit (USL) minus the lower
specification limit (LSL) divided by 6 sigma. It is sometimes referred to as the
engineering tolerance divided by the natural tolerance and is only a measure of
dispersion.
Measures of the capability of a manufacturing process to produce parts within given
upper and lower variability limits (tolerances). In a process that is in statistical control
(has only common causes of variation), as the Cp increases so does the difference
between what the process is capable of producing and what it is required to produce. A
Cp of 1 indicates 0.3 percent rejects or 3000 rejected parts per million (PPM), and is
called the condition of Three Sigma. A Cp of 2 indicates 0.0007 percent rejects or 7
rejected ppm, a condition of six sigma. Also called process capability index, production
capability index, or production capability ratio. Formula: (Upper variability limit - Lower
variability limit) ÷ 6 x Standard deviation of the spread of variation.
Cascading
The continuing flow of the quality message down to, not through, the next level of
supervision until it reaches all workers. Also see “deployment”.
Quality Definitions – Page 15 (Return to Index)
CASCO
An International Organization for Standardization policy development committee for
conformity assessment.
Cause
An identified reason for the presence of a defect or problem.
Cell
An arrangement of people, machines, materials and equipment in which the production
(processing) steps are placed next to each other in sequential order and through which
parts are produced (processed) in a continuous flow. The most common cell layout is a
U shape.
Cellular manufacturing
Arranging machines in the correct production (processing) sequence, with operators
remaining within the cell and materials presented to them from outside.
CE mark
A mandatory conformity mark on many products placed on the single market in the
European Economic Area (EEA). The CE marking certifies that a product has met EU
consumer safety, health or environmental requirements. CE stands for Conformité
Européenne, "European conformity" in French.
Centerline
A line on a graph that represents the overall average (mean) operating level of the
process.
Central tendency
The tendency of data gathered from a process to cluster toward a middle value
somewhere between the high and low values of measurement.
Certification
The result of a person meeting the established criteria set by a certificate granting
organization.
Chain reaction
A chain of events described by W. Edwards Deming: improve quality, decrease costs,
improve productivity, increase market with better quality and lower price, stay in
business, provide jobs and provide more jobs.
Quality Definitions – Page 17 (Return to Index)
Champion
A business leader or senior manager who ensures resources will be available for
training and projects, and who is involved in periodic project reviews; also an executive
who supports and addresses Six Sigma organizational issues.
Change agent
An individual from within or outside an organization who facilitates change in the
organization; might be the initiator of the change effort, but not necessarily.
Changeover
A process in which a production device is assigned to perform a different operation or a
machine is set up to make a different part—for example, a new plastic resin and new
mold in an injection molding machine.
Changeover time
The time required to modify a system or workstation, usually including both teardown
time for the existing condition and setup time for the new condition.
Characteristic
The factors, elements or measures that define and differentiate a process, function,
product, service or other entity.
Characteristic matrix
An analytical technique for displaying the relationship between process parameters and
manufacturing stations.
Chart
A tool for organizing, summarizing and depicting data in graphic form.
Charter
A written commitment approved by management stating the scope of authority for an
improvement project or team.
Checklist
A tool for ensuring that all the important steps or actions in an operation have been
taken. Checklists contain items important or relevant to an issue or situation. Checklists
are often confused with check sheets.
Quality Definitions – Page 18 (Return to Index)
Check sheet
A simple document that is used for collecting data in real-time and at the location where
the data is generated. The document is typically a blank form that is devised for the
quick, easy, and efficient recording of the desired information, which can be either
quantitative or qualitative. When the information is quantitative, the check sheet is
sometimes called a tally sheet. One of the 7 Basic Tools of Quality Control.
Classification of defects
The listing of possible defects of a unit, classified according to their seriousness. Note:
Commonly used classifications: class A, class B, class C, class D; or critical, major,
minor and incidental; or critical, major and minor. Definitions of these classifications
require careful preparation and tailoring to the product(s) being sampled to ensure
accurate assignment of a defect to the proper classification. A separate acceptance
sampling plan is generally applied to each class of defects.
Combinatorial optimization
The efficient allocation of limited resources to yield the best solution to meet the
objectives when the values of some or all of the variables must be integers and there
are many possible combinations.
Common causes
Used to refer to variation that happens in the same way from worker to worker, hour to
hour, lot to lot, etc. On a control chart, common causes by definition always fall within
control limits. Also see “special causes”.
Company culture
A system of values, beliefs and behaviors inherent in a company. To optimize business
performance, top management must define and create the necessary culture.
Quality Definitions – Page 19 (Return to Index)
Complaint tracking
Collecting data, disseminating them to appropriate persons for resolution, monitoring
complaint resolution progress and communicating results.
Compliance
The state of an organization that meets prescribed specifications, contract terms,
regulations or standards.
Conflict resolution
The management of a conflict situation to arrive at a resolution satisfactory to all parties.
Conformance
An affirmative indication or judgment that a product or service has met the requirements
of a relevant specification, contract or regulation.
Conformity assessment
All activities concerned with determining that relevant requirements in standards or
regulations are fulfilled, including sampling, testing, inspection, certification,
management system assessment and registration, accreditation of the competence of
those activities and recognition of an accreditation program’s capability.
.
Quality Definitions – Page 20 (Return to Index)
Confounding
Allowing two or more variables to vary together so that it is impossible to separate their
unique effects. If an experiment does not vary x and y separately then the effects of the
two factors cannot be distinguished. Blocking may be used to separate these effects
where one is expected to be a critical x and one appears to be noise. The main effects
and interactions can be confounded in order to reduce the number of runs in a fractional
factorial design of experiments.
Conjoint analysis
Involves measurement of psychological judgments (such as one's preferences) or
perceived similarities or differences between alternatives (for example - which factors -
price, quality, dealer location - are most important to customers when buying a new car).
Conjoint measurement
The difference from conjoint analysis is that it permits the use of rating when evaluating
pairs of attributes or attribute profiles.
Consensus
A state in which all the members of a group support an action or decision, even if some
of them don’t fully agree with it.
Constraint
Anything that limits a system from achieving higher performance or throughput; also, the
bottleneck that most severely limits the organization’s ability to achieve higher
performance relative to its purpose or goal.
Constraint analysis
The use of one or more constraint satisfaction algorithms to specify the set of feasible
solutions. Constraints are programmed in rules or procedures that produce solutions to
particular configuration and design problems using one or more constraint satisfaction
algorithms.
Constraints management
See “theory of constraints”.
Consultant
An individual who has experience and expertise in applying tools and techniques to
resolve process problems and who can advise and facilitate an organization’s
improvement efforts.
Consumer
The external customer to whom a product or service is ultimately delivered; also called
end user.
Consumer risk
Pertains to sampling and the potential risk that bad products will be accepted and
shipped to the consumer.
Quality Definitions – Page 21 (Return to Index)
Contingency table
A two-dimensional table constructed for classifying count data, the purpose of which is
to determine whether two variables are dependent (or contingent) on each other.
Control chart
Based on the statistical variation of any process - control charts help focus on stability of
a process. A graphical tool for monitoring a process and/or for determining where
variation lies; control charts show results over time, with +/- 3σ boundaries representing
the upper and lower control limits (UCL/LCLs). The chart frequently shows a central line
to help detect a trend of plotted values toward either control limit. One of the 7 Basic
Tools of Quality Control. Also see “Control Chart Examples”.
Control limits
The natural boundaries of a process within specified confidence levels, expressed as
the upper control limit (UCL) and the lower control limit (LCL).
Quality Definitions – Page 22 (Return to Index)
Control plan
Written descriptions of the systems for controlling part and process quality by
addressing the key characteristics and engineering requirements. They are written by
suppliers to address the important characteristics and engineering requirements of the
product. Each part shall have a Control Plan, but in many cases, "family" Control Plans
can cover a number of parts produced using a common process. Customer approval of
Control Plans may be required prior to production part submission.
Control methods
Standard methods implemented during the “control” phase of the DMAIC process
include: fix, minimize, standardize, measure and monitor, communicate and audit.
Controllable input(s)
Input variables (x’s) that can be changed to see the effect on process output variables
(y’s); sometimes called “Knob” variables.
Corrective action
A solution meant to reduce or eliminate an identified problem.
Correlation (statistical)
A measure of the relationship between two data sets of variables.
Quality Definitions – Page 23 (Return to Index)
Quality processes cannot be justified simply because "everyone else is doing them" -
but return on quality (ROQ) has dramatic impacts as companies mature. Research
shows that the costs of poor quality can range from 15%-40% of business costs (e.g.,
rework, returns or complaints, reduced service levels, lost revenue). Most businesses do
not know what their quality costs are because they do not keep reliable statistics.
Finding and correcting mistakes consumes an inordinately large portion resource.
Typically, the cost to eliminate a failure in the customer phase is five times greater than
it is at the development or manufacturing phase. Effective quality management
decreases production costs because the sooner an error is found and corrected, the
less costly it will be.
Cpk index
Equals the lesser of the USL minus the mean divided by 3 sigma (or the mean) minus
the LSL divided by 3 sigma. The greater the Cpk value, the better. Also see
“differentiating Cpk and Ppk values”.
Critical input(s)
x’s input for the tools (FMEA, DOE, SPC, etc.) and significant process knowledge have
proved to have a major impact on the variability of the y’s.
Critical process(es)
Process(es) that present serious potential dangers to human life, health and the
environment or that risk the loss of significant sums of money or customers.
Cross functional
A term used to describe a process or an activity that crosses the boundary between
functions. A cross functional team consists of individuals from more than one
organizational unit or function.
Cross pilot
See “scatter diagram”.
Cultural resistance
A form of resistance based on opposition to the possible social and organizational
consequences associated with change.
Culture change
A major shift in the attitudes, norms, sentiments, beliefs, values, operating principles
and behavior of an organization.
Culture, organizational
A common set of values, beliefs, attitudes, perceptions and accepted behaviors shared
by individuals within an organization.
Customer
See “external customer” and “internal customer”.
Customer delight
The result of delivering a product or service that exceeds customer expectations.
Customer satisfaction
The result of delivering a product or service that meets customer requirements.
Customer-supplier partnership
A long-term relationship between a buyer and supplier characterized by teamwork and
mutual confidence. The supplier is considered an extension of the buyer’s organization.
The partnership is based on several commitments. The buyer provides long-term
contracts and uses fewer suppliers. The supplier implements quality assurance
processes so incoming inspection can be minimized. The supplier also helps the buyer
reduce costs and improve product and process designs.
Cycle
A sequence of operations repeated regularly.
Data
A set of collected facts. There are two basic kinds of numerical data: measured or
variable data, such as “16 ounces,” “4 miles” and “0.75 inches;” and counted or attribute
data, such as “162 defects.”
Data analysis
Breaking down the data to draw significant insights. Steps involved in data analysis -
validate (make sure that the data is good), summarize (compute central tendency and
dispersion), assess (histograms, etc) search for structure (relationship between
variables with scatter plots, correlation, regression, etc), compare (mean, standard
deviation, etc) and present results and draw conclusions.
Decision matrix
A matrix teams use to evaluate problems or possible solutions. For example, a team
might draw a matrix to evaluate possible solutions, listing them in the far left vertical
column. Next, the team selects criteria to rate the possible solutions, writing them across
the top row. Then, each possible solution is rated on a scale of 1 to 5 for each criterion,
and the rating is recorded in the corresponding grid. Finally, the ratings of all the criteria
for each possible solution are added to determine its total score. The total score is then
used to help decide which solution deserves the most attention.
Defect
An event of nonconformance to specification. Occurrence is measured in DPU (Defects
Per Unit), DPO (Defects Per Opportunity), DPMO (Defects Per Million Opportunities) or
Sigma Level. A given unit may have any number of defects - based on the number of
opportunities. A unit with one or more defects is defective. Defects are caused by errors
and measured using c-chart or u-chart. A binomial distribution characterizes defectives.
There are four classes of defects: class 1, very serious, leads directly to severe injury or
catastrophic economic loss; class 2, serious, leads directly to significant injury or
significant economic loss; class 3, major, is related to major problems with respect to
intended normal or reasonably foreseeable use; and class 4, minor, is related to minor
problems with respect to intended normal or reasonably foreseeable use. Also see
“blemish”, “imperfection” and “nonconformity”.
Defective
A defective unit; a unit of product that contains one or more defects with respect to the
quality characteristic(s) under consideration.
Delighter
A feature of a product or service that a customer does not expect to receive but that
gives pleasure to the customer when received. Also called an “exciter”.
Delphi method
A systematic, interactive forecasting method which relies on a panel of experts. The
experts answer questionnaires in two or more rounds. After each round, a facilitator
provides an anonymous summary of the experts’ forecasts from the previous round as
well as the reasons they provided for their judgments. Thus, experts are encouraged to
revise their earlier answers in light of the replies of other members of their panel. Since
its creation, the method has been used frequently to make predictions, seek consensus
and generate ideas. The technique recognizes human judgment as legitimate and useful
contribution and allows experts to generate ideas systematically for a complex problem.
1. Form the team
2. Selection of experts - most studies use a 15-35 member panel
3. Develop the first set of question or issues for idea generation
4. Transmission of the first set of questions to experts
5. Analysis of the first round of responses and feedback
6. Preparation and transmission of the second set of questions
7. Analysis of the second round of responses
8. Resolution
Deming cycle
Another term for the plan-do-study-act cycle. Walter Shewhart created it (calling it the
plan-do-check-act cycle), but W. Edwards Deming popularized it, calling it plan-do-
study-act. Also see “plan-do-check-act cycle.
Deming prize
Award given annually to organizations that, according to the award guidelines, have
successfully applied companywide quality control based on statistical quality control and
will continue to do so. Although the award is named in honor of W. Edwards Deming, its
criteria are not specifically related to Deming’s teachings. There are three separate
divisions for the award: the Deming Application Prize, the Deming Prize for Individuals
and the Deming Prize for Overseas Companies. The award process is overseen by the
Deming Prize Committee of the Union of Japanese Scientists and Engineers in Tokyo.
Quality Definitions – Page 29 (Return to Index)
Deming's 14 points
1. Establish Constancy of Purpose: plan and manage to the plan; detect and correct
deviations.
2. Improve constantly and forever every system of production and service: small
continuous improvement is better than infrequent quantum leaps.
3. Eliminate numerical goals and quotas, including management by objective:
unsupported arbitrary objectives can be both restrictive & demoralizing.
