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Production and Operations Management




                    Notes          comparable businesses around the world. Organizations need to work with an ongoing sense of
                                   renewal. This is not easy. Many things  occur whenever  an organization tries to accomplish
                                   significant, meaningful improvement. However, these obstacles have to be overcome and quality
                                   has to be an area of focus. Increasing focus on quality and improving the quality of products
                                   usually results in lower costs and this very often provides a competitive advantage to the firm.

                                   5.1 Quality Management Principles

                                   Sumantra Ghoshal in his book Managing Radical Change talks about the Indian mentality of
                                   ‘chalta hai’ or ‘satisfactory underperformance’. This type of company could expect as much as
                                   7 per cent of the goods it received and an equal percentage of products it shipped out to be
                                   defective. This type of company, when asked what poor quality costs them, their guess would be
                                   about 3-5 per cent of sales. But expert opinions actually calculate the costs of poor quality more
                                   like 20-30 per cent.

                                                           Table  5.1: Cost  of Quality  Assurance

                                           Prevention Costs   Appraisal Costs   Internal Failure Costs   External Failure
                                                                                               Costs
                                          QC administration and   Quality audits   Scrap, at full shop cost   Complaints and loss of
                                          systems planning   In-process testing    Rework, at full shop   customer goodwill
                                          Quality training             Checking labour   cost   Warranty costs
                                          Quality planning    Laboratory or other   Scrap and rework. Fault  Field maintenance and
                                          Special processes   measurement services   of vendor   product service
                                          planning        Calibration & Set up for   Material procurement   Returned material
                                          Quality data analysis    test and inspection   Factor contact   processing and repair
                                          Procurement planning   Test and inspection   engineering   Replacement
                                          Vendor surveys    material      QC investigations (of   inventories
                                                                          failures)       Strained distributor
                                          Reliability studies   Outside endorsements      relations
                                                          Maintenance and   Material review activity
                                          Quality measurement                             Trade Concessions
                                          and control equipment     calibration   Repair and
                                                          Field testing   troubleshooting
                                          Qualification of material
                                          New Product review    Incoming, in process,
                                                          final inspection
                                          Process control


                                   Can such companies compete with today’s value driven companies? They would find it very
                                   difficult to compete. Today, the best companies do not count their defects per hundred but per
                                   million! Philip Crosby states that the correct cost for a well run quality management program
                                   should be under 2.5 per  cent. This is happening with a  large number of professionally  run
                                   quality conscious firms.


                                          Example:  When Matsushita bought over the TV plant run by Motorola at Quasar, the
                                   plant had been running at a rate of 150-180 defects per 100 TV sets. Three years later, under the
                                   new management, Matsushita was running the plant at a rate of 3-4 defects per 100 sets. The cost
                                   of poor quality dropped from $ 22 million to less than $ 4 million annually, making the loss-
                                   making plant profitable. All this did not cost much. Quality improvement was achieved through
                                   marginal  investments  but  primarily  by  innovative  employee  relations  and  workplace
                                   reorganization.
                                   Though customers consider quality a trade-off, companies that offer low prices with high quality,
                                   do not see the trade-off. This is because they do not attribute cost to quality. The consensus is that
                                   quality increases profits and reduces costs.
                                   The typical activities of quality assurance that cost the organization are shown in Table above.
                                   Costs of poor quality are generally classified into four broad categories. Juran defines  three




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