Six Sigma Quality Resources for Achieving Six Sigma Results
Click To Learn More About PremiumLinks
 Home > Methodologies  > Process Management Search:
 
 for    
Publications
Marketplace
| iSixSigma
Stuff
| iSixSigma
Blogosphere
| Events
Calendar
| The
Dictionary
| Discussion
Forum
| Find
a Job
| Post
a Job
| Industry
News
| Newsletter
Signup
| Sigma
Calculator
| Online
Surveys
Nominations for iSixSigma Awards! close November 30 – nominate your project/program today!
iSixSigma Magazine Signup
 iSixSigma Live!  
  Live! Home
  2010 Summit & Awards
  2010 Energy Forum
 Free Newsletters!  
  Sign Up Now!
  Manage Subscriptions
  New To Six Sigma?
  Six Sigma Q&A
  Cert. Practice Test
  Problem Solving Wizard
  ISSSP Info
ISSSP Is The Official Six Sigma Society of iSixSigma
 Channels 
  Europe
  Financial Services
  Healthcare
  Military
  Software / IT
 Quality Directory 
  Best Practices
  Certifications/Awards
  Consultants
  Culture Evolution
  Methodologies
   BPR
   DMAIC
   Kaizen
   Metrics
   Six Sigma
   TQM
   Work-Out
  News & Events
  Organizations
  Product/Service Guides
  Statistics & Analysis
  Tools & Templates
  Voice of the Customer
  Free Whitepapers
 Related Topics 
  Innovation
  Outsourcing/Offshoring
  Business Process Mgt
 Quick Access 
  Help
  Search
  Advertise Here
  Article Archives
  Newsletter Archives
 User Feedback 
  Please suggest site
  improvements.
 
  [ larger form ]

Cost of a Process with Poor Quality Can Be Very High

Bookmark This Page Bookmark This Page
Email This Page Email This Page
Format for Printing Format for Printing
Cite This Article Cite This Article
Submit an Article Submit an Article
Six Sigma Article Archive Read More Articles
Related Tools & Articles
  • Discussion Forum
    "I am no longer expecting inspectors to catch 100% of the defects. I am expecting them to find anywhere between 50 to 80% of them. I have become more aware of the fact that our issues at inspection are a reflection of what's going on upstream."

    Contribute to this Discussion
    Download Products

    By Issa Bass

    The definition of quality can differ depending on whether it is associated with products and services or with the processes used to generate them. The quality of a product or service is measured in terms of the satisfaction that the customer derives from using it. The quality of a process depends on its ability to consistently deliver products or services within customer-specified limits. While it is possible for a company to deliver a good quality product made using an inefficient process, the company does so at a very high cost. An inefficient process will generate an unacceptably high number of defects and produce them with a level of variation that hinders the ability to predict process performance.

    One Fortune 500 company experienced this situation when it decided to change its culture and implement Lean and Six Sigma. The company, which subcontracts for major computer manufacturers, sought the assistance of a Six Sigma consulting firm for the training of its employees. At the end of the training, everything in the company changed except the production process.

    Slogans about total quality, Six Sigma, continuous improvement and "five S" were everywhere. The quality assurance department was separated from production and numerous employees were hired to perform 100 percent inspection on 100 percent of the units produced. About 30 percent of the units produced were defective, but the inspection process kept 97 percent of the defective units from reaching the customer. As a result, the customer satisfaction index reached 98 percent – a statistic which pleased the company, as well as the companies for whom it subcontracted.

    Three years after the Six Sigma team was created, the company lost four of the seven subcontracts it had due to the high cost of production. As a result, half of the Six Sigma team members were laid off and the team was dismantled.

    What was wrong with this situation in which the customers were very satisfied with the product? The answer lies in process, productivity and cost.

    The Quality of the Process

    A process is defined as a sequence of events that are contingent and work in tandem with the objective of producing goods or services. Each task operates as a customer for the previous task and a supplier for the next. In the sequence of events, every employee should expect a defect-free product from the previous step in the process, and should in turn, supply a product at the same quality level to the next step. When analyzing the quality of a process, it is essential to view not only how the particular tasks are singularly performed, but also how they are linked to one another.