4. Eliminate fear so that everyone may work effectively for the Company: mistakes
happen and fear of disclosure impedes correction.
5. Institute leadership: managers must not be cops or directors but rather coaches
of the creative team.
6. End the practice of awarding business largely on the basis of price: product
quality, product improvement and reliability of supply are important.
7. Break down the barriers between departments: encourage communication and
cooperation - eliminate chimneys and silos.
8. Institute training on the job: as product and process content grows, not all
employees come equally prepared.
9. Eliminate the annual rating or merit system: performance is subject to variation
whereas shared reward develops teamwork.
10. Institute a vigorous program of education and self-improvement: as employees
promote the company, the company must develop its employees.
11. Eliminate slogans and exhortations: management, not an individual worker, is
responsible for system performance.
12. Cease dependence on mass inspection: it is impractical to sort quality into a
system that produces bad product.
13. Adopt the new philosophy: every department of the company can quantitatively
measure its productivity.
14. Create a structure in top management to accomplish the transformation:
successful systems can only be introduced and maintained by top management.
Density function
The function which yields the probability that a particular random variable takes on any
one of its possible values.
Dependability
The degree to which a product is operable and capable of performing its required
function at any randomly chosen time during its specified operating time, provided that
the product is available at the start of that period. (Non-operation related influences are
not included.) Dependability can be expressed by the ratio: time available divided by
(time available + time required).
Dependent events
Events that occur only after a previous event.
Quality Definitions – Page 30 (Return to Index)
Deployment
Dispersion, dissemination, broadcasting or spreading communication throughout an
organization, downward and laterally. Also see “cascading”.
Design
The planning that lays the basis for the making of every object or system. Most
commonly linked with engineering. It can be used both as a noun and as a verb.
• As a verb, "to design" refers to the process of originating and developing a plan
for a product, structure, system, or component with intention.
• As a noun, "a design" is used for either the final (solution) plan (e.g. proposal,
drawing, model, description) or the result of implementing that plan in the form of
the final product of a design process.
Design record
Engineering requirements typically contained in various formats; examples include
engineering drawings, math data and referenced specifications. Designing in quality
versus inspecting in quality. Also see “prevention versus detection”.
Design reviews
A proactive procedure to prevent problems and misunderstandings during the design
and development of a product or process.
Design validation
Testing to ensure that product conforms to defined user needs and/or requirements.
Design validation follows successful design verification and is normally performed on the
final product under defined, operating conditions. Multiple validations may be performed
if there are different intended uses.
Deviation
In numerical data sets, the difference or distance of an individual observation or data
value from the center point (often the mean) of the set distribution.
Diagnosis
The activity of discovering the cause(s) of quality deficiencies; the practice of
investigating symptoms, collecting and analyzing data, and conducting experiments to
test theories to determine the root cause(s) of deficiencies.
Dissatisfiers
The features or functions a customer expects that either are not present or are present
but not adequate; also pertains to employees’ expectations. Distribution (statistical): The
amount of potential variation in the output(s) of a process, typically expressed by its
shape, average or standard deviation.
Dock-to-Dock (DTD)
A metric that measures how long it takes for raw materials or sub-components coming
into plant to be turned into finished products. Improving DTD time improves company’s
ability to make on-time deliveries; lowers material handling, obsolescence and inventory
carrying costs which in turn leads to lower total cost.
Documentation
Material defining the procedure to be followed (e.g. quality manual, operator
instructions, graphics, and pictorials).
Downtime
Lost production time during which a piece of equipment is not operating correctly due to
breakdown, maintenance, power failures or similar events.
Driving forces
Forces that tend to change a situation in desirable ways.
Durability
The probability that an item will continue to function at customer expectation levels, at
the useful life without requiring overhaul or rebuild due to wear out.
Quality Definitions – Page 34 (Return to Index)
Effect
The result of an action being taken; the expected or predicted impact when an action is
to be taken or is proposed.
Effectiveness
The state of having produced a decided on or desired effect.
Efficiency
The ratio of the output to the total input in a process.
Efficient
A term describing a process that operates effectively while consuming minimal
resources (such as labor and time).
Eight wastes
Taiichi Ohno originally enumerated seven wastes (muda) and later added underutilized
people as the eighth waste commonly found in physical production. The eight wastes
are: 1. overproduction ahead of demand; 2. waiting for the next process, worker,
material or equipment; 3. unnecessary transport of materials (for example, between
functional areas of facilities, or to or from a stockroom or warehouse); 4. over-
processing of parts due to poor tool and product design; 5. inventories more than the
absolute minimum; 6. unnecessary movement by employees during the course of their
work (such as to look for parts, tools, prints or help); 7. production of defective parts; 8.
under-utilization of employees’ brainpower, skills, experience and talents.
Eighty-twenty (80-20)
A term referring to the Pareto principle, which was first defined by J. M. Juran in 1950.
The principle suggests most effects come from relatively few causes; that is, 80% of the
effects come from 20% of the possible causes. Also see “pareto chart”.
Empowerment
A condition in which employees have the authority to make decisions and take action in
their work areas without prior approval. For example, an operator can stop a
manufacturing process if he or she detects a problem, or a customer service
representative can send out a replacement product if a customer calls with a problem.
Quality Definitions – Page 35 (Return to Index)
EN 46000
Medical device quality management systems standard. EN 46000 is technically
equivalent to ISO 13485:1996, an international medical device standard. The two are
similar enough that if an organization is prepared to comply with one, it could easily
comply with the other.
EN 9100
An international quality management standard for the aerospace industry (see AS9100).
End user
See “consumer.”
Environment
Environment is all of the process conditions surrounding or affecting the manufacture
and quality of a part or product.
Equipment availability
The percentage of time during which a process (or equipment) is available to run. This
can sometimes be called uptime. To calculate operational availability, divide the
machine’s operating time during the process by the net available time.
Error detection
A hybrid form of error proofing. It means a bad part can be made but will be caught
immediately, and corrective action will be taken to prevent another bad part from being
produced. A device is used to detect and stop the process when a bad part is made.
This is used when error proofing is too expensive or not easily implemented.
Error proofing
Use of process or design features to prevent the acceptance or further processing of
nonconforming products. Also known as “mistake proofing”.
Ethics
The practice of applying a code of conduct based on moral principles to day-to-day
actions to balance what is fair to individuals or organizations with what is right for
society.
Evaporating cloud
Also called the conflict cloud or conflict resolution diagram, this is a tool whose purpose
is to identify the elements of a conflict or dilemma in order to facilitate the development
of non-compromise, win-win solutions. (Part of the Theory of Constraints Thinking
Process). Also see “Conflict Resolution Diagram Example”.
Quality Definitions – Page 36 (Return to Index)
Experimentation
The manipulation of controllable factors (independent variables) at different levels to see
their effect on some response (dependent variable). Common methods include: trial-
and-error, one-factor-at-a-time, full factorial, and fractional factorial design.
Exciter
See “delighter”.
Expectations
Customer perceptions about how an organization’s products and services will meet their
specific needs and requirements.
Experimental design
A formal plan that details the specifics (i.e. design, process, etc.) for conducting an
experiment, such as which responses, factors, levels, blocks, treatments and tools are
to be used.
External customer
A person or organization that receives a product, service or information but is not part of
the organization supplying it. Also see “internal customer”.
External failure
Nonconformance identified by the external customers.
External setup
Die setup procedures that can be performed safely while the machine is in motion. Also
known as outer exchange of die. Also see “internal setup”.
External work
Set-up activities which can be performed while the machine (or process) is running. Also
see “internal work”.
Quality Definitions – Page 37 (Return to Index)
F-tests
Used to test variances or dispersion effects. For example, if a company has two
manufacturing lines making the same product but different regions of the world, an F-
test may be used to compare the variance of one line's productivity vs. that of the other.
[Statistical inference tests to compare the quality of different products / processes and
compare the performance of different groups.]
Fabrication
See “manufacturing”.
Facilitator
A specifically trained person who functions as a teacher, coach and moderator for a
group, team or organization.
Facility
Permanent, semi-permanent, or temporary commercial or industrial property such as a
building, plant, or structure, built, established, or installed for the performance of one or
more specific activities or functions.
Factor analysis
A statistical method used to describe variability among observed variables in terms of
fewer unobserved variables.
Factorial design
Factorial design is generally employed in engineering and manufacturing experiments. It
is appropriate when several factors are to be investigated at two or more levels and
interaction of factors may be important. Also see “design of experiments”.
Failure
The inability of an item, product or service to perform required functions on demand due
to one or more defects.
Failure cost
The cost resulting from the occurrence of defects. One element of cost of quality or cost
of poor quality.
Feasibility
A determination that a process, design, procedure, or plan can be successfully
accomplished in the required time frame.
Feedback
Communication from customers about how delivered products or services compare with
customer expectations.
Feeder lines
A series of special assembly lines that allow assemblers to perform preassembly tasks
off the main production line.
Fishbone diagram
A systematic analysis tool that organizes the effects of a problem and its possible
causes, in a graphical display that often resembles the skeleton of a fish.
Also see Cause-and-Effect or Ishikawa Diagrams. One of the 7 Basic Tools of Quality
Control. Also see “Ishikawa Diagram Example”.
Five whys
A technique for discovering the root causes of a problem and showing the relationship of
causes by repeatedly asking the question, “Why?”
Flow chart
A common type of diagram that represents an algorithm or process, showing the steps
as boxes of various kinds, and their order by connecting these with arrows. This
diagrammatic representation can give a step-by-step solution to a given problem. One of
the 7 Basic Tools of Quality Control. Also see “Flow Chart Example”.
Flow kaizen
Radical improvement, usually applied only once within a value stream.
Flow production
Continuous movement of the product or service from start to finish without interruption
or storage with the intent to eliminate batch sizing and produce at the smallest possible
increment.
Function
A group of related actions contributing to a larger action.
Functional layout
The practice of grouping machines (such as grinding machines) or activities (such as
order entry) by type of operation performed.
Functional verification
Functional verification is testing to ensure the part conforms to all customer and supplier
engineering performance and material requirements. Functional verification (to
applicable customer engineering material and performance standards) may be required
by some customers annually unless another frequency is established in a customer
approval control plan. Results shall be available for customer review upon request.
Funnel experiment
An experiment that demonstrates the effects of tampering. Marbles are dropped through
a funnel in an attempt to hit a flat surfaced target below. The experiment shows that
adjusting a stable process to compensate for an undesirable result or an extraordinarily
good result will produce output that is worse than if the process had been left alone.
Gain sharing
A reward system that shares the monetary results of productivity gains among owners
and employees.
Gantt chart
Type of bar-chart that shows both the scheduled and completed work over a period. A
time-scale is given on the chart's horizontal axis and each activity is shown as a
separate horizontal rectangle (bar) whose length is proportional to the time required (or
taken) for the activity's completion. In project planning, these charts show start and
finish dates, critical and non-critical activities, slack time, and predecessor-successor
relationships. Also called chronogram, it was invented in 1917 by the US engineer and a
scientific-management pioneer, Henry L. Gantt (1861-1919). See “Gantt Chart
Diagram”.
Gap analysis
Technique for determining the steps to be taken in moving from a current state to a
desired future-state. It begins with (1) listing of characteristic factors (such as attributes,
competencies, performance levels) of the present situation ("what is"), (2) cross-lists
factors required to achieve the future objectives ("what should be"), and then (3)
highlights the 'gaps' that exist and need to be 'filled.' Also called need-gap analysis,
needs analysis, and needs assessment.
Gatekeeper
A timekeeper; in team meetings, a designated individual who helps monitor the team’s
use of allocated time.
Gemba
Where all the activity is. 5 Rules to follow-1. Go to the gemba (also shop floor) first; 2.
Check with genbutsu (the actual product); 3. Take countermeasures; 4. Find root cause;
5. Standardize to prevent recurrence.
Genchi Genbutsu
Go see the problem. This is the belief that practical experience is valued over theoretical
knowledge. You must see the problem to know the problem.
Quality Definitions – Page 43 (Return to Index)
Genjitsu
The real facts and data. this along with gemba and genbutsu are the three reals
fundamental to kaizen.
Goal
A broad statement describing a desired future condition or achievement without being
specific about how much and when.
Go/no-go
State of a unit or product. Two parameters are possible: go (conforms to specifications)
and no-go (does not conform to specifications).
Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) or 21 CFR, parts 808, 812 and 820
Requirements governing the quality procedures of medical device manufacturers.
Grade
An indicator of category or rank related to features or characteristics that cover different
sets of needs for products or services intended for the same functional use.
Group dynamic
The interaction (behavior) of individuals within a team meeting.
Groupthink
A situation in which critical information is withheld from the team because individual
members censor or restrain themselves, either because they believe their concerns are
not worth discussing or because they are afraid of confrontation.
Quality Definitions – Page 45 (Return to Index)
Hawthorne effect
The concept that every change results (initially, at least) in increased productivity.
Heijunka
A method of leveling production, usually at the final assembly line, that makes just-in-
time production possible. It involves averaging both the volume and sequence of
different model types on a mixed model production line. Using this method avoids
excessive batching of different types of product and volume fluctuations in the same
product. Also see “production smoothing”.
Hidden Factory
Unintended steps/tasks in a process; i.e. rework.
Histogram
A graphical display of tabulated frequencies shown as bars. It shows what proportion of
cases fall into each of several categories: it is a form of data binning. The categories are
usually specified as non-overlapping intervals of some variable. The categories (bars)
must be adjacent. One of the 7 Basic Tools of Quality Control. Also see “Histogram
Interpretation”.
Quality Definitions – Page 46 (Return to Index)
Hooke's Law
Stress is proportional to strain. This law is valid only up to the proportional limit, or the
end of the straight-line portion of the stress-strain curve.
Homeostasis
The stability of a system's internal environment, despite having to cope with an
unpredictable external environment.
Hotelling’s T2 model
A multivariate profile for detecting differential expressions in microarrays.
House of quality
A product planning matrix, that somewhat resembles a house, which is developed
during quality function deployment and shows the relationship of customer requirements
to the means of achieving these requirements.
Quality Definitions – Page 47 (Return to Index)
Imagineering
Developing in the mind’s eye a process without waste.
Imperfection
A quality characteristic’s departure from its intended level or state without any
association to conformance to specification requirements or to the usability of a product
or service. Also see “blemish”, “defect” and “nonconformity”.
Improvement
The positive effect of a process change effort.
Iceberg effect
90% of an iceberg's mass is below the surface, not visible to the eye. Many aspects of
business are like that.
