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IT Services Group 4 Jalal Hafidi Mathew Joseph Tolulope Oke

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Presentation on theme: "IT Services Group 4 Jalal Hafidi Mathew Joseph Tolulope Oke"— Presentation transcript:

1 IT Services Group 4 Jalal Hafidi Mathew Joseph Tolulope Oke
Denisa Teme Li Wei

2 Overview Total Quality Management (TQM) Definition of TQM
Evolution of TQM Quality Quality programs Cost of Quality Philosophy of TQM TQM approaches TQM tools Case Study Difference between manufacturing and service organization ITIL Quality Standards Failure of TQM efforts Relations to COBIT5 1 of 26

3 Total Quality Management (TQM)
Have you ever lost your luggage or ordered goods and they were late? Was your issue resolved? What in your opinion is TQM? 2 of 26

4 What is TQM? An integrated effort geared at improving quality throughout the organization Quality & Success, Competitiveness Customer Satisfaction & Quality Management Customer-defined Quality Quality terms should be agreed upon by both parties so as to achieve the desired aim 3 of 26

5 Evolution of TQM The concept of Quality dates as far back as the early twentieth century The general concept then was inspecting products to ensure that they met specifications In the 1960s with the help of “Quality gurus” it evolved from being just a production process to a concept that spans across the organization In the 1970s companies began to tie quality and competitive edge TQM moved from the old concept of “reactiveness” to “proactiveness” 4 of 26

6 Question A successful TQM program incorporates all of the following except: Continuous improvement Employee involvement c. Benchmarking d. Centralized decision making authority 5 of 26

7 How do you define quality?
Discussion How do you define quality? 6 of 26

8 What is Quality? No universal definition of quality People view it as:
“Performance to standards” “Meeting the customer’s needs” “Satisfying the customer” Conformance to specifications Fitness for use Value for price paid Support services Psychological criteria Common Definitions of Quality Conformance to specifications Measures now well the product or service meets the targets and tolerances determined by its designers. Fitness for use Focuses on how well the product performs its intended function or use. Value for price paid Quality that consumers often use for product or service usefulness Combines economics and consumer criteria Quality is price sensitive “Got for what you paid” Support Services Quality defined in terms of the support provided after the product or services is purchased. Does not apply only to the product or service itself, it also applies to the people, process, and organizational environment associated with it. Psychological criteria Subjective definition A way of defining quality that focuses on the judgmental evaluation of what constitutes product or services excellence. 7 of 26

9 Cost of Quality Cost to achieve high quality Cost consequences
of poor quality Prevention costs Appraisal Internal failure costs External failure costs 8 of 26

10 Cost of Quality 9 of 26 Prevention Costs Includes:
Quality planning costs, such as the cost of developing and implementing a quality plan Costs of product and process design, from collecting customer information to designing processes that achieve conformance to specifications Employee training Maintaining records of information and data related to quality. Appraisal Costs. Cost of quality inspections, product testing, and performing audits to make sure that quality standards are being met Costs of worker time spent measuring quality and the cost of equipment used for quality appraisal Internal Failure Costs Rework which is the cost of correcting the defective item. Sometimes the item is so defective that it cannot be corrected and must be thrown away. Cost of machine downtime due to failures in the process and the costs of discounting defective items for salvage value. External Failure Costs Customer complaints, product returns, and repairs, to warranty claims, recalls, and costs resulting from product liability issues such a product recall. 9 of 26

11 Costs of Defects The earlier defects are found, the less costly they are to correct. 10 of 26

12 Question All of the following costs are likely to decrease as a result of better quality except: a. Customer dissatisfaction costs b. Maintenance costs c. Scrap costs d. Inspection costs You always want to spend money on maintenance costs because you want to constantly improve quality. Maintenance cost is what improves quality whereas with the other options you reduce costs as quality increases. 11 of 26

