#7 – THE DEATH OF SIX SIGMA – KARL SCHULTZ

Google “Is Six-Sigma Dead?” and you’ll get 11,700 responses in 0.40 seconds!  Certainly a big topic.  Why?  And why is it even a topic?

As most everyone knows, the term six-sigma is statistically based on 3.4 defects per one million occurrences (DPMO).  But it is much more than that.  It is actually based upon a strict discipline called Define – Measure – Analyze – Improve – Control (DMAIC).  So, is the concern over the need to get all processes to 3.4 DPMO or pursue the DMAIC process?  Most six-sigma supporters would say the DMAIC process is the important ingredient of six-sigma, not just the 3.4 statistic.

So what’s the risk of implementing six-sigma?  If you are sitting in one of the ‘C’ offices and hear good and bad news about six-sigma, what would you do?  Certainly the ‘C’ office decisions are based on Return On Investment (ROI).

For startup, there is the training of the workforce of 30-40 hours each in Statistical Quality Control (SPC). The hiring of a Black Belt(s) at probably $150,000. The training of other individuals for Green Belt.  And you haven’t even started a six-sigma project yet!  It took Jack Welch at GE 11 years to transform 300,000 employees at a cost of nearly $17,000 per employee.  And his focus was on cost reduction and not “delighting” the customer.

A study by QualPro in 2007 showed that 53 of 58 companies that use six-sigma trailed the S&P 500 since implementing it.  And this was before the Great Recession.

And there are many other reasons why six-sigma has struggled to be a part of the business culture.

However, Google “Six-Sigma Success Stories” and you’ll get 21,300 responses in 0.19 seconds!

#7 – FIVE WAYS TO KEEP YOUR JOB SEARCH CONFIDENTIAL – ELIZABETH LIONS

Elizabeth Lions PixMany people decide the New Year is the time to find another job.  Managing a confidential job search is critical.  Once an employer finds out that you are looking, they could deem you no longer loyal to them.

Here are five ways to keep your job search confidential:

  1. Network with peers that you trust to uncover opportunities.
    Networking with peers outside of your company can help you uncover a good position for you that would not normally be listed on a job board.  The ‘hidden’ job market does exist.  Avoid telling people you work with that you are looking because if it ever leaks back to your boss, it could be an issue for you.  Consider talking to people who are related to your industry or a small circle of business associates. Keeping your cards too close to the vest will not serve you in a job search.  Share.  Be open.
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#7 – PERFORMANCE EXCELLENCE MODELS – PART 2 – ADINA SUCIU

EFQM and Baldrige are the two best in the world Performance Excellence Models.

This is the second part in the series of three articles focused on Performance Excellence Models. We are comparing the Baldrige Performance Excellence Framework and the European Framework for Quality Management (EFQM) Excellence Model and we show a higher level paradigm of similar best practices and approaches.

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#7 – SOFTWARE RISK MANAGEMENT – PAUL KOSTEK

Paul Kostek PixFor anyone involved in risk management the thought of applying risk techniques to software opens many questions, including can we really identify risk areas in code?  Can we identify what software items contribute to hazardous situations? Can we identify mitigations and be sure we have covered all cases?

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#7 – QUALITY, MANAGEMENT, OR QUALITY MANAGEMENT – WHERE TO START? – GURBANOV ROMAN

Caveat:  this article is not a step – by – step guideline for establishing a Quality Management System (QMS).  It’s rather a warning to think about before bringing Quality into a company.

Nowadays, there are almost a million enterprises worldwide having certified their Quality Management System (QMS).  But how many have their systems certified only because a client said so?

There are many companies where Top Management marginalized Quality to simply a  “Function.”  At the same time, they expect Quality to make clients happy and eventually bring the company to be a top competitor of the market segment.

Such companies are likely to employ a Quality Manager as a requirement to a turn-key contract  or a ISO 9000 requirement. This is where their efforts end and problems start.

Let’s face it, common quality managerial practice too often is limited to window dressing, ISO contractual requirement, organizing a meeting addressed to quality problems, being the ‘management representative’ for quality auditors and that’s it.

What we really need is constant, daily efforts by management to evangelize and reinforce quality as part of the organization’s culture.

Eventually, it’s not surprising to see Top Management disappointed having literary zero results after “thorough” quality efforts have been employed.  And what we see one floor below is: quality “professionals” are justifying their existence by creating another procedure, another policy, another form, and so on.  All to fill their paid working hours and to prove the company needs them to manage quality and ISO operations.

What risks occur? The Company spends tons of moneyfor “Quality” yet it doesn’t add any value to process performance or product compliance. Subsequently the company becomes awkward, inefficient, “acid” attitude to quality folks and whatever they are doing inside the company is growing so even if the world’s top quality guy will come working there, his efforts will be thrown in to the bin as they appear. Finally the company ends up with its product/service – more expensive and time consuming than competitor’s one. And so the company goes out of the market.

Worth to note that today’s risks associated with positioning Quality as function that works by itself and brings miracles are very kin to companies based at “Informational Era” business where young, ambitious, flexible and lean startups rushing to IT market, deploying their profit pathways competing with their elder generation rivals with “Quality Function”. The last ones lose their market place.

Resuming the above we can say that when things come to Quality, company management shall start their way to client and market appeal not with Certified Quality Management System, but with understanding that Quality will only be at any use when it’s developed to pursue company’s values. And in that connection on the first place the company must clearly understand its core values. Secondly the company shall ensure these values are well understood by each single individual inside the company. Thirdly the company wants to ensure that each single step it makes brings the company closer to its values.

Unless the company will not understand these three elementary truths, it will keep on dumping their resources, encountering disappointment, loosing market and there is no quality standard and no quality manager that will help them.

AUTHOR:
Gurbanov Roman
Founder, QHSE Focus Magazine.
www.qhsefocus.com