Description
In the past manufacturers could sell all they made. Service organizations didn't worry about the service they provided. Now things have changed. Companies now are becoming more responsive, they offer a better product, and keep improving through Total Quality Management (TQM) techniques.
1
Abstract - In the past manufacturers could sell all
they made. Service organizations didn't worry
about the service they provided. Now things have
changed. Companies now are becoming more
responsive, they offer a better product, and keep
improving through Total Quality Management
(TQM) techniques. TQM increases customer
satisfaction by boosting quality. It does this by
motivating the workforce and improving the way
the company operates. The customer is more
sophisticated and knowledgeable. If you don't
offer good service, he will buy from a competitor.
When corporate customers start improving their
own quality, they also expect better performance
from their suppliers.
Index Terms – Continuous improvement program,
customer satisfaction, Total Quality Management, Re-
engineering.
I INTRODUCTION
Competition is getting harder and becoming
global. The fast-growing countries of East Asia
often produce at low cost. This may be because of
low wage costs or large investment. As a result,
prices in many markets have fallen. Others will
start to drop. It is easy for a company to get caught
between improved Western products and low-
price products from emerging countries.
Many companies now produce a new model in
half the time it previously took. Some products
have a much shorter life than before. At one time
a building society wouldn't alter the style of its
savings accounts for decades. Now it may add or
delete accounts from one year to the next. Change
has even taken place in mature public-service
organizations. Among hospitals, local
government, railways and schools each institution
is trying to get an advantage over the other are
being done differently. Companies are using
biotechnology, fibre optics, ultrasound and neural
networks to make faster and better products. The
four challenges shown in Figure.1, are forcing
organizations to adapt TQM techniques.
1
Prof., Department of Mechanical Engineering, Malnad
College of Engineering, Hassan, Karnataka. India.
Email: [email protected], [email protected]
Fig 1: The four challenges
Legislation is making greater demands on
companies. Environmental, health and safety laws
now require companies to run safe and pollution-
free businesses. No longer you can simply pour
toxic liquids down the drain. Employees have to
be careful to avoid environmental damage. This
requires a motivated and knowledgeable
workforce. Many companies are complacent.
They're used to customers sending in orders. They
are accustomed to supplying products which have
faults in them. In today's competitive climate, they
will start to lose customers. As one guru said,
'Survival is not obligatory.'
Some companies think they have no problems.
This is especially true of monopoly suppliers and
market leaders with popular products. Success
makes companies complacent. Yet history proves
that the most successful market leaders invariably
fall the heaviest.
A Popular company, which lost its grip on the
computer market, is just one example. Many
companies are reluctant to change. They think that
the systems that have made them successful will
continue to work in the future. They feel
uncomfortable making changes, or they lack the
energy.
Inefficiency exists inside every company. Errors
add cost, and reduce customer satisfaction. In the
average firm, the cost of doing things wrong can
be 25 per cent of turnover. Many staff spends a
Enrichment Of Customer Satisfaction Through Total Quality
Management Techniques
Dr. H. Nagaprasad,
1
B. Yogesha
2
The Four challenges
facing business
The Four challenges
facing business Legislation
Customers
Competition
Technology
The Four challenges
facing business
The Four challenges
facing business Legislation
Customers
Competition
Technology
Proceedings of the International MultiConference of Engineers and Computer Scientists 2009 Vol II
IMECS 2009, March 18 - 20, 2009, Hong Kong
ISBN: 978-988-17012-7-5 IMECS 2009
day a week rectifying problems (which is a 20 per
cent failure rate). Doing things twice is a waste of
time and effort. As a customer you are surrounded
by examples of bad quality. It is not just that
things are well made or badly made. It goes
further than that. Here are some examples of
quality failure: The kettle whose spout spills
water, the incomprehensible printer manual, the
letter from your children's school which
contains spelling errors the cafe where the staff
ignore their customers & the brochure that takes
weeks to arrive, or never actually comes
Even Inside the organization, we can probably see
other quality problems: The project which runs
over time and over budget, The R&D
department whose members are always
obstructive, & the products which are made
wrongly, and have to be redone.
