Assignment !!

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Chapter6PPT.ppt

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Managing Quality

PowerPoint presentation to accompany

Heizer and Render

Operations Management, Eleventh Edition

Principles of Operations Management, Ninth Edition

PowerPoint slides by Jeff Heyl

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© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.

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Outline

Global Company Profile:
Arnold Palmer Hospital

  • Quality and Strategy
  • Defining Quality
  • Total Quality Management
  • Tools of TQM
  • The Role of Inspection
  • TQM in Services

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Learning Objectives

When you complete this chapter you should be able to:

  • Define quality and TQM
  • Describe the ISO international quality standards
  • Explain what Six Sigma is
  • Explain how benchmarking is used in TQM
  • Explain quality robust products and
    Taguchi concepts
  • Use the seven tools of TQM

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Managing Quality Provides a Competitive Advantage

Arnold Palmer Hospital

  • Deliver over 12,000 babies annually
  • Virtually every type of quality tool is employed
  • Continuous improvement
  • Employee empowerment
  • Benchmarking
  • Just-in-time
  • Quality tools

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Quality and Strategy

  • Managing quality supports differentiation, low cost, and response strategies
  • Quality helps firms increase sales and reduce costs
  • Building a quality organization is a demanding task

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Two Ways Quality
Improves Profitability

Figure 6.1

Improved Quality

Increased Profits

  • Increased productivity
  • Lower rework and scrap costs
  • Lower warranty costs

Reduced Costs via

  • Improved response
  • Flexible pricing
  • Improved reputation

Sales Gains via

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The Flow of Activities

Organizational Practices

Leadership, Mission statement, Effective operating procedures, Staff support, Training

Yields: What is important and what is to be
accomplished

Figure 6.2

Quality Principles

Customer focus, Continuous improvement, Benchmarking, Just-in-time, Tools of TQM

Yields: How to do what is important and to be
accomplished

Employee Fulfillment

Empowerment, Organizational commitment

Yields: Employee attitudes that can accomplish
what is important

Customer Satisfaction

Winning orders, Repeat customers

Yields: An effective organization with
a competitive advantage

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Defining Quality

An operations manager’s objective is to build a total quality management system that identifies and satisfies customer needs

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Defining Quality

The totality of features and characteristics of a product or service that bears on its ability to satisfy stated or implied needs

American Society for Quality

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Different Views

  • User-based: better performance, more features
  • Manufacturing-based: conformance to standards, making it right the first time
  • Product-based: specific and measurable attributes of the product

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Implications of Quality

  • Company reputation
  • Perception of new products
  • Employment practices
  • Supplier relations
  • Product liability
  • Reduce risk
  • Global implications
  • Improved ability to compete

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Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award

  • Established in 1988 by the U.S. government
  • Designed to promote TQM practices
  • Recent winners include

Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control, MESA Products Inc., North Mississippi Health Services, City of Irving, Concordia Publishing House, Henry Ford Health System, MEDRAD, Nestlé Purina PetCare Co., Montgomery County Public Schools

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Baldrige Criteria

Applicants are evaluated on:

CATEGORIES POINTS
Leadership 120
Strategic Planning 85
Customer Focus 85
Measurement, Analysis, and Knowledge Management 90
Workforce Focus 85
Operations Focus 85
Results 450

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ISO 9000 International Quality Standards

  • International recognition
  • Encourages quality management procedures, detailed documentation, work instructions, and recordkeeping
  • 2009 revision emphasized sustained success
  • Over one million certifications in 178 countries
  • Critical for global business

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ISO 9000 International Quality Standards

  • Management principles
  • Top management leadership
  • Customer satisfaction
  • Continual improvement
  • Involvement of people
  • Process analysis
  • Use of data-driven decision making
  • A systems approach to management
  • Mutually beneficial supplier relationships

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Costs of Quality

  • Prevention costs - reducing the potential for defects
  • Appraisal costs - evaluating products, parts, and services
  • Internal failure costs - producing defective parts or service before delivery
  • External failure costs - defects discovered after delivery

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Costs of Quality

External Failure

Internal Failure

Total Cost

Quality Improvement

Total Cost

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Takumi

A Japanese character that symbolizes a broader dimension than quality, a deeper process than education, and a more perfect method than persistence

