Tools Standards and Legacy of Total Quality Management
Understand the core concepts and tools of Total Quality Management, its official definitions and standards, and how it evolved into ISO 9000, Six Sigma, and lean manufacturing.
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How is quality defined within the fundamental concepts of Total Quality Management?
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Summary
Total Quality Management: Concepts, Tools, and Evolution
What is Total Quality Management?
Total Quality Management (TQM) is a comprehensive management philosophy designed to achieve organizational excellence through continuous improvement. At its core, TQM rests on four fundamental principles that emerged from naval management practices in the 1980s:
Customer-Driven Quality: Quality is not defined by the organization—it's defined by what customers require and expect. This shifts the focus outward, ensuring that improvement efforts target what actually matters to users.
Leadership Commitment: Top management bears direct responsibility for quality improvement. This isn't a task delegated to a quality department; it requires visible commitment from the highest levels of the organization.
Process-Focused Improvement: Quality doesn't happen by accident. Organizations achieve increased quality through systematic analysis and deliberate improvement of their work processes. The focus is on how work gets done, not just the final result.
Continuous Effort: Quality improvement isn't a project with an end date. It's an ongoing effort embedded throughout the entire organization, across all levels and departments.
Formal Definitions of TQM
Different organizations have defined TQM to emphasize different aspects. Understanding these definitions helps clarify what TQM encompasses.
The United States Department of Defense (1988) defined TQM as "a strategy for continuously improving performance at every level and in all areas of responsibility, combining fundamental management techniques, existing improvement efforts, and specialized technical tools." Notice the emphasis on combining multiple approaches and achieving performance improvement everywhere in the organization. The DoD added that the overriding objective is increasing user satisfaction—reminding us that all these improvements ultimately serve the customer.
The British Standards Institution (BS 7850-1:1992) offered a complementary definition: "a management philosophy and company practices that aim to harness human and material resources in the most effective way to achieve organizational objectives." This definition emphasizes the human element and the integration of resources toward organizational goals.
TQM Tools and Implementation Methods
TQM isn't just philosophy—it requires concrete tools and structured approaches to drive improvement. Organizations use several key mechanisms:
The Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA) Cycle: This is TQM's engine for continuous improvement. The cycle works as follows: in the Plan phase, teams identify a problem and design a solution; in the Do phase, they implement the solution on a small scale; in the Check phase, they examine whether it worked; and in the Act phase, they either adopt the successful change or begin a new cycle to refine the approach. This cycle repeats continuously, with each iteration bringing incremental improvement.
Cross-Functional Teams: TQM relies on teams that span different departments and perspectives. Organizations use two types:
Ad hoc cross-functional teams form to address immediate process issues. Similar to quality circles, these temporary teams tackle specific problems and dissolve once the issue is resolved.
Standing cross-functional teams persist over time to drive long-term process improvement. These teams focus on systematic, ongoing enhancement rather than crisis response.
The Seven Basic Tools of Quality: These are fundamental analytical tools used to understand quality-related problems. They enable teams to gather data, identify patterns, and make decisions based on evidence rather than assumption.
The Transition: From TQM to Modern Standards
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TQM emerged as a major management philosophy in the 1980s and dominated quality thinking through the early 1990s. However, its dominance was relatively short-lived in formal organizational practice.
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By the 1990s, the landscape of quality management standards shifted dramatically. The ISO 9000 collection of standards and their formal certification processes effectively superseded all national quality standards, including TQM frameworks. ISO 9000 provided an internationally recognized, auditable standard that organizations could be formally certified against.
It's important to understand that this wasn't a wholesale replacement of TQM's ideas—rather, it was a standardization and formalization of quality management approaches. TQM was later succeeded by other frameworks including Six Sigma and lean manufacturing. Despite their different names and specific emphases, all these frameworks—TQM, ISO 9000, Six Sigma, and lean—share many of the same tools, techniques, and philosophical elements. They all emphasize customer focus, data-driven decision-making, continuous improvement, and process optimization.
Flashcards
How is quality defined within the fundamental concepts of Total Quality Management?
By customers’ requirements
According to Total Quality Management principles, what is the source of increased quality?
Systematic analysis and improvement of work processes
What is the frequency and scope of quality improvement efforts in Total Quality Management?
A continuous effort conducted throughout the organization
Which cycle is used in Total Quality Management to drive issues to resolution?