We know that our product and service could be
improved. And we know that outside pressures are
growing. So how do we respond? We need to
achieve the four essentials, which are shown in
Figure 2. Often grouped under the word 'quality',
they include the following techniques. Reduce
defects. This means reducing the number of errors
made, whether in making products that doesn’t
work, or in making paperwork mistakes.
Improve productivity (in other words, produce a
greater output for the same level of cost). Improve
customer service. Even companies in technical or
capital intensive markets need to satisfy their
customers. Competitors are constantly offering
your customer newer and better products. Yours
have to match that rate of innovation.
II METHODOLOGY
The four essentials can be achieved if the energies
of whole workforce are committed to excellence
and to the customer. The four essentials are too
big a task for any one individual to achieve.
Defining the solution is simple, but achieving it is
less easy. Companies and gurus have wrestled
with the problem for years. Various Methods for
improving quality strategies have been tried. The
early attempts used statistical techniques on the
factory floor. In the, 1960s, companies used
management by objectives to try to, control what
happened. But managers sometimes forgot to
motivate staff, so the results fell short of their
target. Incentive payment schemes (such as
piecework] were brought in to boost productivity.
But often this produced lots of poorly made
products.
The Four Essentials
The Four Essentials
Reduce defects
Reduce defects
Improve productivity
Improve productivity
Improve customer
Improve customer
Innovate
Innovate
The Four Essentials
The Four Essentials
Reduce defects
Reduce defects
Improve productivity
Improve productivity
Improve customer
Improve customer
Innovate
Innovate
Fig 2: The four essentials
Then companies introduced management
systems, such as ISO 9000. But staff sometimes
ignored the new systems, and worked the way they
always had.
The most recent fashions have been
benchmarking, partnership sourcing and business
process re-engineering. But these new tools often
solve problems in only one area of the business,
such as supplier quality or excellence in
manufacturing. So that leads to Total Quality
Management, or TQM.
Total Quality Management is not as fashionable as
re-engineering, nor as firmly defined as ISO 9000.
But it contains all the elements for the successful
company of the future. Without TQM, you have to
pray that your competitors remain incompetent.
Use TQM properly, and your success is assured.
TQM is one of the vaguest business tools ever
invented. There is no TQM bible, and each of the
many quality gurus said something different
everyone has their own view of how TQM should
be applied. But as the case histories in this paper
show, there is more than one route towards TQM.
You adapt it to meet the needs of your business.
TQM means satisfying customers first time, every
time. It means enabling your employees to solve
problems and eliminate waste. TQM is not so
much a management technique as a whole style of
working. TQM is really just another word for
good management. It is difficult, perhaps
impossible, to achieve total quality. But
companies that aim for it are going in the right
direction. In Figure 3 there are the five principles,
on which TQM is founded.
Proceedings of the International MultiConference of Engineers and Computer Scientists 2009 Vol II
IMECS 2009, March 18 - 20, 2009, Hong Kong
ISBN: 978-988-17012-7-5 IMECS 2009
1. Concentrate on the customer. 2. Do it right. 3.
Communicate and educate. 4. Measure and record.
5. Do it together
Do it
together
Focus on
the customer
Do it
right
Communicate
and educate
Measure
and record
Do it
together
Focus on
the customer
Do it
right
Communicate
and educate
Measure
and record
Fig 3: The five principles
The above principles are bandied freely around. It
is worth pausing for a moment to see what each of
them really means.
Be customer focused means placing the customer
at the centre of everything you do. This can be
quite a shock for the production-oriented
organization. It requires the company to check
customers' attitudes regularly. It includes the idea
of internal customers as well as external ones.
Do it right first time means avoiding re-work. It
means cutting the amount of defective work,
whether on the shop floor or in the management
offices.
