Juran Hand Book
Juran Hand Book
Juran Hand Book
ID / 16225322
This Report Include 4 sections from “Juran’s Quality Handbook “From 3 rd section to 6th section.
“Quality planning,” as used here, is a structured process for developing products (both
goods and services) that ensures that customer needs are met by the final result. The
tools and methods of quality planning is incorporated along with the technological tools
for the particular product being developed and delivered. Designing a new automobile
requires automotive engineering and related disciplines, developing an effective care
path for juvenile diabetes will draw on the expert methods of specialized physicians, and
planning a new approach for guest services at a resort will require the techniques of an
experienced hotelier. All three need the process, methods, tools, and techniques of
quality planning to ensure that the final designs for the automobile, diabetic care, and
resort services not only fulfill the best technical requirements of the relevant disciplines
but also meet the needs of the customers who will purchase and benefit from the
products.
The quality planning problem, the first component of the quality gap is the
understanding gap, that is, lack of understanding of what the customer needs.
The second constituent of the quality gap is a design gap.
The quality planning solution, Quality planning provides the process, methods, tools,
and techniques for closing each of these component gaps and thereby ensuring that the
final quality gap is at a minimum.
The remainder of this section will provide details, practical guidance, and examples for
each of these steps. Many detailed examples will be included of how Ford Motor
Company applied the principles of quality planning to develop its 1994 Ford Mustang.
The methodology described in this section is one which has been introduced
with increasing success by a number of prominent corporations, including the
ones already mentioned.
- THE PQM METHODOLOGY
A PQM effort is initiated when executive management selects key processes,
identifies owners and teams, and provides them with process mission statements
and goals. After the owners and team are trained in process methodology, they
work through the three phases of PQM methodology: planning, transfer, and
operational management.
The preliminary process mission and improvement goals for the process are
communicated to the owners (executive and working levels) and team by
the quality council. To do their jobs most effectively, the owners and team must
make the mission and goals their own. They do this in the first step of the
planning phase: defining the process.
- The Planning Phase: Planning the New Process. The first phase of PQM is Planning,
which consists of five steps: (1) defining the process, (2) discovering customer needs and
flow-charting the process, (3) establishing measurements of the process, (4) analyzing
process measurements and other data, and (5) designing (or redesigning) the process.
The output of the Planning Phase is the new process plan.
Defining the Current Process.
Discovering Customer Needs and Flowcharting the Process.
Establishing Process Measurements.
Process Measurements.
Control Points.
Process Variability, Stability, and Capability.
Analyzing the Process.
Designing (or Redesigning) the Process.
Creating the New Process Plan.
- The Transfer Phase: Transferring the New Process Plan to Operations.
The transfer phase consists of three steps: (1) planning for implementation problems, (2)
planning for implementation action, and (3) deploying the new process plan.