I/MR chart
The I/MR chart is a combined chart consisting of: 'individuals' (I) chart with values of
each individual observation that provides a means to assess the process center; and a
'moving range' (MR) chart with the range calculated from subgroups created from
successive observations that provides a means to assess process variation. I/MR chart
is used to draw a combined control chart for assessing whether process center and
variation are in control when your data is individual observations. When subgroups are
available use an X-Bar & R Chart. Also see “Control Chart Examples”.
In-control process
A process in which the statistical measure being evaluated is in a state of statistical
control; in other words, the variations among the observed sampling results can be
attributed to a constant system of chance causes. Also see “out-of-control process”.
Incremental improvement
Improvement implemented on a continual basis.
Indicators
Established measures to determine how well an organization is meeting its customers’
needs and other operational and financial performance expectations.
Information flow
The dissemination of information for taking a specific product from order entry through
detailed scheduling to delivery. Also see “value stream”.
Informative inspection
A form of inspection for determining nonconforming product. Also see “judgment
inspection”.
Quality Definitions – Page 48 (Return to Index)
Input
The term denoting either an entrance or changes which are inserted into a system and
which activate/modify a process. It is an abstract concept, used in the modeling,
system(s) design and system(s) exploitation. It is usually connected with other terms,
e.g., input field, input variable, input parameter, input value, input signal, etc.
Inputs
The products, services and material obtained from suppliers to produce the outputs
delivered to customers.
Inspection
Activities, such as measuring, examining, testing, gaging one or more characteristics of
a product or service, and comparing these with specified requirements to determine
conformity.
Inspection cost
The cost associated with inspecting a product to ensure it meets the internal or external
customer’s needs and requirements; an appraisal cost.
Inspection, curtailed
Sampling inspection in which inspection of the sample is stopped as soon as a decision
is certain. Thus, as soon as the rejection number for defectives is reached, the decision
is certain and no further inspection is necessary. In single sampling, however, the whole
sample is usually inspected in order to have an unbiased record of quality history. This
same practice is usually followed for the first sample in double or multiple sampling.
Inspection lot
A collection of similar units or a specific quantity of similar material offered for inspection
and acceptance at one time.
Inspection, normal
Inspection used in accordance with a sampling plan under ordinary circumstances.
Inspection, 100%
Inspection of all the units in the lot or batch.
Inspection, reduced
Inspection in accordance with a sampling plan requiring smaller sample sizes than those
used in normal inspection. Reduced inspection is used in some inspection systems as
an economy measure when the level of submitted quality is sufficiently good and other
stated conditions apply. Note: The criteria for determining when quality is “sufficiently
good” must be defined in objective terms for any given inspection system.
Quality Definitions – Page 49 (Return to Index)
Inspection, tightened
Inspection in accordance with a sampling plan that has stricter acceptance criteria than
those used in normal inspection. Tightened inspection is used in some inspection
systems as a protective measure when the level of submitted quality is sufficiently poor.
The higher rate of rejections is expected to lead suppliers to improve the quality of
submitted product. Note: The criteria for determining when quality is “sufficiently poor”
must be defined in objective terms for any given inspection system.
Instant pudding
A term used to illustrate an obstacle to achieving quality or the supposition that quality
and productivity improvement are achieved quickly through an affirmation of faith rather
than through sufficient effort and education. W. Edwards Deming used this term, which
was coined by James Bakken of Ford Motor Co., in his book Out of the Crisis.
Interim approval
Permits shipment of products for a specified time period or quantity.
Intermediate customers
Organizations or individuals who operate as distributors, brokers or dealers between the
supplier and the consumer or end user.
Internal customer
The recipient (person or department) within an organization of another person’s or
department’s output (product, service or information). Also see “external customer”.
Internal failure
A product failure that occurs before the product is delivered to external customers.
Internal setup
Die setup procedures that must be performed while a machine is stopped; also known
as “inner exchange of die”. Also see “external setup”.
Internal work
Set-up activities that require the machine (or process) be stopped. Also see “external
work”.
Quality Definitions – Page 50 (Return to Index)
Interrelationship diagram
A management tool that depicts the relationship among factors in a complex situation.
Also called “relations diagram”. Also see “Relations Diagram Example”.
Intervention
The action of a team facilitator when interrupting a discussion to state observations
about group dynamics or the team process.
Inventory
In lean, the money invested to purchase things an organization intends to sell.
Quality Definitions – Page 51 (Return to Index)
ISO 14001
An internationally accepted standard that sets out how you can go about putting in place
an effective Environmental Management System (EMS). The standard is intended to
address the delicate balance between maintaining profitability and reducing
environmental impact; with the commitment of your entire organization, it can enable
you to achieve both objectives.
ISO/IEC 27001
Formally specifies a management system that is intended to bring information security
under explicit management control. ISO/IEC 27001 requires that management:
• Systematically examine the organization's information security risks, taking
account of the threats, vulnerabilities and impacts.
• Design and implement a coherent and comprehensive suite of information
security controls and/or other forms of risk treatment (such as risk avoidance or
risk transfer) to address those risks that are deemed unacceptable.
• Adopt an overarching management process to ensure that the information
security controls continue to meet the organization's information security needs
on an ongoing basis.
ISO/TS 16949
An ISO technical specification which aligns existing US, German, French and Italian
automotive quality system standards within the global automotive industry. It specifies
the quality system requirements for the design/development, production, installation and
servicing of automotive-related products.
Quality Definitions – Page 52 (Return to Index)
Jidohka
One of the two main pillars of TPS (Toyota Production System). It refers to the ability to
stop production lines, by man or machine, in the event of problems such as equipment
malfunction, quality issues, or late work. Jidohka helps prevent the passing of defects,
helps identify and correct problem areas using localization and isolation, and makes it
possible to “build” quality at the production process. Also see “autonomation”.
Jishuken
Management driven kaizen activity where management members identify areas in need
of continuous improvement and spread information through the organization to stimulate
kaizen activity.
JIS Q 9100
An international quality management standard for the aerospace industry. Also see
“AS9100”.
Job instruction
Quality system documentation that describes work conducted in one function in a
company, such as setup, inspection, rework or operator.
Joint commission
A U.S. healthcare accreditation body; formerly known as Joint Commission for the
Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations.
Judgment inspection
A form of inspection to determine nonconforming product. Also see “informative
inspection”.
Just-In-Time (JIT)
One of the two main pillars of TPS (Toyota Production System). It refers to the
manufacturing and conveyance of only what is needed, when it is needed, and in the
amount needed. It is built upon three basic principles: the pull system, continuous flow
processing and takt time. There is little or no manufacturing material inventory on hand
at the manufacturing site and little or no incoming inspection.
Kaizen
A Japanese term that means gradual unending improvement by doing little things better
and setting and achieving increasingly higher standards. Masaaki Imai made the term
famous in his book, Kaizen: The Key to Japan’s Competitive Success. Taken from the
Japanese words kai and zen where kai means change and zen means good. The
popular meaning is continuous improvement of all areas of a company not just quality.
Kanban
Japanese term for “signal”. Kanban systems are pull systems, which replenish materials
only as they are used. One of the primary tools of a just-in-time system. It maintains an
orderly and efficient flow of materials throughout the entire course of manufacturing. It is
usually a printed card that contains specific information such as part name, description
and quantity. An example of visual management or visual control.
Kano model
In the late 1970s Dr. Noriaki Kano of Tokyo Rika University further refined the notion of
quality derived partially from his study of Herzberg's "Motivator-Hygiene Theory" and re-
defined quality along two dimensions in contrast to the linear "good-bad" "ok-not ok"
dimension in existence all along. The two dimensions were:
1. The degree to which a product or service performs.
2. the degree to which the user is satisfied.
The correlation of quality on two axes further led to three unique definitions of quality,
namely: basic quality, performance quality and excitement quality.
Kansei
Kansei engineering is a consumer-oriented technology process used to develop
products. It uses the consumer’s feelings (kansei) as a guideline in creating the product.
Kappa
An attribute measurement system which compares how well a judge repeats him/her
self and/or how well other judges agree.
Key characteristics
Product / Process / Manufacturing / Assembly features or characteristics that are highly
constrained or for which minute deviations from specification have a significant impact
on product performance, function and form. (PKC - product key characteristics; AKC -
assembly key characteristics; MKC - manufacturing key characteristics)
Quality Definitions – Page 54 (Return to Index)
Key process
A major system level process that supports the mission and satisfies major consumer
requirements.
Kitting
A process in which assemblers are supplied with kits—a box of parts, fittings and
tools—for each task they perform. This eliminates time consuming trips from one parts
bin, tool crib or supply center to another to get necessary materials.
Knowledge brokering
A systematic approach to seeking external ideas from people in a variety of industries,
disciplines, contexts and then of combining the resulting lessons in new ways.
Kruskal-Wallis test
A non-parametric test to compare three or more samples. It tests the null hypothesis
that all populations have identical distribution functions against the alternative
hypothesis that at least one of the samples differs only with respect to location (median),
if at all. It is the analogue to the F-test used in analysis of variance. While analysis of
variance tests depend on the assumption that all populations under comparison are
normally distributed, the Kruskal-Wallis test places no such restriction on the
comparison. This is a non-parametric test equivalent to ANOVA. Samples should have
same shape and distribution. If not, then use Moods Median test.
Quality Definitions – Page 55 (Return to Index)
Laboratory
A test facility that can include chemical, metallurgical, dimensional, physical, electrical
and reliability testing or test validation.
Laboratory scope
A record containing the specific tests, evaluations and calibrations a laboratory has the
ability and competency to perform, the list of equipment it uses, and a list of the
methods and standards to which it adheres to each of these.
Layout Inspection
Layout Inspection is the complete measurement of all part dimensions shown on the
design record. A layout inspection may be required by some customers for all products
annually unless another frequency is established in a customer approved control plan.
Results shall be available for customer review upon request.
Lead time
The total time a customer must wait to receive a product after placing an order.
Leadership
An essential part of a quality improvement effort. Organization leaders must establish a
vision, communicate that vision to those in the organization and provide the tools and
knowledge necessary to accomplish the vision.
Lean
A production practice that considers the expenditure of resources for any goal other
than the creation of value for the end customer to be wasteful, and thus a target for
elimination. This means producing the maximum sellable products or services at the
lowest operational cost while optimizing inventory levels.
Lean enterprise
A manufacturing company organized to eliminate all unproductive effort and
unnecessary investment, both on the shop floor and in office functions.
Lean manufacturing/production
An initiative focused on eliminating all waste in manufacturing processes. Principles of
lean manufacturing include zero waiting time, zero inventory, scheduling (internal
customer pull system instead of push system), batch to flow (cut batch sizes), line
balancing and cutting actual process times. The production systems are characterized
by optimum automation, just-in-time supplier delivery disciplines, quick changeover
times, high levels of quality and continuous improvement.
Quality Definitions – Page 56 (Return to Index)
Lean migration
The journey from traditional manufacturing methods to one in which all forms of waste
are systematically eliminated.
Lead Time
Average time to manufacture and deliver a product or service, from order receipt to
delivery to the customer.
Lessons Learned
An ongoing documentation of things the project manager and project team have learned
throughout the project. Lessons learned are supplied to other project teams and project
managers to apply to their ongoing projects. They are documented throughout the
project, not just at the end of the project.
Level loading
A technique for balancing production throughput over time. Life cycle stages: Design,
manufacturing, assembly, installation, operation and shutdown periods of product
development.
Levene test
A test of the hypothesis that all factor standard deviations (or equivalently variances) are
equal against the alternative that the standard deviations are not all equal.
Likert Scale
Discrete ordinal measurement scale e.g., 5-point grading, 7-point numerical rating,
verbal rating (poor, good, excellent, etc.).
Linearity
The difference in the bias values and a reference (known) value through the operating
range of the gauge.
Line balancing
A process in which work elements are evenly distributed and staffing is balanced to
meet takt time.
Listening post
An individual who, by virtue of his or her potential for having contact with customers, is
designated to collect, document and transmit pertinent feedback to a central collection
authority in the organization.
Quality Definitions – Page 57 (Return to Index)
Load-load
A method of conducting single-piece flow in which the operator proceeds from machine
to machine, taking the part from one machine and loading it into the next. The lines
allow different parts of a manufacturing process to be completed by one operator,
eliminating the need to move around large batches of work-in-progress inventory.
Loss Function
A graphical representation of the relationship between the customer's sensitivity (loss)
and deviations from the target (design intent) - conducted without considering the
specifications.
Lot
A collection of output(s) from which a sample is to be drawn and inspected to determine
conformance with the standard.
Lot, batch
A definite quantity of some product manufactured under conditions of production that
are considered uniform.
Lot quality
The value of percentage defective or of defects per hundred units in a lot.
Lot size
Also referred to as “N”. The number of units in a lot.
Maintainability
The probability that a given maintenance action for an item under given usage
conditions can be performed within a stated time interval when the maintenance is
performed under stated conditions using stated procedures and resources.
Management review
A periodic management meeting to review the status and effectiveness of the
organization’s quality management system.
Manager
An individual charged with managing resources and processes.
Manufacturing
The use of machines, tools and labor to produce items (products) for use or sale. It is
most commonly applied to industrial production, in which materials are transformed
through fabrication, assembly and/or installation into finished goods on a large scale.
Also known as “fabrication” or “production”.
Manufacturing process
Includes all intermediate procedures, methods, and systems required for the production
and integration of a product's components. Also known as “production process”.
Markov model
A probabilistic model that can accurately capture the effects of component failure rates
and changing failure rates over time resulting from stress in other factors.
Material handling
Methods, equipment and systems for conveying materials to various machines and
processing areas and for transferring finished parts to assembly, packaging and
shipping areas.
Matrix
A planning tool for displaying the relationships among various data sets.
Mean
Parameter used to characterize the “process location” or “center”. Average of all data
points in sample or population.
Measure
Number or quantity that records a directly observable value or performance. All
measures have a unit attached to them: i.e. inch, centimeter, dollar, liter, etc.
Measurement
The act or process of quantitatively comparing results with requirements. Or, values
made meaningful by quantifying into specific units. Measurements act as labels which
make those values more useful in terms of details.
Quality Definitions – Page 60 (Return to Index)
Measurement error
Variation in measurement which can be attributed to variation in the item being
measured or to the measurement system itself.
Measurement system
All operations, procedures, devices and other equipment or personnel used to assign a
value to the characteristic being measured.