Constantly improve. 'Continuous improvement
beats postponed perfection', said a manager at
Cummins, the engine maker. As the comment
implies, continuous improvement allows the
company gradually to get better.
Quality is an attitude. There are no shortcuts to
quality. The old methods of inspecting for defects
are not good enough any more. Everyone has to be
committed to quality. That means changing the
attitude of the entire workforce, and altering the
way the company operates.
Telling staff what is going on involves improved
communication. Typically, this includes team
briefings, one of the main elements of TQM. We
have to educate and train our people, for an
unskilled workforce makes mistakes. Giving more
skills to workers means they can do a wider range
of jobs, and do them better. It also means
educating staff in the principles of TQM, which is
a whole new style of working.
Measure the work. Measurements allow the
company to make decisions based on facts, not
opinion. They help to maintain standards and keep
processes within the agreed tolerances.
Top management must be involved. If senior
management is not involved, the program will fail.
It is as simple as that. If you are the big boss,
there is no problem. If you aren't, your program
cannot start until you have the boss's
Commitment. Empowering the staff means getting
employees to think for themselves. 'We pay
people to improve the business, not just perform
to the status quo,' said one organization.
Make it a good place to work. Many companies
are full of fear.
Staffs are afraid of the sack, afraid of their boss,
and afraid of making mistakes. In Spain, the UK
and France, more than 60 per cent of full-time
employees are very worried about losing their
jobs, according to the Henley Centre. There is no
point in running a TQM program unless the
company drives out fear.
Introduce team working. Teamwork boosts
employee morale. It reduces conflict and in-
fighting. It solves problems by hitting them with a
wider range of skills. It pushes authority and
responsibility downwards and it provides better,
more balanced solutions. Yet the culture in most
companies actively discourages teamwork. So the
TQM program has to foster it actively.
Organize by process, not by function. This
element of TQM seeks to reduce the barriers that
exist between different departments, and
concentrates on getting the product to the
customer.
Figure.4 shows, a TQM program creates
continuous improvement. This reduces waste and
improves customer satisfaction. Both these factors
ultimately lead to more profit
Proceedings of the International MultiConference of Engineers and Computer Scientists 2009 Vol II
IMECS 2009, March 18 - 20, 2009, Hong Kong
ISBN: 978-988-17012-7-5 IMECS 2009
TQM Programme
TQM Programme
Continuous
improvement
Continuous
improvement
Increased profit
Increased profit
Reduces
cost
Increases
sales
Satisfies
customers’
needs
Reduces
Waste and
error
TQM Programme
TQM Programme
Continuous
improvement
Continuous
improvement
Increased profit
Increased profit
Reduces
cost
Increases
sales
Satisfies
customers’
needs
Reduces
Waste and
error
Fig 4: How TQM Works
III CASE STUDIES:
TQM can produce unbelievable results, as the
following examples show.
The reject rate at Bally Shoes fell from 2.7 to 0.3
per cent between three years. Lead time from
receipt of order to delivery improved from 28 to 3
days. This followed training in team building,
continuous improvement and waste reduction.
Using TQM techniques, X company has gained
annual fuel savings of Rs 325,000, against
management time worth Rs12,000 and a capital
investment of Rs35,000. The payback was seven
and a half weeks.
Parcel Carrier Company has increased its
customers from 62,000 to 105,000 in four years.
Unit costs have fallen over five years; 91 per cent
of the company's 6000 workers believe that it is
committed to developing people.
Car Company has increased its sales per employee
from 68,000 to 126,000 in five years, a success
which it attributes to its TQM program; 92 per
cent of its employee’s say they are proud to work
for the company, compared with 69 per cent four
years previously. Company has launched 30 new
cars in five years.
TQM companies out-perform others. A survey by
Business Week magazine showed that leading
TQM companies (such as AT&T, Motorola and
Federal Express) yielded a return of 89 per cent
against the Standard and Poor's 500 index average
of 33 per cent.