    A process performing at a sigma level of 6, is defined as one that generates no more than 3.4 defects per million opportunities. It is not a process that delivers no more than 3.4 defective products to customers at any cost. If the quality of the process in place is at a Six Sigma level, by the time the product reaches the audit process, it should contain very little to no defect. This renders a 100 percent audit of 100 percent of the output unnecessary.

    Quality and Productivity

    Productivity is a business metric that reflects resource efficiency. The productivity of employees is calculated as the ratio of the output to the number of employee hours used to produce it, or as the number of items generated for each dollar invested. Expressed as a formula, where P = productivity, O = output and C = the cost incurred to produce O, it is:

    P = O/C

    There is a positive correlation between productivity and good quality. In a defect-free process, the cost of production is the cost of producing all the goods that are actually used by the customer. In a process that generates defects, the cost of production includes the cost of the defects (inspection costs, returns from customers, rework in the process flow, etc.).

    The advantage of using a Six Sigma approach is that it addresses the process rather than the repair aspect of the business. It is a proactive, preventative and innovative approach rather than a reactive and conforming one. When Six Sigma is successfully implemented, products are produced within specified limits before they reach the end of the process, so the probability of rework is small.

    While it is a good practice to conduct an audit of a process or product, it is unnecessary to inspect every item produced because that is redundant and expensive. The quality assurance department should inspect a sample, analyze the statistical process control (SPC) and keep the process variation under control.

    About the Author: Issa Bass is a Six Sigma specialist. He currently works for a Fortune 500 company in the midsouth region of the United States. He can be reached at issabass@netscape.net.

     
    Rate This Article:  Current Rating: 4.35
      Poor    Excellent     
              1    2    3     4    5
    Copyright � 2000-2009 iSixSigma – All Rights Reserved
    Reproduction Without Permission Is Strictly Prohibited – Copyright Requests


    Publish an Article: Do you have a Six Sigma tip, learning or case study?
    Share it with the largest community of Six Sigma professionals, and be recognized by your peers.
    It's a great way to promote your expertise and/or build your resume. Read more about submitting an article.




    "The Bottom Line" Links

    BEST SELLING PRODUCTS (iSixSigma Publications)
    1. Six Sigma Black Belt (DMAIC) Training Slides - 2009 Version!
      The 2009 Six Sigma Black Belt course includes over 40 more slides than the 2008 version. Contents include: 1,220 PowerPo...
    2. Certified Lean Six Sigma Black Belt Assessment Exam
      Interested in assessing your knowledge of Lean Six Sigma? Preparing for certifications? Testing your students and traine...
    3. Certified Lean Six Sigma Green Belt Assessment Exam
      This assessment exam is useful for students interested in assessing their knowledge of Lean Six Sigma on the Green Belt ...
    4. Certified Lean Six Sigma Black Belt E-book
      In 670 pages learn everything within the Lean Six Sigma DMAIC body of knowledge to successfully achieve Black Belt certi...
    5. Kaizen Workshop E-book
      This 150+ page ebook teaches key tools and techniques of Kaizen, as well as real application to enhance learning. Kaizen...
    6. Six Sigma Yellow Belt Training Slides - 2009 Version
      The 2009 Six Sigma Yellow Belt course is comprised of: 503 slidesInstructor notesSlide explanations15 data sets19 suppo...
    7. Design For Six Sigma (DFSS) E-Book or Print
      Need an "encyclopedia" consisting of many of the tools you’ll study? Need a helpful refresher to apply the DFSS process?...
     
    Six Sigma AdLinks
    AdLinks Information


    Google AdWords
     
    Home | Discussion Forum | Event Calendar | Job Shop
    Link To iSixSigma | Rate This Page | Report A Problem | Free Content For Your Site | Submit Article For Publishing
     Terms of Service. �2000-2009 iSixSigma. All rights reserved. v3.0lb, 0.2
    About iSixSigmaContact UsPrivacy PolicySite Map