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Leaders in Quality

TABLE 6.1 Leaders in the Field of Quality Management
LEADER PHILOSOPHY/CONTRIBUTION
W. Edwards Deming Deming insisted management accept responsibility for building good systems. The employee cannot produce products that on average exceed the quality of what the process is capable of producing. His 14 points for implementing quality improvement are presented in this chapter.
Joseph M. Juran A pioneer in teaching the Japanese how to improve quality, Juran believed strongly in top-management commitment, support, and involvement in the quality effort. He was also a believer in teams that continually seek to raise quality standards. Juran varies from Deming somewhat in focusing on the customer and defining quality as fitness for use, not necessarily the written specifications.

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Leaders in Quality

TABLE 6.1 Leaders in the Field of Quality Management
LEADER PHILOSOPHY/CONTRIBUTION
Amarnd Feigenbaum His 1961 book Total Quality Control laid out 40 steps to quality improvement processes. He viewed quality not as a set of tools but as a total field that integrated the processes of a company. His work in how people learn from each other’s successes led to the field of cross-functional teamwork.
Philip B. Crosby Quality Is Free was Crosby’s attention-getting book published in 1979. Crosby believed that in the traditional trade-off between the cost of improving quality and the cost of poor quality, the cost of poor quality is understated. The cost of poor quality should include all of the things that are involved in not doing the job right the first time. Crosby coined the term zero defects and stated, “There is absolutely no reason for having errors or defects in any product or service.”

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Ethics and Quality Management

  • Operations managers must deliver healthy, safe, quality products and services
  • Poor quality risks injuries, lawsuits, recalls, and regulation
  • Ethical conduct must dictate response to problems
  • All stakeholders much be considered

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Total Quality Management

Encompasses entire organization from supplier to customer

Stresses a commitment by management to have a continuing companywide drive toward excellence in all aspects of products and services that are important to the customer

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Deming’s Fourteen Points

TABLE 6.2 Deming’s 14 Points for Implementing Quality Improvement
1. Create consistency of purpose
2. Lead to promote change
3. Build quality into the product; stop depending on inspections to catch problems
4. Build long-term relationships based on performance instead of awarding business on price
5. Continuously improve product, quality, and service
6. Start training
7. Emphasize leadership

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Deming’s Fourteen Points

TABLE 6.2 Deming’s 14 Points for Implementing Quality Improvement
8. Drive out fear
9. Break down barriers between departments
10. Stop haranguing workers
11. Support, help, and improve
12. Remove barriers to pride in work
13. Institute a vigorous program of education and self-improvement
14. Put everyone in the company to work on the transformation

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Seven Concepts of TQM

Continuous improvement

Six Sigma

Employee empowerment

Benchmarking

Just-in-time (JIT)

Taguchi concepts

Knowledge of TQM tools

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Continuous Improvement

  • Never-ending process of continual improvement
  • Covers people, equipment, materials, procedures
  • Every operation can be improved

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Shewhart’s PDCA Model

Figure 6.3

4. Act

Implement the plan, document

2. Do

Test the plan

3. Check

Is the plan working?

  • Plan

Identify the pattern and make a plan

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Continuous Improvement

  • Kaizen describes the ongoing process of unending improvement
  • TQM and zero defects also used to describe continuous improvement

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Six Sigma

  • Two meanings
  • Statistical definition of a process that is 99.9997% capable, 3.4 defects per million opportunities (DPMO)
  • A program designed to reduce defects, lower costs, save time, and improve customer satisfaction
  • A comprehensive system for achieving and sustaining business success

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Six Sigma

  • Two meanings
  • Statistical definition of a process that is 99.9997% capable, 3.4 defects per million opportunities (DPMO)
  • A program designed to reduce defects, lower costs, save time, and improve customer satisfaction
  • A comprehensive system for achieving and sustaining business success

Figure 6.4

Mean

Lower limits

Upper limits

±6

3.4 defects/million

2,700 defects/million

±3

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Six Sigma Program

  • Originally developed by Motorola, adopted and enhanced by Honeywell and GE
  • Highly structured approach to process improvement
  • A strategy
  • A discipline – DMAIC
  • A set of 7 tools