In the UK, 25,000 companies have tackled their
quality problems by becoming registered' to ISO
9000 (BS 5750). Elsewhere in the world,
registrations are also increasing, with big growth
in North America, Brazil, India and the Pacific
Rim. Many of these organizations are now seeking
to build on their success, and are turning to TQM.
The first UK award for Quality attracted entries
from major firms like TNT and Rover. In the
USA, the Baldridge Award has been won by firms
like Rank Xerox. If they take TQM seriously,
maybe you should as well.
The main benefits of a TQM program are shown
in Figure. 5. Some of these benefits are common
to many ‘quality’ initiatives. Advantages which
are unique to TQM are as follows: It makes the
company a leader, not a follower it fosters
teamwork. It makes the company more sensitive
to customers’ needs. It makes the company adapt
more readily to change. It lets staff from different
departments meet each other. With this list of
benefits, who could ignore TQM?
Benefits for the customer
Fewer problems
with the product
or service
Better customer
care
Greater
satisfaction
Benefits for the company
Quality
improves
Staff are
more
motivated
Productivity
increases
Costs reduce Defects fall
Problems
resolved faster
Benefits for staff
Empowerment
More training,
more skills
More
recognition
Benefits for the customer
Fewer problems
with the product
or service
Better customer
care
Greater
satisfaction
Benefits for the company
Quality
improves
Staff are
more
motivated
Productivity
increases
Costs reduce Defects fall
Problems
resolved faster
Benefits for staff
Empowerment
More training,
more skills
More
recognition
Fig 5 : Benefits of TQM program
IV Self-assessment
This quiz helps to assess the scale and
effectiveness of the measurements taken at the
place of work.
Score one point for every ‘Yes’ answer. Then see
how well your organizations do
6-8 A Strong TQM culture is in place.
3-5 there are signs of a quality culture,
But a lot of work remains to be done
0-2 Go and find yourself another job
Proceedings of the International MultiConference of Engineers and Computer Scientists 2009 Vol II
IMECS 2009, March 18 - 20, 2009, Hong Kong
ISBN: 978-988-17012-7-5 IMECS 2009
Table 1: Self Assessment
Yes No
Don’t
Know
Is your organization
aware of the changes
taking place among
competitors and
customers?
Is your company a
friendly place to work?
Are most employees
secure about their jobs?
Does the company widely
circulate information
about corporate progress
and plans?
Is your product and
service as good as the best
of your competitors?
Have you conducted
brainstorming sessions in
the last 12 months?
Do you have minimal
waste and few errors?
Are all employees
customer focused?
Is the organization
constantly improving?
Score
V CONCLUSION
With each day passing, better products are
reaching the market. Some improvements result
from technology, others from better Total Quality
Management philosophy. All the time,
competitors are seeking to gain an advantage by
making their products better in satisfying the
customer. This is the theory of Total Quality
Management. If companies don't seek to improve,
in satisfying the customers they get left behind.
Small improvements are easier to make than giant
ones, especially for people lower down the chain
of command. Small improvements in satisfaction
often produce surprisingly big advances.
Remember to improve not just production
processes, but also management and clerical
processes, too, which enriches the customer
satisfaction to the highest level
REFERENCES
[1] Management Sciences. Pandey & Singh,
Standard publisher’s distributors, J anuary
1996. Page, 318-327.
[2] Total Quality Management. Bester field,
Pearson education. December 2005, Page, 60-
85
[3] Industrial engineering & Management.
O.P.Kanna, Dhanpat Rai and Sons, J uly
1977, page 148-180
[4] Making TQM work. Kit Sadgrove. Kogan
page India, page 11-26
[5] Essentials of Management. Harold Koontz.
McGraw Hill. May 2008. Page 66-80
[6] Inustrial ingineering. Mukhi. Tech
India publication, page 378-392
Proceedings of the International MultiConference of Engineers and Computer Scientists 2009 Vol II
IMECS 2009, March 18 - 20, 2009, Hong Kong
ISBN: 978-988-17012-7-5 IMECS 2009
doc_633957702.pdf
In the past manufacturers could sell all they made. Service organizations didn't worry about the service they provided. Now things have changed. Companies now are becoming more responsive, they offer a better product, and keep improving through Total Quality Management (TQM) techniques.