13 The Philosophy of TQM TQM is based on quality management from different points of view: Customer focus Continuous improvement Employee empowerment Use of quality tools Two approaches are used in assessing performance: Benchmarking approach TQM approach is not based on inspection it focuses on identifying and correcting the root cause of the problems TQM embeds quality in the entire organization Customers focus In TQM approach, quality is costumer driven First identify the customers needs Second satisfy their needs Third exceed their expectation “if possible” Customers focus challenge Tastes and preferences change Expectations are different Can the customers afford what they want? Continuous improvement “Kaizen” A philosophy of never-ending improvement Perfection hard to achieve Evaluate performance and take measures to improve it Two approaches are used in assessing performance: PDSA & Benchmarking Employee Empowerment: In TQM approach the employees are encouraged to find quality problems, not punished The employees are considered internal customers “Two heads are better than one” Team meeting Quality cycle 12 of 26

14 TQM Approaches Benchmarking approach:
The Plan–Do–Study–Act approach (PDSA) The activities needed to improve PDSA cycle: Plan: Analyze =>collect data=>identify problems=>develop a plan for improvements. Do: Implement the changes=>collect data for evaluation. Study: Analyze the data collected=> evaluate it against the plan Act: Communicate the result=> implement the new procedure Benchmarking approach: Studying the business practices of other companies Compare your company performance Learn how they do things differently Apply it 13 of 26

15 TQM Tools The seven tools of quality control: Cause-and-effect diagram Flowchart Checklist Control charts Scatter diagrams Pareto analysis Histogram Quality tools can be used to evaluate the acceptability of product quality and to monitor product quality from individual suppliers Use of Quality Tools Employees need quality control tools to asses quality The seven tools of quality control Cause-and-effect diagram A chart that identifies potential causes of particular quality problems Flowchart A schematic of the sequence of steps involved in an operation or process Checklist A list of common defects and the number of observed occurrences of these defects Control charts Charts used to evaluate whether a process is operating within set expectations Scatter diagrams Graphs that show how two variables are related to each other Pareto analysis A technique used to identify quality problems based on their degree of importance Histogram A chart that shows the frequency distribution of observed values of a variable 14 of 26

16 Question The process of identifying other organizations that are best at some facet modeling your organization after them is known as: a. Continuous improvement b. Employee empowerment c. Benchmarking d. Copycatting e. Patent infringement 15 of 26

17 Case Study Questions What is wrong with how Gold Coast Advertising (GCA) measure its quality? Explain why Gold Coast should ask its customers about how they define quality. Offer suggestions to George Stein on ways of identifying quality dimensions GCA’s customers consider important. What questions would you ask customers to evaluate how they define quality? 16 of 26

18 Quality as Defined by Manufacturing & Service Organizations
Defining quality in manufacturing organizations is often different from that of services. Conformance - is the degree to which a product characteristic meets preset standards. When a person buys a IPhone he measures the quality by relying on the fact that all IPhones are the same Performance – The acceleration of the vehicle. Reliability is the concept that the product will function as expected without failure. Reliability can be measured as a probability. durability—expected operational life of the product. A person buying a Landover measures the quality of his vehicle by how durable it is. serviceability—how readily a product can be repaired. Nokia was a big success in Asia because it could be easily repaired at a low cost. Suzuki captured the Indian car market because people knew that parts were cheap and service centers were located throughout the country. service organizations produce a product that is intangible. The service industry is the largest segment of the economy. The 2007 economic collapse was largely due to the service sector. 17 of 26

19 Process Management Old vs. New What kind of control is it ? Preventive
Detective Corrective Managing supplier quality The old concept focused on inspecting goods after they were produced The new concept of quality focuses on identifying quality problems at the source and correcting them. Total Quality management also includes ensuring that suppliers are meeting quality standards. It is tough for small companies to influence their suppliers to change their process. On the other hand suppliers are ready to re invent their whole manufacturing process if Wal mart requires them to do so. This new way focuses building quality into the process rather than just final inspection. 18 of 26

20 ITIL Information Technology Infrastructure Library
A globally recognized collection of best practices for IT service management Focuses on aligning IT services with the needs of business Quality management 19 of 26