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Six Sigma

  • Defines the project’s purpose, scope, and outputs, identifies the required process information keeping in mind the customer’s definition of quality
  • Measures the process and collects data
  • Analyzes the data ensuring
    repeatability and reproducibility
  • Improves by modifying or
    redesigning existing
    processes and procedures
  • Controls the new process
    to make sure performance
    levels are maintained

DMAIC Approach

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Implementing Six Sigma

  • Emphasize defects per million opportunities as a standard metric
  • Provide extensive training
  • Focus on corporate sponsor support (Champions)
  • Create qualified process improvement experts (Black Belts, Green Belts, etc.)
  • Set stretch objectives

This cannot be accomplished without a major commitment from top level management

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Employee Empowerment

  • Getting employees involved in product and process improvements
  • 85% of quality problems are due
    to process and material
  • Techniques
  • Build communication networks
    that include employees
  • Develop open, supportive supervisors
  • Move responsibility to employees
  • Build a high-morale organization
  • Create formal team structures

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Quality Circles

  • Group of employees who meet regularly to solve problems
  • Trained in planning, problem solving, and statistical methods
  • Often led by a facilitator
  • Very effective when done properly

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Benchmarking

Selecting best practices to use as a standard for performance

  • Determine what to benchmark
  • Form a benchmark team
  • Identify benchmarking partners
  • Collect and analyze benchmarking information
  • Take action to match or exceed the benchmark

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Best Practices for Resolving Customer Complaints

Table 6.3
BEST PRACTICE JUSTIFICATION
Make it easy for clients to complain It is free market research
Respond quickly to complaints It adds customers and loyalty
Resolve complaints on first contact It reduces cost
Use computers to manage complaints Discover trends, share them, and align your services
Recruit the best for customer service jobs It should be part of formal training and career advancement

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Internal Benchmarking

  • When the organization is large enough
  • Data more accessible
  • Can and should be established in a variety of areas

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Just-in-Time (JIT)

Relationship to quality:

  • JIT cuts the cost of quality
  • JIT improves quality
  • Better quality means less inventory and better, easier-to-employ JIT system

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Just-in-Time (JIT)

  • ‘Pull’ system of production scheduling including supply management
  • Production only when signaled
  • Allows reduced inventory levels
  • Inventory costs money and hides process and material problems
  • Encourages improved process and product quality

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Taguchi Concepts

  • Engineering and experimental design methods to improve product and process design
  • Identify key component and process variables affecting product variation
  • Taguchi Concepts
  • Quality robustness
  • Quality loss function
  • Target-oriented quality

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Quality Robustness

  • Ability to produce products uniformly in adverse manufacturing and environmental conditions
  • Remove the effects of adverse conditions
  • Small variations in materials and process do not destroy product quality

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Quality Loss Function

  • Shows that costs increase as the product moves away from what the customer wants
  • Costs include customer dissatisfaction, warranty
    and service, internal
    scrap and repair, and costs to society
  • Traditional conformance specifications are too simplistic

Target-oriented quality

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Quality Loss Function

Figure 6.5

Unacceptable

Poor

Good

Best

Fair

High loss

Loss (to producing organization, customer, and society)

Low loss

L = D2C

where

L = loss to society

D2 = square of the distance from target value

C = cost of deviation

Lower

Target

Upper

Specification

Frequency

Target-oriented quality yields more product in the “best” category

Target-oriented quality brings product toward the target value

Conformance-oriented quality keeps products within 3 standard deviations

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TQM Tools

  • Tools for Generating Ideas
  • Check Sheet
  • Scatter Diagram
  • Cause-and-Effect Diagram
  • Tools to Organize the Data
  • Pareto Chart
  • Flowchart (Process Diagram)

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TQM Tools

  • Tools for Identifying Problems
  • Histogram
  • Statistical Process Control Chart

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Hour

Defect 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

A

B

C

Seven Tools of TQM

(a) Check Sheet: An organized method of recording data

Figure 6.6

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Seven Tools of TQM

(b) Scatter Diagram: A graph of the value of one variable vs. another variable

Figure 6.6

Absenteeism

Productivity

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Seven Tools of TQM

(c) Cause-and-Effect Diagram: A tool that identifies process elements (causes) that might effect an outcome

Figure 6.6

Cause

Materials

Methods

Manpower

Machinery

Effect

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Seven Tools of TQM

(d) Pareto Chart: A graph to identify and plot problems or defects in descending order of frequency