1
Abstract - In the past manufacturers could sell all
they made. Service organizations didn't worry
about the service they provided. Now things have
changed. Companies now are becoming more
responsive, they offer a better product, and keep
improving through Total Quality Management
(TQM) techniques. TQM increases customer
satisfaction by boosting quality. It does this by
motivating the workforce and improving the way
the company operates. The customer is more
sophisticated and knowledgeable. If you don't
offer good service, he will buy from a competitor.
When corporate customers start improving their
own quality, they also expect better performance
from their suppliers.
Index Terms – Continuous improvement program,
customer satisfaction, Total Quality Management, Re-
engineering.
I INTRODUCTION
Competition is getting harder and becoming
global. The fast-growing countries of East Asia
often produce at low cost. This may be because of
low wage costs or large investment. As a result,
prices in many markets have fallen. Others will
start to drop. It is easy for a company to get caught
between improved Western products and low-
price products from emerging countries.
Many companies now produce a new model in
half the time it previously took. Some products
have a much shorter life than before. At one time
a building society wouldn't alter the style of its
savings accounts for decades. Now it may add or
delete accounts from one year to the next. Change
has even taken place in mature public-service
organizations. Among hospitals, local
government, railways and schools each institution
is trying to get an advantage over the other are
being done differently. Companies are using
biotechnology, fibre optics, ultrasound and neural
networks to make faster and better products. The
four challenges shown in Figure.1, are forcing
organizations to adapt TQM techniques.
1
Prof., Department of Mechanical Engineering, Malnad
College of Engineering, Hassan, Karnataka. India.
Email: [email protected], [email protected]
Fig 1: The four challenges
Legislation is making greater demands on
companies. Environmental, health and safety laws
now require companies to run safe and pollution-
free businesses. No longer you can simply pour
toxic liquids down the drain. Employees have to
be careful to avoid environmental damage. This
requires a motivated and knowledgeable
workforce. Many companies are complacent.
They're used to customers sending in orders. They
are accustomed to supplying products which have
faults in them. In today's competitive climate, they
will start to lose customers. As one guru said,
'Survival is not obligatory.'
Some companies think they have no problems.
This is especially true of monopoly suppliers and
market leaders with popular products. Success
makes companies complacent. Yet history proves
that the most successful market leaders invariably
fall the heaviest.
A Popular company, which lost its grip on the
computer market, is just one example. Many
companies are reluctant to change. They think that
the systems that have made them successful will
continue to work in the future. They feel
uncomfortable making changes, or they lack the
energy.
Inefficiency exists inside every company. Errors
add cost, and reduce customer satisfaction. In the
average firm, the cost of doing things wrong can
be 25 per cent of turnover. Many staff spends a
Enrichment Of Customer Satisfaction Through Total Quality
Management Techniques
Dr. H. Nagaprasad,
1
B. Yogesha
2
The Four challenges
facing business
The Four challenges
facing business Legislation
Customers
Competition
Technology
The Four challenges
facing business
The Four challenges
facing business Legislation
Customers
Competition
Technology
Proceedings of the International MultiConference of Engineers and Computer Scientists 2009 Vol II
IMECS 2009, March 18 - 20, 2009, Hong Kong
ISBN: 978-988-17012-7-5 IMECS 2009
day a week rectifying problems (which is a 20 per
cent failure rate). Doing things twice is a waste of
time and effort. As a customer you are surrounded
by examples of bad quality. It is not just that
things are well made or badly made. It goes
further than that. Here are some examples of
quality failure: The kettle whose spout spills
water, the incomprehensible printer manual, the
letter from your children's school which
contains spelling errors the cafe where the staff
ignore their customers & the brochure that takes
weeks to arrive, or never actually comes
Even Inside the organization, we can probably see
other quality problems: The project which runs
over time and over budget, The R&D
department whose members are always
obstructive, & the products which are made
wrongly, and have to be redone.