Measurement uncertainty
The result of random effects and imperfect correction of systemic effects in obtaining a
measurement value that results in variation from the actual true value. Also known as
“measurement error”.
Median
The middle number or center value of a set of data in which all the data are arranged in
sequence.
Method 635
A variation of brainstorming developed by Professor Bernd Rohrbach in 1968. This
method involves '6' people generating and writing down '3' potential solutions after
studying a problem. After a set period of time, the solutions are handed to the next
participant, who then either further develops the original three solutions ideas or
provides three new ones. The handing over of potential solutions to the next person
continues until everyone in the group gets a chance to see each of the original three
solutions and contribute to the document. This method may generate less creative
solutions because mostly individual nature of the contributions does not take advantage
of group discussions.
Metric
A measurement, taken over a period of time that communicates vital information about a
process or activity. A metric should drive appropriate leadership or management action.
Physically, a metric package consists of an operational definition, measurement over
time and presentation.
Metrology
The science of weights and measures or of measurement; a system of weights and
measures.
Quality Definitions – Page 61 (Return to Index)
MIL-Q-9858A
A military standard that describes quality program requirements.
MIL-STD-45662A
A military standard that describes the requirements for creating and maintaining a
calibration system for measurement and test equipment.
MIL-STD-105E
A military standard that describes the sampling procedures and tables for inspection by
attributes.
Mission
An organization’s purpose.
Mistake proofing
Use of production or design features to prevent the manufacture or passing downstream
a nonconforming product. Also known as “error proofing.”
Mode
The value occurring most frequently in a data set.
Monument
Any design, scheduling or production technology with scale requirements that call for
designs, orders and products to be brought to the machine to wait in line for processing.
The opposite of a right sized machine.
Muda
Japanese for waste; any activity that consumes resources but creates no value for the
customer.
Multiple Regression
Most common statistical technique for predicting the value of a dependent variable in
relation to one or more independent variables. Relationships can be linear, non-linear,
logarithmic, etc.
Multi-Vari analysis
A powerful graphical analysis technique used to identify and quantify dominant sources
of variation in a process. It is appropriate when the response variable (y) is continuous
and the x's under investigation are discrete. Multi-Vari Analysis graphically depicts
multiple sources of variation. It allows the examination of major families of variation,
including positional (within unit or part), cyclical (unit-to-unit or part-to-part) and temporal
(over time). The basic objective of Multi-Vari Analysis is to determine which family
exhibits the largest variation.
n
The number of units in a sample.
N
The number of units in a population.
Nagara system
Smooth production flow, ideally one piece at a time, characterized by synchronization
(balancing) of manufacturing processes and maximum use of available time; includes
overlapping of operations where practical. A nagara production system is one in which
seemingly unrelated tasks can be produced simultaneously by the same operator.
Natural team
A team of individuals drawn from a single work group; similar to a process improvement
team except that it is not cross functional in composition and it is usually permanent.
Noise Input(s)
Input variables that impacts the y’s but are uncontrollable, difficult, or too costly to
control. i.e., Environmental variables such as humidity, ambient temperature, etc.
Non-Value Added
Anything that does not transform the form, fit and or function of a product or service as
defined by the customer the first time.
Nonconformance
Nonconformance is product or material which does not conform to the customer
requirements or specifications.
Nonconformity
Nonconformity is a process which does not conform to a quality system requirement.
The non-fulfillment of a specified requirement. Also see “blemish”, “defect” and
“imperfection”.
Quality Definitions – Page 64 (Return to Index)
Non-normal distribution
A symmetric (normal) distribution is one in which the 2 "halves" of the histogram appear
as mirror-images of one another. A skewed (non-symmetric or non-normal) distribution
is a distribution in which there is no such mirror-imaging. Also see “Histogram
Interpretation: Skewed (Non-Normal) Curve”.
Non-parametric tests
All tests involving ranked data (data that can be put in order). Non-parametric tests are
often used in place of their parametric counterparts when certain assumptions about the
underlying population are questionable. For example, when comparing two independent
samples, the Wilcoxon Mann-Whitney test does not assume that the difference between
the samples is normally distributed, whereas its parametric counterpart, the two-sample
t-test, does. Non-parametric tests can be, and often are, more powerful in detecting
population differences when certain assumptions are not satisfied.
Non-value added
A term that describes a process step or function that is not required for the direct
achievement of process output. This step or function is identified and examined for
potential elimination. Also see “value added.”
Objective
A specific statement of a desired short-term condition or achievement; includes
measurable end results to be accomplished by specific teams or individuals within time
limits.
One-factor-at-a-time method
A method of designing experiments involving the testing of factors, or causes, one at a
time instead of all simultaneously
One-piece flow
The opposite of batch and queue; instead of building many products and then holding
them in line for the next step in the process, products go through each step in the
process one at a time, without interruption. Meant to improve quality and lower costs.
Operating expenses
The money required for a system to convert inventory into throughput.
Operations
Work or steps to transform raw materials to finished product.
Quality Definitions – Page 66 (Return to Index)
Ordinal (data)
If the observations in a data are assigned with numbers which can be arranged in some
order, the data is said to be in Ordinal scale. All the data sets consisting of ranks are
examples for Ordinal data. These data can be compared with respect to their order.
Out-of-control process
A process in which the statistical measure being evaluated is not in a state of statistical
control. In other words, the variations among the observed sampling results can be
attributed to a constant system of chance causes. Also see “in-control process”.
Outlier
An outlier is a data point that is located far from the rest of the data. Given a mean and
standard deviation, a statistical distribution expects data points to fall within a specific
range. Those that do not are called outliers and should be investigated.
Out of spec
A term that indicates a unit does not meet a given requirement or specification.
Output
The term denoting either an exit or changes which exit a system and which
activate/modify a process. It is an abstract concept, used in the modeling, system(s)
design and system(s) exploitation.
Outputs
Products, materials, services or information provided to customers (internal or external),
from a process.
Ownership
The recognized possession of rights and liability created or passed to an individual
person who, through integrity and competent ability, is recognized and empowered to
decide and act; willingly accepting responsibility as well as accountability.
Quality Definitions – Page 67 (Return to Index)
Packaging
A unit that provides protection and containment of items plus ease of handling by
manual or mechanical means.
Painted floor
A lean manufacturing technique to provide visual indications to determine stock levels.
Similar to kanban. An example of visual management or visual control.
Parallel operation
A technique to create economy of scale by having two operators work together to
perform tasks on either side of a machine. Using this technique reduces the time it takes
a single operator to move from one side to the other, making the overall process more
efficient. An example of parallel operation is having two people work on a changeover,
supplementing each other’s work effort.
Parameter
A component of technology, product or process that can assume a nominal value that
defines it.
Pareto chart
A graphical tool for ranking causes from most significant to least significant. It is based
on the Pareto principle, which was first defined by Joseph M. Juran in 1950. The
principle, named after 19th century economist Vilfredo Pareto, suggests most effects
come from relatively few causes; that is, 80% of the effects come from 20% of the
possible causes. A Pareto chart tests and/or illustrates this relationship by sorting and
displaying metrics in a descending order chart. One of the 7 Basic Tools of Quality
Control. Also see “Pareto Chart Example”.
Partnership/alliance
Both a strategy and a formal relationship between a supplier and a customer that
produces cooperation for the benefit of both parties.
Paynter chart
A matrix of problems, faults, failure types vs. occurrence frequency (days / weeks /
months) - named after Marvin (Marv) Paynter (Ford Motor Company). Also see “Paynter
Chart Example”.
Performance standard
The metric against which a complete action is compared.
PICK chart
Used for organizing process improvement ideas and categorizing them during the
Identify and Prioritize Opportunities Phase of a Lean Six Sigma project. When faced
with multiple improvement ideas a PICK chart may be used to determine the most
useful. There are four categories on a 2x2 matrix; horizontal is scale of payoff (or
benefits), vertical is ease of implementation. By deciding where an idea falls on the pick
chart four proposed project actions are provided; Possible, Implement, Challenge and
Kill (thus the name PICK). Also see “PICK Chart Example”.
Quality Definitions – Page 69 (Return to Index)
Pitch
The pace and flow of a product.
Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA)
A four-step process for quality improvement. In the first step (plan), a way to effect
improvement is developed. In the second step (do), the plan is carried out, preferably on
a small scale. In the third step (check), a study takes place between what was predicted
and what was observed in the previous step. In the last step (act), action is taken on the
causal system to effect the desired change. The plan-do-check-act cycle is sometimes
referred to as the Shewhart cycle, because Walter A. Shewhart discussed the concept
in his book Statistical Method From the Viewpoint of Quality Control, and as the Deming
cycle, because W. Edwards Deming introduced the concept in Japan. The Japanese
subsequently called it the Deming cycle. Also called the plan-do-study-act (PDSA) cycle.
Point kaizen
See “process kaizen”.
Point of use
A technique that ensures people have exactly what they need to do their jobs—work
instructions, parts, tools and equipment—where and when they need them.
Poisson distribution
A discrete probability distribution that expresses the probability of a number of events
occurring in a fixed time period if these events occur with a known average rate, and are
independent of the time since the last event.
Poka-yoke
A Japanese term that means "fail-safing" or "mistake-proofing". A poka-yoke is any
mechanism in a Lean manufacturing process that helps an equipment operator avoid
(yokeru) mistakes (poka). Its purpose is to eliminate product defects by preventing,
correcting, or drawing attention to human errors as they occur. Also see “baka-yoke”.
Quality Definitions – Page 70 (Return to Index)
Policy
An overarching plan (direction) for achieving an organization’s goals.
Policy deployment
The selection of goals and projects to achieve the goals, designation of people and
resources for project completion and establishment of project metrics. Also see “hoshin
kanri.”
Population
A theoretical, infinitely large sample.
Precision
The closeness of agreement between randomly selected individual measurements or
test results. Also see “accuracy”.
Preventive action
Action taken to remove or improve a process to prevent potential future occurrences of
a nonconformance. Analyzing possible failure modes and putting in place appropriate
action to avoid failure. For example; FMEAs, design reviews and validation, supplier
evaluations, preventative maintenance and calibration.
Prevention cost
The cost incurred by actions taken to prevent a nonconformance from occurring; one
element of cost of quality or cost of poor quality.
Probability (statistical)
The likelihood of occurrence of an event, action or item.
Quality Definitions – Page 71 (Return to Index)
Probability of acceptance
Percentage of inspection lots estimated to be of acceptable quality when subjected to a
specific sampling routine.
Probability of rejection
The probability that a lot will be rejected.
Problem solving
The act of defining a problem; determining the cause of the problem; identifying,
prioritizing and selecting alternatives for a solution; and implementing a solution.
Procedures
Documented processes that are used when work affects more than one function or
department of an organization. Or, the steps in a process and how these steps are to be
performed for the process to fulfill a customer’s requirements.
Process
A set of interrelated work activities characterized by a set of specific input(s) and value
added tasks that make up a procedure for a (set) of specific output(s). A combination of
people, equipment, methods, materials and environment that produces output (a given
product) or service. A process can involve any aspect of a business. All processes have
inherent statistical variability which can be evaluated by statistical control methods.
Process capability
A statistical measure of the inherent process variability of a given characteristic. The
most widely accepted formula for process capability is 6 sigma. A measurable property
of a process to the specification, expressed as a process capability index (e.g., C pk or
C pm ) or as a process performance index (e.g., P pk or P pm ). The output of this
measurement is usually illustrated by a histogram and calculations that predict how
many parts will be produced out of specification. The concept of process capability only
holds meaning for processes that are in a state of statistical process control (SPC).
Process control
The method for keeping a process within boundaries; the act of minimizing the variation
of a process.
Process dispersion
The standard deviation of f(x), symbolized by “σ”, the Greek letter known as “sigma”.
Process improvement
A series of actions taken by a process owner to identify, analyze and improve existing
processes within an organization to meet new goals and objectives. These actions often
follow a specific methodology or strategy to create successful results. The application of
the plan-do-check-act cycle to processes to produce positive improvement and better
meet the needs and expectations of customers.
Process kaizen
Improvements made at an individual process or in a specific area. Sometimes called
“point kaizen”.
Quality Definitions – Page 74 (Return to Index)
Process location
The mean or average of f(x), symbolized by “μ”, the Greek letter known as “mu”.
Process management
The pertinent techniques and tools applied to a process to implement and improve
process effectiveness, hold the gains and ensure process integrity in fulfilling customer
requirements.
Process owner
The person who coordinates the various functions and work activities at all levels of a
process, has the authority or ability to make changes in the process as required and
manages the entire process cycle to ensure performance effectiveness.
Process quality
The value of percentage defective or of defects per hundred units in product from a
given process. Note: The symbols “p” and “c” are commonly used to represent the true
process average in fraction defective or defects per unit; and “l00p” and “100c” the true
process average in percentage defective or in defects per hundred units.
Process re-engineering
A strategy directed toward major rethinking and restructuring of a process; often referred
to as the “clean sheet of paper” approach.
Production
See “manufacturing”.
Production smoothing
Keeping total manufacturing volume as constant as possible. Also see “heijunka”.
Production tooling
Manufacturing aids such as cutting tools, dies, fixtures, gauges, jigs, molds, and
patterns of a specialized nature which (unless substantially modified) are limited in use
to a specific production line or the performance of a specific contract or job.
Product warranty
An organization’s stated policy that it will replace, repair or reimburse a buyer for a
product if a product defect occurs under certain conditions and within a stated period of
time.
Productivity
A measurement of output for a given amount of input.
Project management
The application of knowledge, skills, tools and techniques to a broad range of activities
to meet the requirements of a particular project.
Project team
Manages the work of a project. The work typically involves balancing competing
demands for project scope, time, cost, risk and quality, satisfying stakeholders with
differing needs and expectations and meeting identified requirements.
Proportion chart
See “percent chart.”
Pull system
A method of controlling the flow of resources by replacing what has been consumed. An
alternative to scheduling individual processes, in which the customer process withdraws
the items it needs from a supermarket and the supplying process produces to replenish
what was withdrawn; used to avoid push. Also see “kanban”.
Quality Definitions – Page 77 (Return to Index)
Q9000 series
Refers to ANSI/ISO/ASQ Q9000 series of standards, which is the verbatim American
adoption of the 2000 edition of the ISO 9000 series standards.