Figure 6.6

Frequency

Percent

A B C D E

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Seven Tools of TQM

(e) Flowchart (Process Diagram): A chart that describes the steps in a process

Figure 6.6

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Seven Tools of TQM

(f) Histogram: A distribution showing the frequency of occurrences of a variable

Figure 6.6

Distribution

Repair time (minutes)

Frequency

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Seven Tools of TQM

(g) Statistical Process Control Chart: A chart with time on the horizontal axis to plot values of a statistic

Figure 6.6

Upper control limit

Target value

Lower control limit

Time

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Cause-and-Effect Diagrams

Figure 6.7

Material

(ball)

Method

(shooting process)

Machine

(hoop &

backboard)

Manpower

(shooter)

Missed
free-throws

Rim alignment

Rim size

Backboard stability

Rim height

Follow-through

Hand position

Aiming point

Bend knees

Balance

Size of ball

Lopsidedness

Grain/Feel (grip)

Air pressure

Training

Conditioning

Motivation

Concentration

Consistency

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Pareto Charts

Number of occurrences

12

4

3

2

54

Room svc Check-in Pool hours Minibar Misc.

72% 16% 5% 4% 3%

– 100

– 93

– 88

– 72

70 –

60 –

50 –

40 –

30 –

20 –

10 –

0 –

Frequency (number)

Causes and percent of the total

Cumulative percent

Data for October

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Flow Charts

MRI Flowchart

  • Physician schedules MRI
  • Patient taken to MRI
  • Patient signs in
  • Patient is prepped
  • Technician carries out MRI
  • Technician inspects film
  • If unsatisfactory, repeat
  • Patient taken back to room
  • MRI read by radiologist
  • MRI report transferred to physician
  • Patient and physician discuss

11

10

20%

9

8

80%

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

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Statistical Process Control (SPC)

  • Uses statistics and control charts to tell when to take corrective action
  • Drives process improvement
  • Four key steps
  • Measure the process
  • When a change is indicated, find the assignable cause
  • Eliminate or incorporate the cause
  • Restart the revised process

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Control Charts

Figure 6.8

Upper control limit

Coach’s target value

Lower control limit

Game number

| | | | | | | | |

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

40%

20%

0%

Plot the percent of free throws missed

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Inspection

  • Involves examining items to see if an item is good or defective
  • Detect a defective product
  • Does not correct deficiencies in process or product
  • It is expensive
  • Issues
  • When to inspect
  • Where in process to inspect

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When and Where to Inspect

  • At the supplier’s plant while the supplier is producing
  • At your facility upon receipt of goods from your supplier
  • Before costly or irreversible processes
  • During the step-by-step production process
  • When production or service is complete
  • Before delivery to your customer
  • At the point of customer contact

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Inspection

  • Many problems
  • Worker fatigue
  • Measurement error
  • Process variability
  • Cannot inspect quality into a product
  • Robust design, empowered employees, and sound processes are better solutions

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Source Inspection

  • Also known as source control
  • The next step in the process is your customer
  • Ensure perfect
    product to your
    customer

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Source Inspection

  • Poka-yoke is the concept of foolproof devices or techniques designed to pass only acceptable product
  • Checklists ensure
    consistency and
    completeness

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Service Industry Inspection

TABLE 6.4 Examples of Inspection in Services
ORGANIZATION WHAT IS INSPECTED STANDARD
Jones Law Office Receptionist performance Billing Attorney Phone answered by the second ring Accurate, timely, and correct format Promptness in returning calls
Hard Rock Hotel Reception desk Doorman Room Minibar Use customer’s name Greet guest in less than 30 seconds All lights working, spotless bathroom Restocked and charges accurately posted to bill

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Service Industry Inspection

TABLE 6.4 Examples of Inspection in Services
ORGANIZATION WHAT IS INSPECTED STANDARD
Arnold Palmer Hospital Billing Pharmacy Lab Nurses Admissions Accurate, timely, and correct format Prescription accuracy, inventory accuracy Audit for lab-test accuracy Charts immediately updated Data entered correctly and completely
Olive Garden Restaurant Busboy Busboy Waiter Serves water and bread within 1 minute Clears all entrée items and crumbs prior to dessert Knows and suggest specials, desserts