21 Question ISO 9000 seeks standardization in terms of a. Products b. Production procedures c. Suppliers’ specifications d. Procedures to manage quality 20 of 26

22 Quality Standards ISO 9000 Standards
A set of international quality standards and a certification demonstrating that companies have met all the standard specified. Development: ISO 9000:2000 – Fundamentals and Standards ISO 9001:2000 – Requirements ISO 9004:2000 – Guidelines for Performance Advantages How to receive the ISO certification Increases in international trade during the 1980s created a need for the development of universal standards of quality International Organization for Standardization (ISO) published its first set of standards for quality management called ISO 9000. ISO 9000:2000 – Fundamentals and Standards (starting point) ISO 9001:2000 – Requirements (conformity of Quality Management systems->customer requirements) ISO 9004:2000 – Guidelines for Performance (customer requirements & improving performance) Advantages: Applicable to all types of companies and have gained global acceptance. creates a more efficient, effective operation increases customer satisfaction and retention reduces audits enhances marketing improves employee motivation, awareness, and morale promotes international trade increases profit reduces waste and increases productivity How to receive: 1) Provide extensive documentation of its quality process. (methods used to monitor quality, methods and frequency of worker training, job descriptions, inspection programs, and statistical process-control tools used) 2) Company then audited by ISO 9000 registrar who visits the facility to make sure company have a well-documented quality management system and that the process meets the standards. 3) Registrar find all in order -> receive the certification 18-24 months; $10,000-30,000; recertified per 3 years Two types of auditing are required to become registered to the standard: auditing by an external audit and audits by internal audit. The aim is a continual process of review and assessment to verify that the system is working as it is supposed to; to find out where it can improve; and to correct or prevent problems identified. It is considered healthier for internal auditors to audit outside their usual management line, so as to bring a degree of independence to their judgments. Audit development: Under the 1994 version, the question was broad: "Are you doing what the manual says you should be doing?", whereas under the 2000 version, the questions are more specific: "Will this process help you achieve your stated objectives? Is it a good process or is there a way to do it better?" 21 of 26

23 Quality Standards ISO 14000 A set of international standards and a certification focusing on a company's environmental responsibility Focusing on 3 major areas: Management systems Operations Environmental systems Green Manufacturing and environmental concerns Management systems standards measure systems development and integration of environmental responsibility into the overall business. Operations standards include the measurement of consumption of natural resources and energy. Environmental systems standards measure emissions, effluents, and other waste systems. 22 of 26

24 Why TQM Efforts Fail Lack of a genuine quality culture ☆
Failure Lack of a genuine quality culture Lack of top management support and commitment Over- and under-reliance on statistical process control (SPC) methods Lack of a genuine quality culture ☆ The most important factor in the success or failure of TQM efforts is the true reason why the company would like to do quality management. X: competitor, market, short-term ->failure Lack of top management support and commitment: lies with employees other than top management Top-down Over- and under-reliance on statistical process control (SPC) methods: SPC is not a substitute for continuous improvement, teamwork, and a change in the organization’s belief system. However, SPC is a necessary tool for identifying quality problems. {Statistical process control (SPC) is a method of quality control which uses statistical methods. SPC is applied in order to monitor and control a process. Monitoring and controlling the process ensures that it operates at its full potential. At its full potential, the process can make as much conforming product as possible with a minimum (if not an elimination) of waste} 23 of 26

25 APO11-Managing Quality Maintain continuous improvement.
Establish a quality management system Define and manage quality standards, practices and procedures. Focus quality management on customers. Perform quality monitoring, control and reviews Integrate quality management into solutions Maintain continuous improvement. 24 of 26

26 Relation to COBIT5- Output
Establish a quality management system Quality management plans Define and manage quality standards, practices and procedures. Quality management standards Focus quality management on customers Review results of quality of service, including customer feedback Perform quality monitoring, control and reviews. Results of quality reviews and audits Integrate quality management into solutions for development and service delivery Results of solution and service delivery quality monitoring Maintain continuous improvement. Quality review benchmark results 25 of 26

27 THANK YOU 26 of 26


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