QS 9000
Establishes a set of standards for the automotive industry. This standard incorporates
ISO 9001 plus the automotive requirements. The QS-9000 3rd Edition will expire 14 Dec
2006 (and ISO 9000:1994 expires 15 Dec 2003). Beyond that date, ISO/TS 16949:2002
will replace QS-9000. TS 16949 is more process driven and is expected to help
streamline the quality systems further.
Qualitician
Someone who functions as both a quality practitioner and a quality technician.
Quality
A subjective term for which each person or sector has its own definition. In technical
usage, quality can have two meanings:
1. The characteristics of a product or service that bear on its ability to satisfy stated
or implied needs.
2. A product or service free of deficiencies. According to Joseph Juran, quality
means “fitness for use”; according to Philip Crosby, it means “conformance to
requirements.”
Quality audit
A systematic, independent examination and review to determine whether quality
activities and related results comply with plans and whether these plans are
implemented effectively and are suitable to achieve the objectives.
Quality circle
A team that follows a standard process of problem identification, root cause analysis,
problem solving and implementation. A quality improvement or self-improvement study
group composed of a small number of employees (10 or fewer) and their supervisor.
Quality circles originated in Japan, where they are called quality control circles.
Quality control
See “quality assurance/quality control”.
Quality costs
See “cost of poor quality”.
Quality engineering
The analysis of a manufacturing system at all stages to maximize the quality of the
process itself and the products it produces. “Quality Excellence” for suppliers of
telecommunications. A set of operational, managerial and engineering activities that a
company uses to ensure the quality characteristics of a product are at the nominal or
required levels.
Quality improvement
Quality is inversely proportional to variability. Quality Improvement is the reduction of
variability in products and processes.
Quality Definitions – Page 79 (Return to Index)
Quality lever
This concept demonstrates that the earlier in the manufacturing process a quality
correction or improvement is made, the greater the payoff - both in fixing the process
and in reducing the costs. Theoretically, an investment in product engineering quality
will give you a payback of 100:1 by the time your product is shipped. At the
manufacturing engineering stage investment will have a payback of 10:1 greater than
those made at final inspection.
Quality manual
A Quality Manual is the supplier's document that describes the elements of the quality
system used to assure customer requirements, needs, and expectations are met.
Quality manuals shall include responsibilities and authorities for each element of the
quality system.
Quality month
Quality month is celebrated annually in October in North America. This was started by
the American Society for Quality in the early 1980s. Individuals and organizations hold
special events to strengthen their commitment to quality and celebrate performance
excellence.
Quality plan
A document or set of documents that describe the standards, quality practices,
resources and processes pertinent to a specific product, service or project.
Quality planning
Quality Planning is a structured process for defining the methods that will be used in the
production of a specific product or family of products. Quality planning embodies the
concepts of defect prevention and continuous improvement as contrasted with defect
detection.
Quality policy
An organization’s general statement of its beliefs about quality, how quality will come
about and its expected result.
Quality rate
See “first pass yield”.
Quality Definitions – Page 81 (Return to Index)
Quality records
Quality Records are the documented evidence that the supplier's processes were
executed according to the quality system documentation and records results.
Quality tool
An instrument or technique to support and improve the activities of process quality
management and improvement.
Quality trilogy
A three-pronged approach to managing for quality. The three legs are quality planning
(developing the products and processes required to meet customer needs), quality
control (meeting product and process goals) and quality improvement (achieving
unprecedented levels of performance).
QuEST Forum
A partnership of telecommunications suppliers and service providers. The QuEST
Forum developed TL 9000.
Queue time
Time a product waits between the value-added process steps. If inventory exists
between process steps, can be approximated by dividing the inventory by customer
demand for a time frame.
Quick changeover
The ability to change tooling and fixtures rapidly (usually within minutes) so multiple
products can be run on the same machine.
Quincunx
A tool that creates frequency distributions. Beads tumble over numerous horizontal rows
of pins, which force the beads to the right or left. After a random journey, the beads are
dropped into vertical slots. After many beads are dropped, a frequency distribution
results. Quincunxes are often used in classrooms to simulate a manufacturing process.
The quincunx was invented by English scientist Francis Galton in the 1890s.
Quality Definitions – Page 82 (Return to Index)
RABQSA International
Organization that designs, develops and delivers personnel and training certification
sources.
RAM
Reliability/availability/maintainability.
Random cause
A cause of variation due to chance and not assignable to any factor.
Random sampling
A commonly used sampling technique in which sample units are selected so all
combinations of n units under consideration have an equal chance of being selected as
the sample.
Range (statistical)
The measure of dispersion in a data set (the difference between the highest and lowest
values).
Random sample
A sampling method whereby each service output in a lot has an equal chance of being
selected.
Random sampling
A method of looking at a few individual items in a lot to determine the quality of that lot
against a standard.
Quality Definitions – Page 83 (Return to Index)
Rational subgroup
A rational subgroup is one in which the samples are selected so that the chance for
variation due to special causes occurring within a subgroup is minimized, while the
chance for special cause variation between subgroups is maximized. The key item to
remember when developing a sampling plan is that the variation between subgroups is
going to be compared to the variation within subgroups. Taking consecutive samples for
the subgroups minimizes the opportunity for the process to change and should minimize
the within-subgroup variation. The sampling frequency will determine the opportunity the
process has to change between subgroups. The variation within a subgroup represents
the piece-to-piece variation over a short period of time. Any significant variation between
subgroups would reflect changes in the process that should be investigated for
appropriate action. (Source: AIAG SPC Manual).
Reengineering
A breakthrough approach for restructuring an entire organization and its processes.
Registered suppliers
Registered Suppliers are suppliers who have received third party registration to a
specific quality system standard for the commodity supplied.
Registrar
Generally accepted U.S. equivalent term for “certification body.”
Quality Definitions – Page 84 (Return to Index)
Registration
The act of including an organization, product, service or process in a compilation of
those having the same or similar attributes.
Registration to standards
A process in which an accredited, independent third-party organization conducts an on-
site audit of a company’s operations against the requirements of the standard to which
the company wants to be registered. Upon successful completion of the audit, the
company receives a certificate indicating it has met the standard requirements. In
countries outside the United States, this generally known as certification.
Regression analysis
Any techniques for modeling and analyzing several variables, when the focus is on the
relationship between a dependent variable and one or more independent variables.
Helps to understand how the typical value of the dependent variable changes when any
one of the independent variables is varied, while the other independent variables are
held fixed.
Rejection number
The smallest number of defectives (or defects) in the sample or samples under
consideration that will require rejection of the lot.
Relations diagram
See “interrelationship diagram”. Also see “Relations Diagram Example”.
Reliability
The probability of a product’s performing its intended function under stated conditions
without failure for a given period of time.
Rengi system
Formal decision process.
Required waste
Process that adds no value to the product, but is required by the current process.
Quality Definitions – Page 85 (Return to Index)
Requirements
The ability of an item to perform a required function under stated conditions for a stated
period of time.
Resource utilization
Using a resource in a way that increases throughput.
Results
The effects that an organization obtains at the conclusion of a time period.
Rework
Action taken on nonconforming product so that it will meet the specified requirements.
Right size
Matching tooling and equipment to the job and space requirements of lean production.
Right sizing is a process that challenges the complexity of equipment by examining how
equipment fits into an overall vision for workflow through a factory. When possible, right
sizing favors smaller, dedicated machines rather than large, multipurpose batch
processing ones.
Risk analysis
Risk analysis has a primary purpose of answering two questions - 1. what can go
wrong? and, 2. if something does go wrong, what is the probability of it happening &
what are the consequences?
Risk management
Using managerial resources to integrate risk identification, risk assessment, risk
prioritization, development of risk handling strategies and mitigation of risk to acceptable
levels.
Quality Definitions – Page 86 (Return to Index)
Robust design
The design of products to be less sensitive to variations, including manufacturing
variation, environment and abuse, increasing the probability that they will perform as
intended. It is an integrated system of tools and techniques that are aimed at reducing
product or process performance variability while simultaneously guiding that
performance towards an optimal setting. Robustness measures are usually
implemented for designs that are new so that the best values of the critical functional
parameters are uncovered. Robust design follows the methods first proposed by
Genichi Taguchi.
Root cause
The source of a problem which, if eliminated, would prevent recurrence of the issue. A
factor that caused a nonconformance and should be permanently eliminated through
process improvement.
Run chart
Also known as a “run-sequence plot” is a chart showing a line connecting numerous
data points collected from a process running over time. Often, the data displayed
represent some aspect of the output or performance of a manufacturing or other
business process. One of the 7 Basic Tools of Quality Control. Also see “Run Chart
Example”.
Runner
A person on the production floor who paces the entire value stream through the pickup
and delivery of materials through kanban usage.
Quality Definitions – Page 88 (Return to Index)
SAE International
Professional organization of individual engineers and related disciplines; formerly
Society for Automotive Engineers.
Sample
In acceptance sampling, one or more units of product (or a quantity of material) drawn
from a lot for purposes of inspection to reach a decision regarding acceptance of the lot.
Samples need to be random, independent and unbiased.
Sampling at random
As commonly used in acceptance sampling theory, the process of selecting sample
units so all units under consideration have the same probability of being selected. Note:
Equal probabilities are not necessary for random sampling; what is necessary is that the
probability of selection be ascertainable. However, the stated properties of published
sampling tables are based on the assumption of random sampling with equal
probabilities. An acceptable method of random selection with equal probabilities is the
use of a table of random numbers in a standard manner.
Sampling, double
Sampling inspection in which the inspection of the first sample leads to a decision to
accept a lot, reject it or take a second sample; the inspection of a second sample, when
required, then leads to a decision to accept or to reject the lot.
Sampling, multiple
Sampling inspection in which, after each sample is inspected, the decision is made to
accept a lot, reject it or take another sample. But there is a prescribed maximum number
of samples, after which a decision to accept or reject the lot must be reached. Note:
Multiple sampling as defined here has sometimes been called “sequential n sampling” or
“truncated sequential e sampling.” The term “multiple sampling” is recommended.
Sampling plan
A scheme for determining sample sizes and actions for making decisions. 'The decision,
based on counting the number of defectives in a sample, can be to accept the lot, reject
the lot, or even, for multiple or sequential sampling schemes, to take another sample
and then repeat the decision process'.
Sampling, single
Sampling inspection in which the decision to accept or to reject a lot is based on the
inspection of one sample.
Quality Definitions – Page 89 (Return to Index)
Sampling, unit
Sequential sampling inspection in which, after each unit is inspected, the decision is
made to accept a lot, reject it or to inspect another unit.
Sanitizing
English translation of seiso, one of the Japanese 5S’s used for workplace organization.
Sanitizing (also referred to as shining or sweeping) is the act of cleaning the work area.
Dirt is often the root cause of premature equipment wear, safety problems and defects.
Satisfier
A term used to describe the quality level received by a customer when a product or
service meets expectations.
SCAMPER
SCAMPER stands for a checklist that helps the creative process - substitute, combine,
adapt, modify, put (to other uses), eliminate, reverse.
Scedasticity
The relationship between the value of input variables and the variation (rather than the
mean) of the output. Where variation changes with the input variable (for example,
variation increases over time) then the process demonstrates hetero-scedasticity
(sequence of random variables having different variances). Where variation is constant
the process demonstrates homo-scedasticity (sequence of random variables having a
constant variance).
Scientific management/approach
A term referring to the intent to find and use the best way to perform tasks to improve
quality, productivity and efficiency.
s chart
A type of control chart used to monitor a variables data when samples are collected at
regular intervals from a business or industrial process. The s chart plots the mean value
for the quality characteristic across all units in the sample, , plus the standard
deviation of the quality characteristic across all units in the sample. Also see “Control
Chart Examples”.
Quality Definitions – Page 90 (Return to Index)
Scorecard
An evaluation device, usually in the form of a questionnaire, that specifies the criteria
customers will use to rate your business’ performance in satisfying customer
requirements.
Seiban
The name of a Japanese management practice taken from the words sei, which means
manufacturing, and ban, which means number. A seiban number is assigned to all
parts, materials and purchase orders associated with a particular customer job, project
or anything else. This enables a manufacturer to track everything related to a particular
product, project or customer, and facilitates setting aside inventory for specific projects
or priorities. That makes it an effective practice for project and build-to-order
manufacturing.
Sentinel event
Healthcare term for any event not consistent with the desired, normal or usual operation
of the organization. Also known as an adverse event.
Setup time
The elapsed time from production of the last good product to the production of the first
good product; associated with changing the process from one product to another.
Seven wastes
See “eight wastes”.
Shadow board
A tool painted to indicate where tools belong and which tools are missing. An example
of visual management or visual control.
Shewhart cycle
See “plan-do-check-act cycle.”
Shift
Changes over time - data typically shifts 1.5 sigma levels (a key measure of process
capability) between short-term and long-term.
Sifting
English translation of Japanese seiri, one of the 5S’s used for workplace organization.
Sifting involves screening through unnecessary materials and simplifying the work
environment. Sifting is separating the essential from the nonessential.
Sigma
18th letter of the Greek alphabet. Mathematically understood to represent standard
deviation in a normally distributed process.
Simulation
The practice of mimicking some or all of the behavior of one system with a different,
dissimilar system. A 3-D technique to balance a line. It involves using cardboard, wood
and plastic foam to create full-sized equipment mock-ups that can be easily moved to
obtain an optimum layout.
Simultaneous engineering
A way of simultaneously designing products, and the processes for manufacturing those
products, through the use of cross functional teams to assure manufacturability and to
reduce cycle time.
Quality Definitions – Page 92 (Return to Index)
Single-piece flow
A process in which products proceed, one complete product at a time, through various
operations in design, order taking and production without interruptions, backflows or
scrap.
SIPOC
SIPOC is a tool used by Six Sigma process improvement teams to identify all relevant
elements (Suppliers, Inputs, Process, Outputs, Customers) of a process improvement
project before work begins.
Six Sigma
Philosophy focuses on defect prevention through the use of statistical tools as opposed
to defect detection through inspection. Six Sigma seeks to improve the quality of
process output(s) by identifying and removing the causes of defects (errors) and
minimizing variability in manufacturing and business processes. It uses a set of quality
management methods, including statistical methods, and creates a special infrastructure
of people within the organization ("Black Belts", "Green Belts", etc.) who are experts in
these methods. Each Six Sigma project carried out within an organization follows a
defined sequence of steps and has quantified targets. These targets can be financial
(cost reduction or profit increase) or whatever is critical to the customer of that process
(cycle time, safety, delivery, etc.). The increase in performance and decrease in process
variation lead to defect reduction and improvement in profits, employee morale and
quality of products or services. Six Sigma quality is a term generally used to indicate a
process is well controlled (±6 sigma from the centerline in a control chart).
