OM0016 – Quality Management


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(May 2012)
Master of Business Administration - MBA Semester 4
“Operations Management” Specialization
OM0016 – Quality Management (4 credits)
(Book ID: B1341)
ASSIGNMENT- Set 1
Marks 60
Note: Each Question carries 10 marks. Answer all the questions.
1.a. What do you understand by “Quality as strategy”? Explain.
Answer : Quality as a Business Strategy
QBS is a leadership framework and set of activities to help your organization prepare to
effectively participate in system transformation and continuous quality improvement.
Why QBS?
QBS is a framework for leadership. Therefore, it is appropriate for any organization
because it:
􀂃 provides methods to reach the goals of your organization – whatever your
mandate;
􀂃 can be sustained over the long term;

􀂃 balances an internal and external focus – a benefit t to both clients and staff;

􀂃 is compatible over different businesses within the organization;

􀂃 remains useful despite changes in political or social forces, because it is attuned
to context; and,

􀂃 can be understood and practiced by all members of the organization. Everyone
understands— through this leadership framework— their role and their
contribution to improvement.

What’s our role?
HQC is facilitating the QBS learning process for the Saskatchewan health care system.
HQC Leadership Coaches are consultants to teams, who will nurture and sustain a
relationship with participating organizations for the life of the QBS collaborative
learning series. Once enrolled, you will be assigned a leadership coach.
Your organization is accountable for learning the methods, using the tools, trying the
approaches and having the daffy cult conversations that make up QBS. These efforts,
together, will lead to improvements in your organization, and in the system as a whole

The learning model
Learning about QBS takes the form of a series of workshops and action periods between
workshops. At each workshop, we will focus on a part of the Five Activities for Leaders.
Workshops consist of guest speakers from health care organizations who have achieved
transformative results in health outcomes, presentations from QBS teams about their
activities and insights, small group work and revel action, and time to share ideas and
commitments with all teams.

Action periods involve exploring the tools and activities within your organization,
planning as a team what additional learning/exploration is required, and revel acting on
insights as a team and as individual leaders. It is highly recommended that QBS teams
engage their HQC Leadership Coach to assist them during the action periods.

How was QBS developed?

W.E. Deming believed that an organization should operate as a system that is designed to meet the present and future needs of its stakeholders—who Deming describes as “thecustomers”.The organization Deming envisioned—that can continuously match customer needs and wants with service delivery—requires a new style of management, as well as new philosophies, knowledge, and methods. Deming taught his philosophy and approach to leading for continuous improvement in aeries of executive workshops in Japan in the 1950s and in the US in the 1980s with the help of 5 men who came together to create Associates for Process Improvement (API).In 1985, Associates in Process Improvement began developing the QBS framework to help organizations incorporate Deming’s philosophy and concepts into their management practices.
The QBS framework is not simply installed or implemented in an organization, as you would a new computer system. QBS involves learning to see “how every system imperfectly designed to get the results it gets”, and taking actions to redesign the system to perfectly achieve better results for the customers it serves.


b. Describe the structure of ISO 9000 standards
Q2. Describe DMAIC (Define, Measure, Analyse, Improve and Control) principle of Six
Sigma methodology

Q3.a. Why do think management responsibility is an essential requirement of QMS?

b. List the advantages of quality planning

Q4. Explain the two types of quality
Q5. Explain the methods of estimating reliability
Q6. What is the relevance of Cost and Schedule Information in an organisation?


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(May 2012)
Master of Business Administration - MBA Semester 4
“Operations Management” Specialization
OM 0016 – Quality Management (4 credits)
(Book ID: B1341)
ASSIGNMENT- Set 2
Marks 60
Note: Each Question carries 10 marks
Q1.a. List the five principles are essential to a successful quality audit program.
Answer : The principle behind Quality Audit

The principles of Quality Audit, in the sense we mean it here, are based on the style of quality standards used in several formal national and international standards such as the ISO-900x international quality standards. These standards do not in themselves create quality. The logic is as follows.