The Plan‑Do‑Check‑Act (PDCA) cycle
What specific set of tools is used to analyze quality-related issues in Total Quality Management?
The seven basic tools of quality
What is the overriding objective of Total Quality Management according to the US Department of Defense (1988)?
Increasing user satisfaction
How does the British Standards Institution (BS 7850-1:1992) define Total Quality Management?
A management philosophy and company practices aiming to harness human and material resources effectively to achieve organizational objectives
Which collection of standards effectively superseded all national standards for quality in the 1990s?
ISO 9000
Quiz
Tools Standards and Legacy of Total Quality Management Quiz Question 1: In the Navy 1980s model of total quality management, how is quality primarily defined?
- By customers’ requirements (correct)
- By the lowest production cost
- By internal employee preferences
- By compliance with government regulations
Tools Standards and Legacy of Total Quality Management Quiz Question 2: Which cycle is central to Total Quality Management for guiding problem solving and continuous improvement?
- Plan‑Do‑Check‑Act (PDCA) cycle (correct)
- Define‑Measure‑Analyze‑Improve‑Control (DMAIC) cycle
- Observe‑Orient‑Decide‑Act (OODA) loop
- Plan‑Do‑Measure‑Act (PDMA) cycle
Tools Standards and Legacy of Total Quality Management Quiz Question 3: Which type of team is established to provide ongoing, long‑term process improvement in Total Quality Management?
- Standing cross‑functional team (correct)
- Ad hoc cross‑functional team
- Departmental team
- Project‑specific team
Tools Standards and Legacy of Total Quality Management Quiz Question 4: What set of analytical tools is commonly employed in TQM to examine quality‑related issues?
- The seven basic tools of quality (correct)
- Six Sigma DMAIC tools
- Lean value‑stream mapping tools
- ISO 9001 audit checklists
Tools Standards and Legacy of Total Quality Management Quiz Question 5: According to the United States Department of Defense (1988), what is the overriding objective of Total Quality Management?
- Increasing user satisfaction (correct)
- Reducing manufacturing costs
- Boosting shareholder profit
- Shortening product development time
Tools Standards and Legacy of Total Quality Management Quiz Question 6: How does the British Standards Institution Standard BS 7850‑1:1992 define the ultimate aim of Total Quality Management?
- Achieving organizational objectives (correct)
- Attaining market dominance
- Maximizing short‑term profit
- Ensuring regulatory compliance
Tools Standards and Legacy of Total Quality Management Quiz Question 7: Which process was introduced in the 1990s to formally verify an organization’s compliance with the new dominant quality standards?
- ISO 9000 certification (correct)
- Self‑assessment audit
- ISO 14000 environmental audit
- Six Sigma training program
In the Navy 1980s model of total quality management, how is quality primarily defined?
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Key Concepts
Quality Management Approaches
Total Quality Management
U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) TQM definition (1988)
British Standard BS 7850‑1:1992
Quality Improvement Tools
Plan‑Do‑Check‑Act (PDCA)
Seven basic tools of quality
Six Sigma
Quality circles
Cross‑functional team (quality context)
Production and Efficiency
Lean manufacturing
ISO 9000
Definitions
Total Quality Management
A management approach that seeks continuous improvement of processes, products, and services by focusing on customer requirements and organization-wide participation.
Plan‑Do‑Check‑Act (PDCA)
An iterative four‑step problem‑solving method used to implement and refine changes for quality improvement.
Seven basic tools of quality
A set of fundamental graphical and statistical techniques (e.g., cause‑and‑effect diagram, control chart) for analyzing and solving quality problems.
ISO 9000
An international family of standards that specify requirements for quality management systems and provide certification for organizations.
Six Sigma
A data‑driven methodology aimed at reducing process variation and defects to a level of 3.4 defects per million opportunities.
Lean manufacturing
A production philosophy that maximizes value by eliminating waste and optimizing workflow.
Quality circles
Small groups of workers who voluntarily meet to identify, analyze, and solve work‑related problems.
British Standard BS 7850‑1:1992
A UK standard defining Total Quality Management as a philosophy and set of practices for effective use of resources to meet organizational goals.
U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) TQM definition (1988)
A strategy for continuous performance improvement across all levels, integrating management techniques, existing efforts, and technical tools to boost user satisfaction.
Cross‑functional team (quality context)
A group composed of members from different functional areas that collaborates to address immediate or long‑term process improvement issues.