Skewed distribution
See “non-normal distribution”.
Special causes
Variation that is a result of a special circumstance. On a control chart, by definition,
special causes always fall outside control limits. Causes of variation that arise because
of special circumstances. They are not an inherent part of a process. Special causes are
also referred to as assignable causes. Also see “common causes”.
Quality Definitions – Page 93 (Return to Index)
Sort
English translation of the Japanese word seiri, one of the 5S’s used for workplace
organization. Sorting (also referred to as structuring or sifting) involves organizing
essential materials. It helps the operator to find materials when needed.
Special characteristic
Automotive ISO TS 16949 term for key product or process characteristics.
Specifications
Specifications are engineering requirements for judging the acceptability of a part
characteristic. For the production part approval process (PPAP), every feature of the
product as identified by engineering specifications must be measured. Actual
measurement and test results are required. Specifications should not be confused with
control limits which represent "the voice of the process".
Spider diagram
A visual reporting tool for the performance of a number of indicators. Also known as
"radar chart" this tool makes visible the gaps between the current and desired
performance. Also see “Spider Diagram Example”.
Sponsor
The person who supports a team’s plans, activities and outcomes.
Stable process
A process which is free of assignable causes (in statistical control - a quantitative
condition which describes a process that is free of assignable / special causes of
variation).
Stability
The total variation in the measurements obtained with a measurement system (gauge)
on the same master or part when measuring a single characteristic over an extended
time period. Also known as drift.
Quality Definitions – Page 94 (Return to Index)
Stakeholder
Any individual, group or organization that will have a significant impact on or will be
significantly impacted by the quality of a specific product or service.
Standard
The metric, specification, gauge, statement, category, segment, grouping, behavior,
event or physical product sample against which the output(s) of a process are compared
and declared acceptable or unacceptable.
Standard work
A precise description of each work activity, specifying cycle time, takt time, the work
sequence of specific tasks and the minimum inventory of parts on hand needed to
conduct the activity. All jobs are organized around human motion to create an efficient
sequence without waste. Work organized in such a way is called standard(ized) work.
The three elements that make up standard work are takt time, working sequence and
standard in-process stock.
Quality Definitions – Page 95 (Return to Index)
Standardization
When policies and common procedures are used to manage processes throughout the
system. Also, English translation of the Japanese word seiketsu, one of the Japanese
5S’s used for workplace organization.
Statistical control
Is the condition of a process from which all special causes of variation have been
eliminated and only common causes remain. Statistical control is evidenced on ,a
control chart by the absence of points beyond the control limits and by the absence of
any non-random patterns or trends.
Statistics
A field that involves tabulating, depicting and describing data sets; a formalized body of
techniques characteristically involving attempts to infer the properties of a large
collection of data from inspection of a sample of the collection.
Strategic planning
The process an organization uses to envision its future and develop the appropriate
strategies, goals, objectives and action plans.
Quality Definitions – Page 96 (Return to Index)
Stratification
A process of grouping data according to a common characteristic.
See “flow chart” or “run chart”. One of the 7 Basic Tools of Quality Control.
Stretch goals
Goals and objectives that require employees to achieve more than normally thought
possible.
Structural variation
Variation caused by regular, systematic changes in output, such as seasonal patterns
and long-term trends.
Sub-grouping
A method of organizing (classify, stratify, group, etc.) data from a process to ensure the
greatest similarity among the data in each subgroup and the greatest difference among
the data in different subgroups. Groups need to be selected rationally, i.e. you have a
belief that the groups are different and important.
Submission level
Refers to the level of evidence required for production part submissions. (Refer to the
PPAP manual and/or Local PPAP Addendum)
Sub-optimization
A condition in which gains made in one activity are offset by losses in another activity or
activities that are caused by the same actions that created gains in the first activity.
Subsystem
A major part of a system which itself has the characteristics of a system, usually
consisting of several components.
Supermarket
The storage locations of parts before they go on to the next operation. Supermarkets
are managed by predetermined maximum and minimum inventory levels. Each item in
the plant is at a designated location.
Quality Definitions – Page 97 (Return to Index)
Suppliers
Suppliers are defined as providers of production materials, production or service parts,
heat treating, plating, painting or other finishing services. Or, a source of materials,
service or information input provided to a process.
Supply chain
The series of suppliers to a given process.
Surveillance
The continual monitoring of a process; a type of periodic assessment or audit conducted
to determine whether a process continues to perform to a predetermined standard.
Survey
The act of examining a process or questioning a selected sample of individuals to obtain
data about a process, product or service.
Quality Definitions – Page 98 (Return to Index)
Sustain
The English translation of shitsuke, one of the 5S’s used for workplace organization.
Sustaining (also referred to as self-disciplining) is the continuation of sorting, setting in
order and sanitizing. It addresses the need to perform the 5S’s on an ongoing and
systematic basis.
Symptom
An observable phenomenon arising from and accompanying a defect.
Synectics
Developed by W. Gordon (1961), this method uses analogies and metaphors trigger
idea generation. This method is based on the fact that the mind is more productive when
dealing with a new or foreign environment. the analogous situation takes the individual
away from the exact problem at and requires him/her to consider a related problem.
System
A combination of several components or pieces of equipment integrated to perform a
specific function. Or, a group of interdependent processes and people that together
perform a common mission.
System kaizen
Improvement aimed at an entire value stream.
Quality Definitions – Page 99 (Return to Index)
Taguchi methods
Statistical methods developed by Genichi Taguchi to improve the quality of
manufactured goods, and more recently also applied to, engineering, biotechnology,
marketing and advertising. The American Supplier Institute’s trademarked term for the
quality engineering methodology. In this engineering approach to quality control,
Taguchi calls for off-line quality control, on-line quality control and a system of
experimental design to improve quality and reduce costs.
Takt time
“Takt” is German for the word metronome. It synchronizes the pace of the process to
match the pace of customer demand. Calculated as available time divided by customer
demand.
Takt is the heartbeat of a lean system. It is the rate of customer demand. It is the tool to
link production to the customer by matching the pace of production to the pace of actual
final sales. It defines the rate which material and product flow through the value stream.
First, you calculate actual takt times for each product and part (takt time = total time
available for production / customer demand, where, customer demand = total production
requirement / total available production time). It is used to design assembly and other
processes, to assess production conditions, calculate pitch, develop material handling
processes, determine problem-response requirements, and so on. To run faster than
takt time anywhere in the value stream is overproduction, resulting in excess inventory.
To run slower than takt time creates the need for accelerated production, overtime, and
expedited shipments. Also see “cycle time”.
Tampering
Action taken to compensate for variation within the control limits of a stable system;
tampering increases rather than decreases variation, as evidenced in the funnel
experiment.
Task
A specific, definable activity to perform an assigned piece of work, often finished within a
certain time.
Team
A group of individuals organized to work together to accomplish a specific objective.
3P
The Production Preparation Process is a tool for creating lean manufacturing
environments. It is a highly disciplined, standardized model that results in the
development of an improved production process in which low waste levels are achieved
at low capital cost.
Throughput
The rate the system generates money through sales, or the conversion rate of inventory
into shipped product.
Throughput time
Cycle Time + Queue Time; actual time for a product to move through a production
process.
Timing plan
A plan that lists tasks, assignments, events, and timing required to provide a product
that meets customer needs and expectations.
Quality Definitions – Page 101 (Return to Index)
TL 9000
A quality management standard for the telecommunications industry based on ISO
9000. Its purpose is to define the requirements for the design, development, production,
delivery, installation and maintenance of products and services. Included are cost and
performance based measurements that measure reliability and quality performance of
the products and services.
Tolerance
The maximum and minimum limit values a product can have and still meet customer
requirements.
Tolerance design
A technique using Taguchi Methods or Design of Experiments to identify how much
each tolerance contributes to the final Quality and Reliability to help the engineer decide
which tolerance to improve and which tolerance to relax. Tolerance design increases
product / manufacturing cost and should be done when parameter design has not
sufficiently reduced variation.
Total quality
A strategic integrated system for achieving customer satisfaction that involves all
managers and employees and uses quantitative methods to continuously improve an
organization’s processes.
Touzen
Unnecessary Kaizen
Transaction data
The finite data pertaining to a given event occurring in a process. Examples are the data
obtained when an individual checks out groceries (the grocery shopping process) and
the data obtained from testing a machined component (the final product inspection step
of the manufacturing process).
Tree diagram
A visual representation of the major functions performed by a system which shows
logical components and sub-components. A management tool that depicts the hierarchy
of tasks and subtasks needed to complete an objective. The finished diagram bears a
resemblance to a tree. Also see “Tree Diagram Example”.
Trend
The graphical representation of a variable’s tendency over time to increase, decrease,
or remain unchanged.
TRIZ
TRIZ (Teoriya Resheniya Izobreatatelskikh Zadatch), the Russian language acronym for
the Theory of Inventive Problem Solving is a product of the cataloguing and analysis of
empirical data. A structured methodology which contains an algorithm for isolating the
principal technology / engineering conflict which limits or prevents satisfactory
performance of a system. The identified conflict is then categorized using established
physical laws, principles, or relationships, thereby enabling fundamental solutions to be
derived based upon proven (sometimes previously unrelated) technology.
t-test
A method to assess whether the means of two groups are statistically different from
each other. Used to test means or location effects. For example, used to compare the
mean output of Line A vs. the mean output of Line B. [Statistical inference tests to
compare the quality of different products / processes and compare the performance of
different groups.]
Type I errors
An incorrect decision to reject something (such as a statistical hypothesis or a lot of
products) when it is acceptable. Type I error (also known as alpha error) - conclude a
difference exists when no difference exists. (for example, you say two machines
produce different mean output(s) when they do not.).
Type II errors
An incorrect decision to accept something when it is unacceptable. Type II error (also
known as beta error) - conclude no difference exists when it does. (For example, say
two machines produce similar mean output(s) when in fact they do).
Quality Definitions – Page 104 (Return to Index)
u-chart
A type of control chart used to monitor "count" type data where the sample size is
greater than one, typically the average number of nonconformities per unit. The u-chart
differs from the c-chart in that it accounts for the possibility that the number or size of
inspection units for which nonconformities are to be counted may vary. Also see
“Control Chart Examples”.
Unit
An object for which a measurement or observation can be made; commonly used in the
sense of a “unit of product,” the entity of product inspected to determine whether it is
defective or non-defective.
Uptime
See “equipment availability”.
Quality Definitions – Page 105 (Return to Index)
Validation
The act of confirming a product or service meets the requirements for which it was
intended.
Validity
The ability of a feedback instrument to measure what it was intended to measure; also,
the degree to which inferences derived from measurements are meaningful.
Value
A capability provided to a customer at the right time at an appropriate price, as defined
in each case by the voice of the customer.
Value-added
A term used to describe activities that transform Inputs into a customer (internal or
external) usable Outputs. Transforms the form, fit and or function of a product, material,
or service as defined by the customer the first time. Also see “non-value added”.
Value analysis
Analyzing the value stream to identify value added and non-value added activities.
Value engineering
Analyzing the components and process that create a product, with an emphasis on
minimizing costs while maintaining standards required by the customer.
Value stream
All activities, both value added and non-value added, required to bring a product from
raw material state into the hands of the customer, bring a customer requirement from
order to delivery and bring a design from concept to launch. Also see “information flow”
and “hoshin planning”.
Values
The fundamental beliefs that drive organizational behavior and decision making.
Variables data
The quantitative results where measurements are used for analysis. Examples include
the diameter of a bearing journal in millimeters, the closing effort of a door in newtons,
the concentration of an electrolyte in percent, and the torque of a fastener in newton-
meters. Measurement information. Control charts based on variable data include
average (X-bar) chart, range (R) chart, and sample standard deviation (s) chart.
Variation
A change in data, characteristic or function caused by one of four factors: special
causes, common causes, tampering or structural variation.
VA / VE
Value Analysis/Value Engineering. VA / VE is a systematic effort to improve upon cost
and/or performance of products (services) either purchased or produced. It examines
the materials, processes, information systems, and the flow of materials involved.
Verification
The act of determining whether products and services conform to specific requirements.
Virtual team
Remotely situated individuals affiliated with a common organization, purpose or project,
who conduct their joint effort via electronic communication.
Quality Definitions – Page 107 (Return to Index)
Vision
An overarching statement of the way an organization wants to be; an ideal state of being
at a future point.
Visual control
Also known as visual management. Any devices that help operators quickly and
accurately gauge production status at a glance. Progress indicators and problem
indicators help assemblers see when production is ahead, behind or on schedule. They
allow everyone to instantly see the group’s performance and increase the sense of
ownership in the area. Examples include temperature gauges, control charts, tool
boards, etc. Also see “andon board”, “kanban”, “production board”, “painted floor” and
“shadow board”.
Voluntary standard
A standard that imposes no inherent obligation regarding its use.
Quality Definitions – Page 108 (Return to Index)
Waiver
Written authorization to use or release a quantity of material, components, or stores
already manufactured but not conforming to the specified requirements.
Warrant
Warrant is an industry-standard document required for all newly-tooled or revised
products in which the supplier confirms that inspections and tests on production parts
show conformance to customer requirements.
Waste
Anything that adds cost without producing a corresponding benefit. Or, any activity that
consumes resources and produces no added value to the product or service a customer
receives. Also known as “muda”.
Weighed voting
A way to prioritize a list of issues, ideas or attributes by assigning points to each item
based on its relative importance.
Work in process
Items between machines or equipment waiting to be processed (completed).
Work team
See “natural team”.
Working sequence
One of three elements of standard work; refers to the sequence of operations in a single
process that leads a floor worker to most efficiently produce quality goods.
World-class quality
A term used to indicate a standard of excellence: best of the best.
Quality Definitions – Page 109 (Return to Index)
x
The input(s) to a process (input(s) for individual process steps/tasks are identified using
the lower-case “x”). Six Sigma term for variables that are independent, root causes; as
opposed to y's, which are dependent output(s) of a process. Six Sigma works on
measuring and improving x's, to see subsequent improvement in y's. Also see “y=f(x)”.
X-Bar Chart ( )
An “averages” chart, also called the “between” chart because the points represent
variation between groups; this control chart examines the average of samples in a
subgroup. Also see “Control Chart Examples”.
y
The output of a process (output(s) of individual process steps/tasks are identified using
the lower-case “y”).
y = f(x)
Function used to describe a process whereby x’s represent all the input(s) to a process
(factors) and y represents the output of the process (response).
