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Unit 5: Quality Management




          quality zones relative to the point of minimum total quality costs. The “zone of improvement  Notes
          projects” lies below the optimum quality level, while the “zone of perfectionism” lies above it.
          Between them, and in the area of the minimum total quality costs, lies the “zone of indifference.”
          He identifies the boundary of the zone of perfectionism as lying typically at a quality level
          where failure costs amount to 40 per cent of the total quality cost. The costs include:
          1.   Internal Failure Costs,
          2.   External Failure Costs,
          3.   Appraisal Costs,
          4.   Prevention Costs.


                            Figure  5.1: Juran’s  Model of  Optimum Quality Costs





















          As can be seen from Juran’s model shown in Figure above, the costs of improvement continue to
          rise whilst the costs of failure continue to fall.  Juran suggests relaxing prevention efforts and
          allowing (even encouraging) increased defect rates in the zone of perfectionism. The principle
          of diminishing marginal returns in both benefits and effort suggest that a firm should produce
          where Marginal Revenue is equal to Marginal Cost; but when profit is less than zero, it may be
          preferable to decrease efforts rather than continue. (In practice, the output units do not have to
          be single and judgments have to be made in relation to unit or batch size.)

          5.1.1  Evolution of Quality Management: Quality Gurus

          1.   Walter Shewart
               (i)  In 1920s, developed control charts

               (ii)  Introduced expression “Quality Assurance”
          2.   W. Edwards Deming
               (i)  Developed courses  during World  War  II  to  educate  statistical  quality control
                    techniques to engineers and executives of companies that were military suppliers.
               (ii)  After war. Began teaching statistical quality control to Japanese companies.
          3.   Joseph M Juran

               (i)  Followed Deming to Japan in 1954
               (ii)  Focused on strategic quality planning




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