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Service Industry Inspection

TABLE 6.4 Examples of Inspection in Services
ORGANIZATION WHAT IS INSPECTED STANDARD
Nordstrom Department Store Display areas Stockrooms Salesclerks Attractive, well-organized, stocked, good lighting Rotation of goods, organized, clean Neat, courteous, very knowledgeable

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Attributes Versus Variables

Attributes

Items are either good or bad, acceptable or unacceptable

Does not address degree of failure

Variables

Measures dimensions such as weight, speed, height, or strength

Falls within an acceptable range

Use different statistical techniques

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TQM In Services

  • Service quality is more difficult to measure than the quality of goods
  • Service quality perceptions depend on
  • Intangible differences between products
  • Intangible expectations customers have of those products

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Service Quality

The Operations Manager must recognize:

  • The tangible component of services is important
  • The service process is important
  • The service is judged against the customer’s expectations
  • Exceptions will occur

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Service Specifications

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Determinants of Service Quality

Table 6.5
Reliability involves consistency of performance and dependability
Responsiveness concerns the willingness or readiness of employees to provide service
Competence means possession of the required skills and knowledge to perform the service
Access involves approachability and ease of contact
Courtesy involves politeness, respect, consideration, and friendliness
Communication means keeping customers informed and listening to them
Credibility involves trustworthiness, believability, and honesty
Security is the freedom from danger, risk, or doubt
Understanding/knowing the customer involves making the effort to understand the customer’s needs
Tangibles include the physical evidence of the service

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Service Recovery Strategy

Managers should have a plan for when services fail

Marriott’s LEARN routine

Listen

Empathize

Apologize

React

Notify

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C H A P T E R 6 | M A N AG I N G Q UA L I T Y 225

range. If a piece of electrical wire is supposed to be 0.01 inch in diameter, a micrometer can be used to see if the product is close enough to pass inspection.

Knowing whether attributes or variables are being inspected helps us decide which statisti- cal quality control approach to take, as we will see in the supplement to this chapter.

TQM in Services The personal component of services is more difficult to measure than the quality of the tangible component. Generally, the user of a service, like the user of a good, has features in mind that form a basis for comparison among alternatives. Lack of any one feature may eliminate the ser-vice from further consideration. Quality also may be perceived as a bundle of attributes in which many lesser characteristics are superior to those of competitors. This approach to product com-parison differs little between goods and services. However, what is very different about the selection of services is the poor definition of the (1) intangible differences between products and (2) the intangible expectations customers have of those products. Indeed, the intangible attributes may not be defined at all. They are often unspoken images in the purchaser’s mind. This is why all of those marketing issues such as advertising, image, and promotion can make a difference.

The operations manager plays a signi!cant role in addressing several major aspects of service quality. First, the tangible component of many services is important. How well the ser- vice is designed and produced does make a difference. This might be how accurate, clear, and complete your checkout bill at the hotel is, how warm the food is at Taco Bell, or how well your car runs after you pick it up at the repair shop.

Second, another aspect of service and service quality is the process. Notice in Table 6.5 that 9 out of 10 of the determinants of service quality are related to the service process. Such things as reliability and courtesy are part of the process. An operations manager can design processes (service products) that have these attributes and can ensure their quality through the TQM techniques discussed in this chapter.

Third, the operations manager should realize that the customer’s expectations are the stan- dard against which the service is judged. Customers’ perceptions of service quality result from a comparison of their “before-service expectations” with their “actual-service experience.” In

VIDEO 6.2 TQM at Ritz-Carlton Hotels

Aircraft 97% boarded 10 min. before departure time

1st bag to conveyor belt 15 min. after arrival

First passenger boarded 40 min. before departure

Flight attendants on- board 45 min. before departure

Cargo door opened 1 min. afer arrival

All doors closed 2 min before departure

On board count- check-in count 5 min. before departure

Final load closeout 2 min. before departure

Like many service organizations, Alaska Airlines, sets quality standards in areas such as courtesy, appearance, and time. Shown here are some of Alaska Airlines’s 50 quality checkpoints, based on a timeline for-each departure.

2123_Heizer_Ch06_pp205-234.indd 225 9/27/12 7:18 PM