Yamazumi board
Cycle time mapping process to identify value-added and non-value added activities.
Yamazumi charts
A Yamazumi chart is a stacked bar chart that shows the balance of cycle time workloads
between a number of operators typically in an assembly line or work cell. The
Yamazumi chart can be either for a single product or multi product assembly line.
Yamazumi is a Japanese word that literally means to stack up. Shows the planned
cycle times for each process. Also see “Yamazumi Chart Example”.
Yokaten
Across everywhere. Plant related activities and/or countermeasures that are
communicated plant wide and with other company affiliates.
Zero Defects
Proposed by Philip Crosby as part of the book 'Quality is Free', is a business practice
which aims to reduce and minimize the number of defects and errors in a process and to
do things right the first time. States that if people commit themselves to watching details
and avoiding errors, they can move closer to the goal of zero defects.
Quality Addendums – Page 1 (Return to Index)
Just like control charts tell us about the stability of the process, capability analyses tell
us about process capability. Capability Indices help us judge whether the process is
capable of producing parts that are within specifications. Among the various capability
indices, Cpk and Ppk are popular in the manufacturing world. However, many users
report they are also the most confusing.
These two indices consider process centering to calculate the process capability.
Where:
= Average of all readings
USL= Upper Specified Limit
LSL = Lower Specification Limit
S (Sample Sigma) =
So which capability index should you use, Cpk or Ppk? Although they show similar
information, they have slightly different uses.
Cpk uses an "estimated sigma" value in its formula. It is commonly used to measure
whether the process is capable of meeting a customer's requirements.
Ppk uses the "actual sigma" value in its formula so it is commonly used to measure
whether the process is actually meeting a customer's requirements.
Quality Addendums – Page 2 (Return to Index)
Dark blue is less than one standard deviation from the mean. For the normal
distribution, this accounts for about 68% of the set (dark blue), while two standard
deviations from the mean (medium and dark blue) account for about 95%, and three
standard deviations (light, medium, and dark blue) account for about 99.7%.
About 68% of values drawn from a normal distribution are within one standard deviation
σ > 0 away from the mean μ; about 95% of the values are within two standard deviations
and about 99.7% lie within three standard deviations. This is known as the 68-95-99.7
rule, or the empirical rule, or the 3-sigma rule.
Quality Addendums – Page 3 (Return to Index)
For skewed distributions, it is quite common to have one tail of the distribution
considerably longer or drawn out relative to the other tail. A "skewed right" distribution is
one in which the tail is on the right side. A "skewed left" distribution is one in which the
tail is on the left side. The above histogram is for a distribution that is skewed right.
For a skewed distribution, however, there is no "center" in the usual sense of the word.
Be that as it may, several "typical value" metrics are often used for skewed distributions.
The first metric is the mode of the distribution. Unfortunately, for severely-skewed
distributions, the mode may be at or near the left or right tail of the data and so it seems
not to be a good representative of the center of the distribution. As a second choice, one
could conceptually argue that the mean (the point on the horizontal axis where the
distribution would balance) would serve well as the typical value. As a third choice,
others may argue that the median (that value on the horizontal axis which has exactly
50% of the data to the left (and also to the right) would serve as a good typical value.
For symmetric distributions, the conceptual problem disappears because at the
population level the mode, mean, and median are identical. For skewed distributions,
however, these 3 metrics are markedly different. In practice, for skewed distributions the
most commonly reported typical value is the mean; the next most common is the
median; the least common is the mode. Because each of these 3 metrics reflects a
different aspect of "centerness", it is recommended that the analyst report at least 2
(mean and median), and preferably all 3 (mean, median, and mode) in summarizing and
characterizing a data set.
Quality Addendums – Page 4 (Return to Index)
Data collected in scientific and engineering applications often have a lower bound of
zero. For example, failure data must be non-negative. Many measurement processes
generate only positive data. Time to occurrence and size are common measurements
that cannot be less than zero.
A Gantt chart is a type of bar chart that illustrates a project schedule. Gantt charts
illustrate the start and finish dates of the terminal elements and summary elements of a
project. Terminal elements and summary elements comprise the work breakdown
structure of the project. Some Gantt charts also show the dependency (i.e., precedence
network) relationships between activities.
Quality Addendums – Page 5 (Return to Index)
The goal is to create a map, with minimum delay, while observing the target process in
situation. Thus, value stream maps are usually drawn by hand in pencil to keep the
mapping process simple and allow for simple correction.
However, software tools are emerging as an alternative. A variety are available either as
stand alone products or stencils/add-ons to products such as Microsoft Visio, allCLEAR,
iGrafx, ARIS Platform, FlowCharter and QPR ProcessGuide.
Quality Addendums – Page 6 (Return to Index)
Control Chart Examples: (created using the QI Macros SPC Software for Excel )
A control chart monitors process performance and identifies process shifts. Control
charts can be used in many ways to monitor:
The most common type of control chart used to monitor a product specification is an "X"
chart: XmR, XbarR or XbarS chart.
In this control chart example. we're measuring an individual piston ring diameter using
an XmR chart. The XmR or Individuals and Moving Range chart has two charts: one
shows individual measurements over time and the other monitors the range (i.e.,
difference) between measurements.
In this control chart example, while the X chart appears to be in control, the range chart
shows a potentially unstable condition: too many points in a row hugging the center line.
Using five samples per subgroup in this control chart example, the variation in range
shows that it's in control.
With five samples per subgroup, you could also use the X bar S Chart - Average and
Standard Deviation.
Another common type of control chart involves measuring defects and defect rates.
In the control chart example below, the XmR chart shows patient falls per 1000 patient
days. The downward trend (red below) was caused by an improvement project. The
limits were changed to reflect the new process performance: less variation and lower
falls rate.
A quality tool, also called a Juran diagram, that is based the Pareto Principle, which
uses attribute or discrete data with the data arranged in descending order, and with the
most occurrences shown first. May use a cumulative line to mark percentages for each
group or bar, which distinguishes the Pareto Principal or the 80/20 rules that states 20
percent of items will cause 80 percent of the problems.
Paint Nonconformities
Number Category Freq. Percent Cumulative %
2 Lt. Spray 582 30.9 30.9
7 Runs 434 23.1 54.0
3 Drips 227 12.1 66.1
1 Blister 212 11.3 77.4
5 Splatter 141 7.5 84.8
6 Bad Paint 126 6.7 91.5
4 Overspray 109 5.8 97.3
8 Other 50 2.7 100.0
Quality Addendums – Page 14 (Return to Index)
The Paynter Chart is a tool that goes beyond a Pareto. A Pareto focuses on problems
that offer the greatest potential for improvement by showing their relative frequency or
size. A Paynter Chart goes beyond the Pareto by sub-grouping the Pareto bars. The
subgroups could be days, hours, etc.
The Paynter Chart is based on the Pareto principle, which focuses on the areas of
priority and quickly puts them in a simple graphical form by subgroups. It helps your
team focus their efforts where they can have greatest impact. It allows you to
determine the composition of each bar for troubleshooting or spotting trends.
Figure 1 below illustrates a Pareto Chart, while Figures 2 and 3 show examples of the
Paynter Chart.
This Paynter was run by restricting the number of groups to 5 and the number of
subgroups to 4. In this case it took the last 4 subgroups to plot.
Notice, also that the number at the top of the group is the total defects for that group, but
is not the sum of the subgroups shown.
This chart illustrates 5 defect codes with 4 subgroups where the subgroups plotted are
those with the largest number of defects for the defect codes plotted.
Q Chart Example:
Quality Addendums – Page 17 (Return to Index)
This picture shows part of the main operations virtual control panel of the Lola Wind
Tunnel control system containing two trend components amongst other KineticaRT
components.
The trends plot the pared force values of the 50% scale model being tested and display
them over a 30 second scroll time. After the sampling period the average value of each
of these forces is calculated and then transformed into full-size figures and stored in the
database.
The current values are always on the right-hand edge of the display and the historical
trace allows the operator to monitor the development of the forces and to preempt any
possible adverse effects.
Quality Addendums – Page 19 (Return to Index)
Toyota uses Yamazumi work balance charts to visually present the work content of a
series of tasks and facilitate work balancing and the isolation and elimination of non
value added work content.
STAF system boundary diagram. Arrows represent the direction of silver flow.
The Thinking Processes are a set of tools to help managers walk through the steps of
initiating and implementing a project. When used in a logical flow, the Thinking
Processes help walk through a buy-in process:
1. Gain agreement on the problem.
2. Gain agreement on the direction for a solution.
3. Gain agreement that the solution solves the problem.
4. Agree to overcome any potential negative ramifications.
5. Agree to overcome any obstacles to implementation.
TOC practitioners sometimes refer to these in the negative as working through layers of
resistance to a change.
Quality Addendums – Page 24 (Return to Index)
A current reality tree (CRT) is a type of flowchart that depicts the cause-and-effect
relationships that exist for the object of interest. The tree is normally built starting with a
listing of effects to be remedied. The contributing factors that perpetuate these effects
are associated with them are listed accordingly. The type of analysis is performed again
on the perpetuating factors and is continued again what in essence would be the root
cause.
Here is how to build a conflict resolution tree: Identify three or four people as team
members and develop a list of 10 undesirable effects (UDE) that affect the current
reality. The UDEs are written in present tense. For simplicity, this example will be limited
to five as shown in Figure 1.
Ask the team if any of the UDEs are the cause or effect of another. If so, arrange them
so the causes are at the bottom and the effects at the top. This is illustrated in Figure 2.
UDE 1 is a cause of UDE 2, and UDE 3 and UDE 4 are both an effect of UDE 5. Arrows
are used to indicate the cause-and-effect relationships. It is possible to build down from
these symptom problems to the deeper underlying causes by adding more UDEs or may
be even neutral effects. Figure 2 shows UDE 5 is an effect of an underlying UDE and a
neutral effect. These two entities are the cause of UDE 5 and this is shown by the use of
ellipse.
Quality Addendums – Page 25 (Return to Index)
Using the current reality tree, the existing conditions that needed to be changed are
identified, then using CRD, the objective to counter the effect of root causes are
identified. At the core of this plan of attack is the injection, which if followed assures the
path of success. With the future reality tree (FRT), it is possible to develop a more
detailed analysis that considers what may or may not happen at each step along the
way toward the expected outcome.
In structure, FRT is similar to CRT but with new proposed actions, policies and
behaviors injected into it in order to create a new vision of the future reality of the
system. At its simplest, all the undesirable effects of the CRT are changed to desirable
effects (DE). The FRT is illustrated in Figure 5.
The presence of the new idea or ideas as injections will change reality from undesirable
outcomes of the present to desirable outcomes of the future. Several different injections
may be needed to achieve this.
FRT is the tool of choice in gaining understanding and agreement that the solution
decided upon will account for all the undesirable effects that are currently experienced
and built into CRT.
Quality Addendums – Page 26 (Return to Index)
The prerequisite tree (PRT) is a tool that can used independent of the other tool in the
theory of constraints. Its purpose is to help identify obstacles that exist between the
current state and desired objective. It offers a means for determining an approach for
overcoming obstacles. It is possible that a prerequisite tree may not be necessary for a
simple objective that previously has been discussed with CRT, CRD and FRT.
To successfully achieve an ultimate objective, one must set intermediate objectives and
overcome the specific obstacles to those objectives. The prerequisite tree is a
compilation of these intermediate objectives and their associated obstacles.
Quality Addendums – Page 27 (Return to Index)
The transition tree (TRT) is similar to the future reality tree with the exception of couple
of key points. The transition tree is intended to be used for a final implementation plan.
Whereas the FRT is used as a planning tool to help simulate what might happen in
practice when certain actions are initiated toward achieving a desired outcome. The
transition tree is used when one has completed their simulation activity and is ready to
go forward with a plan. It is basically another project management planning tool.
Quality Addendums – Page 28 (Return to Index)
Perform Box and Whisker Plot analysis (Box plot) to determine variation and central
tendency of data due to time, parts, and production tools.
The box represents the distance between the 1st and 3rd quartiles. The whiskers show
the highest and lowest data points or 1.5 times the box (Q3-Q1). Outlier points are those
that are greater than 1.5 times (Q3 -Q1).
• If the box is all yellow, then there is no difference between the 1st quartile and the
median.
• If the box is all green, there is no difference between the 3rd quartile and the
median.
Box Scores are used widely within lean accounting. The standard format of the box
score shows a 3-dimensional view of value stream performance; operational
performance measurements, financial performance, and how the value stream capacity
is being used. The capacity information shows how much of the capacity within the
value stream is used productively, how much is used to do non-productive activities, and
how much value stream capacity is available for use. The box score shows the value
stream performance on a single sheet of paper and using a simple and accessible
format.
The box score shown on the right shows weekly value stream performance. Other box
scores are used for decision-making, for assessing the financial impact of lean
improvement, for selecting or prioritizing such issues as capital acquisitions using the 3P
approach, and other reporting and decision-making requirements. Companies using
lean accounting often have a standard box score format and require that all decisions
relating to a value stream be presented using the standard box scores. This leads to
operational and financial information being consistent and well understood when it is
used.
The Box Score method is flexible to meet the needs of different kinds of decisions, yet
using the same underlying approach that we do not try to calculate a fully absorbed
product cost. Instead the impact of these decisions on the value stream as a whole is
used to assess the suitability of each of our choices. This leads to better understanding
and better decisions, when used with standard decision-making processes.
Quality Addendums – Page 29 (Return to Index)
Most companies using lean accounting create standard templates for the various kinds
of daily routine decisions. These will include assessing the profitability of a sales order
or request for quote, make-buy decisions for products or components, the impact of
improvement projects, and so forth. These templates often access box score information
from the lean accounting information within the company's systems. The availability of
capacity is often a crucial issue when making these kinds of short-term decisions.
The box score show in this example demonstrates a short term decision and assume
that the company's capacity and costs are largely fixed. There are two other kinds of
decisions used regularly in lean companies; medium term decisions and strategic
decisions. Box Scores are also used for medium term decisions but there is no
assumption of fixed capacity and costs. The template shows how the capacity and
resources need to be changed to fulfill the decision. These decisions are linked in the
SOFP (Sales, Operations, and Financial Planning) process that typically looks out 12–
18 months. The Box Score is also used for strategic decisions such as the introduction
of new products, and the templates feed into the company's Strategy Deployment
(Hoshin Kanri) and Target Costing processes.
