Total Quality Management / TQM is an integrative philosophy
of management for continuously improving the quality of products and processes.
TQM is based on the premise that the quality of products and
processes is the responsibility of everyone involved with the creation or
consumption of the products or services which are offered by an organization,
requiring the involvement of management, workforce, suppliers, and customers,
to meet or exceed customer expectations.
Cua, McKone, and Schroeder (2001) identified nine common TQM
practices:
Cross-functional product design
Supplier quality management
Customer involvement
Information and feedback
Committed leadership
Strategic planning
Cross-functional training
Employee involvement
Total Quality Management is formally defined in BS 7850-1,
paragraph 3.1, as management philosophy and company practices that aim to
harness the human and material resources of an organization in the most effective
way to achieve the objectives of the organization.
Total quality management can be summarized as a management
system for a customer-focused organization that involves all employees in
continual improvement. It uses strategy, data, effective communications and involvement
of all level employees to integrate the quality discipline into the culture and
activities of the organization.
•Customer-focused. The customer ultimately determines the
level of quality. No matter what an organization does to foster quality
improvement—training employees, integrating quality into the design process,
upgrading computers or software, or buying new measuring tools—the customer
determines whether the efforts were worthwhile or not.
•Total employee involvement. All employees participate in
working toward common goals. Total employee commitment can only be obtained
after fear has been driven from the workplace, when empowerment has occurred,
and management has provided the proper environment. High-performance work systems
integrate continuous improvement efforts with normal business operations.
Self-managed work teams are one form of empowerment.
•Process-centered. A fundamental part of TQM is a focus on
process thinking. A process is a series of steps that take inputs from
suppliers (internal or external) and transforms them into outputs that are
delivered to customers (again, either internal or external). The steps required
to carry out the process are defined, and performance measures are continuously
monitored in order to detect unexpected variations in the process.
•Integrated system. Although an organization may consist of
many different functional specialties often organized into vertically
structured departments, it is the horizontal processes interconnecting these functions
that are the focus of TQM. ◦Micro-processes add up to larger processes, and all processes
aggregate into the business processes required for defining and implementing
strategy. Everyone must understand the vision, mission, and guiding principles as
well as the quality policies, objectives, and critical processes of the
organization. Business performance must be monitored and communicated
continuously. ◦An integrated business system may be modeled after the Baldrige
National Quality Program criteria and/or incorporate the ISO 9000
standards. Every organization has a unique work culture, and it is virtually
impossible to achieve excellence in its products and services unless a good
quality culture has been fostered where everyone works for the quality. Thus,
an integrated system connects business improvement elements in an attempt to
continually improve and exceed the expectations of customers, employees, and
all other stakeholders.
•Strategic and systematic approach. A critical part of the
management of quality is the strategic and systematic approach to achieving an
organization’s vision, mission, and goals. This process, called strategic
planning or strategic management, includes the formulation of a strategic plan
that integrates quality as a core component.
•Continual improvement. A major thrust of TQM is continual
process improvement. Continual improvement drives an organization to be both
analytic and creative in finding ways to become more competitive and more
effective at meeting stakeholder requirement and expectations.
• Fact-based decision making. In order to know how well an
organization is performing, data on performance measures are necessary. TQM
requires that an organization continually collect and analyze data in order to
improve decision making accuracy, achieve consensus, and allow prediction based
on past history.
•Communications. During times of organizational change, as
well as part of day-to-day operation, effective communications plays a large
part in maintaining morale and in motivating employees at all levels.
Communications involve strategies, method, and timeliness.
These elements are considered so essential to TQM that many
organizations define them, in some format, as a set of core values and
principles on which the organization is to operate.
Check out Implementing Total Quality Management to learn how
each of these essential Primary Elements come together to form the foundation
of a successful TQM implementation.
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