We know that our product and service could be
improved. And we know that outside pressures are
growing. So how do we respond? We need to
achieve the four essentials, which are shown in
Figure 2. Often grouped under the word 'quality',
they include the following techniques. Reduce
defects. This means reducing the number of errors
made, whether in making products that doesn’t
work, or in making paperwork mistakes.
Improve productivity (in other words, produce a
greater output for the same level of cost). Improve
customer service. Even companies in technical or
capital intensive markets need to satisfy their
customers. Competitors are constantly offering
your customer newer and better products. Yours
have to match that rate of innovation.
II METHODOLOGY
The four essentials can be achieved if the energies
of whole workforce are committed to excellence
and to the customer. The four essentials are too
big a task for any one individual to achieve.
Defining the solution is simple, but achieving it is
less easy. Companies and gurus have wrestled
with the problem for years. Various Methods for
improving quality strategies have been tried. The
early attempts used statistical techniques on the
factory floor. In the, 1960s, companies used
management by objectives to try to, control what
happened. But managers sometimes forgot to
motivate staff, so the results fell short of their
target. Incentive payment schemes (such as
piecework] were brought in to boost productivity.
But often this produced lots of poorly made
products.
The Four Essentials
The Four Essentials
Reduce defects
Reduce defects
Improve productivity
Improve productivity
Improve customer
Improve customer
Innovate
Innovate
The Four Essentials
The Four Essentials
Reduce defects
Reduce defects
Improve productivity
Improve productivity
Improve customer
Improve customer
Innovate
Innovate
Fig 2: The four essentials
Then companies introduced management
systems, such as ISO 9000. But staff sometimes
ignored the new systems, and worked the way they
always had.
The most recent fashions have been
benchmarking, partnership sourcing and business
process re-engineering. But these new tools often
solve problems in only one area of the business,
such as supplier quality or excellence in
manufacturing. So that leads to Total Quality
Management, or TQM.
Total Quality Management is not as fashionable as
re-engineering, nor as firmly defined as ISO 9000.
But it contains all the elements for the successful
company of the future. Without TQM, you have to
pray that your competitors remain incompetent.
Use TQM properly, and your success is assured.
TQM is one of the vaguest business tools ever
invented. There is no TQM bible, and each of the
many quality gurus said something different
everyone has their own view of how TQM should
be applied. But as the case histories in this paper
show, there is more than one route towards TQM.
You adapt it to meet the needs of your business.
TQM means satisfying customers first time, every
time. It means enabling your employees to solve
problems and eliminate waste. TQM is not so
much a management technique as a whole style of
working. TQM is really just another word for
good management. It is difficult, perhaps
impossible, to achieve total quality. But
companies that aim for it are going in the right
direction. In Figure 3 there are the five principles,
on which TQM is founded.
Proceedings of the International MultiConference of Engineers and Computer Scientists 2009 Vol II
IMECS 2009, March 18 - 20, 2009, Hong Kong
ISBN: 978-988-17012-7-5 IMECS 2009
1. Concentrate on the customer. 2. Do it right. 3.
Communicate and educate. 4. Measure and record.
5. Do it together
Do it
together
Focus on
the customer
Do it
right
Communicate
and educate
Measure
and record
Do it
together
Focus on
the customer
Do it
right
Communicate
and educate
Measure
and record
Fig 3: The five principles
The above principles are bandied freely around. It
is worth pausing for a moment to see what each of
them really means.
Be customer focused means placing the customer
at the centre of everything you do. This can be
quite a shock for the production-oriented
organization. It requires the company to check
customers' attitudes regularly. It includes the idea
of internal customers as well as external ones.
Do it right first time means avoiding re-work. It
means cutting the amount of defective work,
whether on the shop floor or in the management
offices.