People in Quality Biographies – Page 1 (Return to Index)
Yoji Akao (赤尾 洋二 Akao Yōji, born 1928) is a Japanese planning specialist
recognized as the developer of Hoshin Kanri (a strategic planning methodology). With
the late Shigeru Mizuno, he developed Quality Function Deployment (a group decision
making technique). Akao and Mizuno also co-founded the Quality Function Deployment
Institute: a non-profit organization dedicated to dissemination and advancement of QFD.
Akao received a Ph.D. in 1964 from the Tokyo Institute of Technology
Howard Malcolm "Mac" Baldrige (October 4, 1922 – July 25, 1987) was the 26th
United States Secretary of Commerce. He was the son of H. Malcolm Baldrige, a
Congressman from Nebraska, and the brother of Letitia Baldrige.
Malcolm Baldrige was nominated to be Secretary of Commerce by President-elect
Ronald Reagan on December 11, 1980, and confirmed by the United States Senate on
January 22, 1981. During his tenure, Baldrige played a major role in developing and
carrying out Administration trade policy. He took the lead in resolving difficulties in
technology transfers with China and India. Baldrige held the first Cabinet-level talks with
the Soviet Union in seven years which paved the way for increased access for U.S.
firms to the Soviet market. He was highly regarded by the world's most preeminent
leaders.
Baldrige was a proponent of quality management as a key to this country's prosperity
and long-term strength. He took a personal interest in the legislation that became the
Quality Improvement Act of 1987 and helped draft one of the early versions. In
recognition of his contributions, Congress named the annual award (Malcolm Baldrige
National Quality Award) for product quality in his honor.
Norman Bodek is an author and the President of PCS Press, started Productivity Inc.
and Press in 1979 and since 1999 has focused on Toyota's second pillar "Respect for
People, employee-development and employee-empowerment.
Bodek has published books and training materials and also led conferences and
seminars on Total Production System - Lean, Total Productive Maintenance, Kaizen
Blitz, 5S (sometimes known as 6-S), Poka-Yoke, Cell Design, Kanban, SMED, CEDAC,
Visual Factory, and Lean Accounting.
Over the course of 30 years, Bodek traveled to Japan 75 times, visiting over 350 plants,
and published over 400 Japanese management books in the English language. He has
met and studied the teachings of Deming, Juran, Crosby, and Ishikawa, and published
the works of Akao, Ohno, and Shingo just to name a few.
People in Quality Biographies – Page 2 (Return to Index)
Philip Bayard "Phil" Crosby, (Wheeling, June 18, 1926 - Winter Park, August 18,
2001) was a businessman and author who contributed to management theory and
quality management practices.
Crosby initiated the Zero Defects program at the Martin Company Orlando, Florida,
plant. As the quality control manager of the Pershing missile program, Crosby was
credited with a 25 percent reduction in the overall rejection rate and a 30 percent
reduction in scrap costs.
Dr. W. Edwards Deming - (October 14, 1900 – December 20, 1993) was an American
statistician, professor, author, lecturer, and consultant. Deming is widely credited with
improving production in the United States during the Cold War, although he is perhaps
best known for his work in Japan. There, from 1950 onward he taught top management
how to improve design (and thus service), product quality, testing and sales (the last
through global markets) through various methods, including the application of statistical
methods. Dr. W. Edwards Deming is considered by many to be the father of modern
quality control.
Deming made a significant contribution to Japan's later reputation for innovative high-
quality products and its economic power. He is regarded as having had more impact
upon Japanese manufacturing and business than any other individual not of Japanese
heritage. Despite being considered something of a hero in Japan, he was only just
beginning to win widespread recognition in the U.S. at the time of his death.
Dr. Armand V. Feigenbaum (born 1922) is an American quality control expert and
businessman. He devised the concept of Total Quality Control, later known as Total
Quality Management (TQM).
Feigenbaum received a bachelor's degree from Union College, and his master's degree
and Ph.D. from MIT. He was Director of Manufacturing Operations at General Electric
(1958-1968), and is now President and CEO of General Systems Company of Pittsfield,
Massachusetts, an engineering firm that designs and installs operational systems.
Feigenbaum wrote several books and served as President of the American Society for
Quality (1961-1963).
People in Quality Biographies – Page 3 (Return to Index)
Sir Francis Galton FRS (16 February 1822 – 17 January 1911), cousin of Sir Douglas
Galton, half-cousin of Charles Darwin, was an English Victorian polymath,
anthropologist, eugenicist, tropical explorer, geographer, inventor, meteorologist, proto-
geneticist, psychometrician, and statistician. He was knighted in 1909.
Galton had a prolific intellect, and produced over 340 papers and books throughout his
lifetime. He also created the statistical concept of correlation and widely promoted
regression toward the mean. He was the first to apply statistical methods to the study of
human differences and inheritance of intelligence, and introduced the use of
questionnaires and surveys for collecting data on human communities, which he needed
for genealogical and biographical works and for his anthropometric studies. He was a
pioneer in eugenics, coining the very term itself and the phrase "nature versus nurture."
As an investigator of the human mind, he founded psychometrics (the science of
measuring mental faculties) and differential psychology. He devised a method for
classifying fingerprints that proved useful in forensic science. As the initiator of scientific
meteorology, he devised the first weather map, proposed a theory of anticyclones, and
was the first to establish a complete record of short-term climatic phenomena on a
European scale. He also invented the Galton Whistle for testing differential hearing
ability.
Henry Laurence Gantt, A.B., M.E. (1861 - 23 November 1919) was an American
mechanical engineer and management consultant who is most famous for developing
the Gantt chart in the 1910s.
These Gantt charts were employed on major infrastructure projects including the Hoover
Dam and Interstate highway system and continue to be an important tool in project
management.
William J. J. Gordon (September 9, 1919 – June 30, 2003) was an inventor and
psychologist. He is recognized as the creator of a problem solving approach called
synectics, which he developed while working in the Invention Design Group of Arthur D.
Little.
Masaaki Imai (born 1930, in Tokyo) is a consultant in the field of quality management.
Known as the “Lean Guru” and the father of Continuous Improvement (CI) Masaaki Imai
has been a pioneer and leader in spreading the KAIZEN philosophy all over the world.
Mr. Imai’s ground breaking book, “Kaizen: The Key to Japan’s Competitive Success”
was an instant global best seller, firmly embedding the word Kaizen in the corporate
lexicon. It was the first book (1986) to introduce the ‘LEAN’ philosophy to the world, four
years before the book “The Machine That Changed The World: The Story of Lean
Production”. His firsthand account is based on his close associations and travels with
such legendary giants as Shoichiro Toyoda and Taichi Ohno and reveals the secrets
behind the success of Toyota and other Japanese companies.
People in Quality Biographies – Page 4 (Return to Index)
Carl Gustav Jung (26 July 1875 – 6 June 1961) was a Swiss psychiatrist, an influential
thinker and the founder of analytical psychology (also known as Jungian psychology).
Jung's approach to psychology has been influential in the field of depth psychology and
in countercultural movements across the globe. Jung is considered as the first modern
psychologist to state that the human psyche is "by nature religious" and to explore it in
depth. He emphasized understanding the psyche through exploring the worlds of
dreams, art, mythology, religion and philosophy. Though not the first to analyze dreams,
he has become perhaps the most well known pioneer in the field of dream analysis.
Although he was a theoretical psychologist and practicing clinician, much of his life's
work was spent exploring other areas, including Eastern and Western philosophy,
alchemy, astrology, sociology, as well as literature and the arts.
Jung emphasized the importance of balance and harmony. He cautioned that modern
people rely too heavily on natural science and logical positivism and would benefit from
integrating spirituality and appreciation of unconscious realms. He considered the
process of individuation necessary for a person to become whole. This is a
psychological process of integrating the conscious with the unconscious while still
maintaining conscious autonomy. Individuation was the central concept of analytical
psychology. A popular psychometric instrument, the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator
(MBTI), has been principally developed from Jung's theories.
People in Quality Biographies – Page 5 (Return to Index)
Dr. Joseph M. Juran - (December 24, 1904 – February 28, 2008) first began
developing a philosophy of quality in 1926 when he started working for the quality
inspections division at Western Electric. He theorized that the field really depended on
human factors, especially the work of managers, and that quality problems should be
solved systemically. Juran first became well known in the quality field in the US as the
editor of the Quality Control Handbook (1951) and later for his paper introducing the
quality trilogy - planning, control and improvement. He developed the Pareto principle,
named after the Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto, which observes that 80% of the
problems in management arise from 20% of causes.
George Michael Low, born George Wilhelm Low (June 10, 1926 – July 17, 1984) was
a NASA administrator and 14th President of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. He was
born near Vienna, Austria to Artur and Gertrude Burger Low, small business people in
Austria. With the German occupation of Austria in 1938, four years after Artur Low's
death, his family emigrated to the United States. In 1943, Low graduated from Forest
Hills High School, Forest Hills, New York, and entered Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
(RPI), where he joined the Delta Phi fraternity. His education was interrupted by the war
and from 1944 to 1946, in which he served in the U.S. Army. While doing so, he became
a naturalized American citizen, and legally changed his name to George Michael Low.
Retiring from NASA in 1976, he became president of RPI, a position he still held at his
death. On July 16, 1984, the White House announced that Low had been awarded the
President’s Medal of Freedom for his contributions to education and the nation’s space
program. He died of cancer on the following day. The New York State Center for
Industrial Innovation was renamed the George M. Low Center for Industrial Innovation
by RPI ("Rensselaer," as of 1996) shortly after his death.
People in Quality Biographies – Page 6 (Return to Index)
Taiichi Ohno (大野 耐一 Ohno Taiichi, February 29, 1912 - May 28, 1990) was a
prominent Japanese businessman. He is considered to be the father of the Toyota
Production System, which became Lean Manufacturing in the U.S.. He wrote several
books about the system, the most popular of which is Toyota Production System:
Beyond Large-Scale Production. Born in Dalian, China, and a graduate of the Nagoya
Technical High School (Japan), he was an employee first of the Toyoda family's Toyoda
Spinning, then moved to the motor company in 1943, and gradually rose through the
ranks to become an executive. In what is considered to be a slight, possibly because he
spoke publicly about the production system, he was denied the normal executive track
and was sent instead to consult with suppliers in his later career.
Ohno's principles influenced areas outside of manufacturing, and have been extended
into the service arena. For example, the field of sales process engineering has shown
how the concept of Just In Time (JIT) can improve sales, marketing, and customer
service processes.
Vilfredo Federico Damaso Pareto (15 July 1848 – 19 August 1923), born Wilfried
Fritz Pareto, was an Italian industrialist, sociologist, economist, and philosopher. He
made several important contributions to economics, particularly in the study of income
distribution and in the analysis of individuals' choices. "His legacy as an economist was
profound. Partly because of him, the field evolved from a branch of social philosophy as
practiced by Adam Smith into a data intensive field of scientific research and
mathematical equations. His books look more like modern economics than most other
texts of that day: tables of statistics from across the world and ages, rows of integral
signs and equations, intricate charts and graphs." He introduced the concept of Pareto
efficiency and helped develop the field of microeconomics. He also was the first to
discover that income follows a Pareto distribution, which is a power law probability
distribution. The pareto principle was named after him and built on observations of his
such as that 80% of the land in Italy was owned by 20% of the population. He also
contributed to the fields of sociology and mathematics.
J.D. Power III (born James David Power on May 30, 1931 in Worcester,
Massachusetts) is the founder of the marketing firm J. D. Power and Associates.
Following graduation from College of the Holy Cross in 1953, Power served four years
as a line officer aboard a Coast Guard icebreaker in the Arctic and Antarctic. He
subsequently earned an MBA from the Wharton School of the University of
Pennsylvania in Finance. He joined Ford Motor Company as a financial analyst and later
worked for Marplan as a marketing research consultant for General Motors
Corporation’s Buick and GMC truck and coach divisions. Prior to launching J.D. Power
and Associates in 1968, Power worked as a marketing research executive for J.I. Case
Company, a construction and farm equipment manufacturer, and was director of
corporate planning for McCulloch Corporation, a Los Angeles-based engine
manufacturer.
People in Quality Biographies – Page 7 (Return to Index)
Walter Andrew Shewhart - (pronounced like "shoe-heart", March 18, 1891 - March 11,
1967) was an American physicist, engineer and statistician, sometimes known as the
father of statistical quality control. Born in New Canton, Illinois to Anton and Esta Barney
Shewhart, he attended the University of Illinois before being awarded his doctorate in
physics from the University of California, Berkeley in 1917.
People in Quality Biographies – Page 8 (Return to Index)
Shigeo Shingo (新郷 重夫 Shingō Shigeo, 1909-1990), born in Saga City, Japan, was a
Japanese industrial engineer who distinguished himself as one of the world’s leading
experts on manufacturing practices and the Toyota Production System. Shingo is known
far more in the West than in Japan, as a result of his meeting Norman Bodek, an
American entrepreneur and founder of Productivity Inc in the USA. In 1981 Bodek had
travelled to Japan to learn about the Toyota Production System, and came across books
by Shingo, who as an external consultant had been teaching Industrial Engineering
courses at Toyota since 1955. Shingo had written his Study of The Toyota Production
System in Japanese and had it translated, very poorly, into English in 1980. Norman
Bodek took as many copies of this book as he could to the USA and arranged to
translate Shingo's other books into English, eventually having his original study re-
translated. Bodek also brought Shingo to lecture in the USA and developed one of the
first Western lean manufacturing consultancy practices with Shingo's support.
The myth prevails that Shingo invented the Toyota Production System but he did
document the system and added two words to the Japanese and English languages—
Poka-yoke (mistake-proofing, not 'fool-proofing', which Shingo rejected as a term) and
single-minute exchange of dies (SMED). In 1988, Utah State University recognized Dr.
Shingo for his lifetime accomplishments and created the Shingo Prize that recognizes
world-class, lean organizations and operational excellence.
Shingo's influence extended into fields outside of manufacturing. For example, his
concepts of SMED, mistake-proofing, and "zero quality control" (eliminating the need for
inspection of results) have all been applied in the field of sales process engineering
4. Kendall, M.G., and Buckland, W.R. Dictionary of Statistical Terms. (2nd ed.) New
York: Hafner Publishing Company, 1960.
16. Six Sigma Quality Resource for Achieving Six Sigma Results -
http://www.isixsigma.com/index.php?option=com_glossary