Every organisation should define comprehensive procedures by which their products or services can be delivered consistently to the desired level of quality. As was discussed in the section on Quality Management, maximum quality is rarely the desired objective since it can cost too much and take too long. The average product or service provides a sensible compromise between quality and cost. There is also a legitimate market for products that are low cost and low quality.

Standards authorities do not seek to make that business judgement and enforce it upon businesses, except where certain minimum standards must be met (egg all cars must have seat belts that meet minimum safety standards, but there is no attempt to define how elegant or comfortable they are).

The principle is that each organisation should create thorough, controlled procedures for each of its processes. Those procedures should deliver the quality that is sought. The Quality Audit, therefore, only needs to ensure that procedures have been defined, controlled, communicated and used. Processes will be put in place to deal with corrective actions when deviations occur. This principle can be applied to continuous business process operations or recurring project work. It would not be normal to establish a set of quality controlled procedures for a one-off situation since the emphasis is consistency.

This principle may be applied whether or not the organisation seeks to establish or maintain an externally recognised quality certification such as ISO-900x. To achieve a certification, the procedures will be subjected to internal and external scrutiny.

Preparing for Quality Audit

Thorough procedures need to be defined, controlled, communicated and used.








Thorough
Procedures should cover all aspects of work where conformity and standards are required to achieved desired quality levels. For example, one might decide to control formal program testing, but leave the preliminary testing of a prototype to the programmer's discretion.
Procedures
Any recurring aspect of work could merit regulation. The style and depth of the description will vary according to needs and preferences, provided it is sufficiently clear to be followed.
Defined
A major tenet is that the defined procedures are good and will lead to the desired levels of quality. Considerable thought, consultation and trailing should be applied in order to define appropriate procedures. Procedures will often also require defined forms or software tools.
Controlled
As with any good quality management, the procedures should be properly controlled in terms of accessibility, version control, update authorities etc.
Communicated
All participants need to know about the defined procedures - that they exist, where to find them, what they cover. Quality reviewers are likely to check that team members understand about the procedures.
Used
The defined procedures should be followed. Checks will be made to ensure this is the case. A corrective action procedure will be applied to deal with shortcomings. Typically the corrective action would either be to learn the lesson for next time, or to re-work the item if it is sufficiently important.

There is no reason why these Quality Audit techniques should conflict with the project's Quality Management processes. Where project work is recurring, the aim should be for the Quality Methods and other procedures to be defined once for both purposes.

Problems may occur where the current project has significant differences from earlier ones. Quality standards may have been set in stone as part of a quality certification. In extreme situations this can lead to wholly inappropriate procedures being forced upon the team, for example, using traditional structured analysis and design in a waterfall style approach for what would be handled best using iterative prototyping. The Project Manager may need to re-negotiate quality standards with the organisation's Quality Manager.



Operating Quality Audit

A Quality Audit approach affects the entire work lifecycle:

·         Pre-defined standards will impact the way the project is planned
·         Quality requirements for specific work packages and deliverables will be identified in advance
·         Specific procedures will be followed at all stages
·         Quality Methods must be defined and followed
·         Completed work and deliverables should be reviewed for compliance.
This should be seen as an underlying framework and set of rules to apply in the project's Quality Management processes.



Quality Audit reviews

Although the impact of Quality Audit will be across all parts of the lifecycle, specific Quality Audit activities tend to be applied as retrospective reviews that the Project Team correctly followed its defined procedures. Such reviews are most likely to be applied at phase end and project completion. Of course, the major drawback of such a review is that it is normally too late to affect the outcome of the work. The emphasis is often on learning lessons and fixing administrative items. In many ways, the purpose of the review is to encourage conformity by the threat of a subsequent bad experience with the quality police.


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b. List the five key drivers for developing quality culture

Q2. What is quality function deployment? List the four phases that are involved in Quality Functional Development
Q3. Classify the three main criterion of self-control in manufacturing and service sectors


Q4. Describe the various types of benchmarking

Q6. Explain the seven basic tools of statistical process control in quality control


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