Constantly improve. 'Continuous improvement
beats postponed perfection', said a manager at
Cummins, the engine maker. As the comment
implies, continuous improvement allows the
company gradually to get better.
Quality is an attitude. There are no shortcuts to
quality. The old methods of inspecting for defects
are not good enough any more. Everyone has to be
committed to quality. That means changing the
attitude of the entire workforce, and altering the
way the company operates.
Telling staff what is going on involves improved
communication. Typically, this includes team
briefings, one of the main elements of TQM. We
have to educate and train our people, for an
unskilled workforce makes mistakes. Giving more
skills to workers means they can do a wider range
of jobs, and do them better. It also means
educating staff in the principles of TQM, which is
a whole new style of working.
Measure the work. Measurements allow the
company to make decisions based on facts, not
opinion. They help to maintain standards and keep
processes within the agreed tolerances.
Top management must be involved. If senior
management is not involved, the program will fail.
It is as simple as that. If you are the big boss,
there is no problem. If you aren't, your program
cannot start until you have the boss's
Commitment. Empowering the staff means getting
employees to think for themselves. 'We pay
people to improve the business, not just perform
to the status quo,' said one organization.
Make it a good place to work. Many companies
are full of fear.
Staffs are afraid of the sack, afraid of their boss,
and afraid of making mistakes. In Spain, the UK
and France, more than 60 per cent of full-time
employees are very worried about losing their
jobs, according to the Henley Centre. There is no
point in running a TQM program unless the
company drives out fear.
Introduce team working. Teamwork boosts
employee morale. It reduces conflict and in-
fighting. It solves problems by hitting them with a
wider range of skills. It pushes authority and
responsibility downwards and it provides better,
more balanced solutions. Yet the culture in most
companies actively discourages teamwork. So the
TQM program has to foster it actively.
Organize by process, not by function. This
element of TQM seeks to reduce the barriers that
exist between different departments, and
concentrates on getting the product to the
customer.
Figure.4 shows, a TQM program creates
continuous improvement. This reduces waste and
improves customer satisfaction. Both these factors
ultimately lead to more profit
Proceedings of the International MultiConference of Engineers and Computer Scientists 2009 Vol II
IMECS 2009, March 18 - 20, 2009, Hong Kong
ISBN: 978-988-17012-7-5 IMECS 2009
TQM Programme
TQM Programme
Continuous
improvement
Continuous
improvement
Increased profit
Increased profit
Reduces
cost
Increases
sales
Satisfies
customers’
needs
Reduces
Waste and
error
TQM Programme
TQM Programme
Continuous
improvement
Continuous
improvement
Increased profit
Increased profit
Reduces
cost
Increases
sales
Satisfies
customers’
needs
Reduces
Waste and
error
Fig 4: How TQM Works
III CASE STUDIES:
TQM can produce unbelievable results, as the
following examples show.
The reject rate at Bally Shoes fell from 2.7 to 0.3
per cent between three years. Lead time from
receipt of order to delivery improved from 28 to 3
days. This followed training in team building,
continuous improvement and waste reduction.
Using TQM techniques, X company has gained
annual fuel savings of Rs 325,000, against
management time worth Rs12,000 and a capital
investment of Rs35,000. The payback was seven
and a half weeks.
Parcel Carrier Company has increased its
customers from 62,000 to 105,000 in four years.
Unit costs have fallen over five years; 91 per cent
of the company's 6000 workers believe that it is
committed to developing people.
Car Company has increased its sales per employee
from 68,000 to 126,000 in five years, a success
which it attributes to its TQM program; 92 per
cent of its employee’s say they are proud to work
for the company, compared with 69 per cent four
years previously. Company has launched 30 new
cars in five years.
TQM companies out-perform others. A survey by
Business Week magazine showed that leading
TQM companies (such as AT&T, Motorola and
Federal Express) yielded a return of 89 per cent
against the Standard and Poor's 500 index average
of 33 per cent.
In the UK, 25,000 companies have tackled their
quality problems by becoming registered' to ISO
9000 (BS 5750). Elsewhere in the world,
registrations are also increasing, with big growth
in North America, Brazil, India and the Pacific
Rim. Many of these organizations are now seeking
to build on their success, and are turning to TQM.
The first UK award for Quality attracted entries
from major firms like TNT and Rover. In the
USA, the Baldridge Award has been won by firms
like Rank Xerox. If they take TQM seriously,
maybe you should as well.
The main benefits of a TQM program are shown
in Figure. 5. Some of these benefits are common
to many ‘quality’ initiatives. Advantages which
are unique to TQM are as follows: It makes the
company a leader, not a follower it fosters
teamwork. It makes the company more sensitive
to customers’ needs. It makes the company adapt
more readily to change. It lets staff from different
departments meet each other. With this list of
benefits, who could ignore TQM?
Benefits for the customer
Fewer problems
with the product
or service
Better customer
care
Greater
satisfaction
Benefits for the company
Quality
improves
Staff are
more
motivated
Productivity
increases
Costs reduce Defects fall
Problems
resolved faster
Benefits for staff
Empowerment
More training,
more skills
More
recognition
Benefits for the customer
Fewer problems
with the product
or service
Better customer
care
Greater
satisfaction
Benefits for the company
Quality
improves
Staff are
more
motivated
Productivity
increases
Costs reduce Defects fall
Problems
resolved faster
Benefits for staff
Empowerment
More training,
more skills
More
recognition
Fig 5 : Benefits of TQM program
IV Self-assessment
This quiz helps to assess the scale and
effectiveness of the measurements taken at the
place of work.
Score one point for every ‘Yes’ answer. Then see
how well your organizations do
6-8 A Strong TQM culture is in place.
3-5 there are signs of a quality culture,
But a lot of work remains to be done
0-2 Go and find yourself another job
Proceedings of the International MultiConference of Engineers and Computer Scientists 2009 Vol II
IMECS 2009, March 18 - 20, 2009, Hong Kong
ISBN: 978-988-17012-7-5 IMECS 2009
Table 1: Self Assessment
Yes No
Don’t
Know
Is your organization
aware of the changes
taking place among
competitors and
customers?
Is your company a
friendly place to work?
Are most employees
secure about their jobs?
Does the company widely
circulate information
about corporate progress
and plans?
Is your product and
service as good as the best
of your competitors?
Have you conducted
brainstorming sessions in
the last 12 months?
Do you have minimal
waste and few errors?
Are all employees
customer focused?
Is the organization
constantly improving?
Score
V CONCLUSION
With each day passing, better products are
reaching the market. Some improvements result
from technology, others from better Total Quality
Management philosophy. All the time,
competitors are seeking to gain an advantage by
making their products better in satisfying the
customer. This is the theory of Total Quality
Management. If companies don't seek to improve,
in satisfying the customers they get left behind.
Small improvements are easier to make than giant
ones, especially for people lower down the chain
of command. Small improvements in satisfaction
often produce surprisingly big advances.
Remember to improve not just production
processes, but also management and clerical
processes, too, which enriches the customer
satisfaction to the highest level
REFERENCES
[1] Management Sciences. Pandey & Singh,
Standard publisher’s distributors, J anuary
1996. Page, 318-327.
[2] Total Quality Management. Bester field,
Pearson education. December 2005, Page, 60-
85
[3] Industrial engineering & Management.
O.P.Kanna, Dhanpat Rai and Sons, J uly
1977, page 148-180
[4] Making TQM work. Kit Sadgrove. Kogan
page India, page 11-26
[5] Essentials of Management. Harold Koontz.
McGraw Hill. May 2008. Page 66-80
[6] Inustrial ingineering. Mukhi. Tech
India publication, page 378-392
Proceedings of the International MultiConference of Engineers and Computer Scientists 2009 Vol II
IMECS 2009, March 18 - 20, 2009, Hong Kong
ISBN: 978-988-17012-7-5 IMECS 2009
doc_633957702.pdf