Quality control
Is
a process by which entities review the quality of all factors involved in production?
Thais approached places en emphasis on three aspects:
1.
Elements such as controls,
job management, defined and well managed processes, performance and integrity
criteria, and identification of records
2.
Competence, such as
knowledge, skills, experience, and qualifications
3.
Soft elements, such as
personnel, integrity, confidence, organizational culture, motivation, team spirit,
and quality relationships.
Controls
include product inspection, where every product is examined visually, and
often using a stereo microscope for fine detail before
the product is sold into the external market. Inspectors will be provided with
lists and descriptions of unacceptable product
defects such as cracks or
surface blemishes for
example.
The
quality of the outputs is at risk if any of these three aspects is deficient in
any way.
Quality
control emphasizes testing of products to uncover defects and reporting to
management who make the decision to allow or deny product release,
whereas quality assurance attempts to improve and
stabilize production (and associated processes) to avoid, or at least minimize,
issues which led to the defect(s) in the first place. For contract work,
particularly work awarded by government agencies, quality control issues are
among the top reasons for not renewing a contract.
Notable
approaches to quality control
There is
a tendency for individual consultants and organizations to name their own
unique approaches to quality control—a few of these have ended up in widespread
use:
Terminology
|
Approximate year of first use
|
Description
|
Statistical quality
control (SQC)
|
1930s
|
The application of
statistical methods (specifically control charts and acceptance sampling) to quality control.[4]:556
|
Total quality control
(TQC)
|
1956
|
Popularized by Armand V. Feigenbaum in a Harvard
Business Review article and
book of the same name. Stresses involvement of departments in addition to
production (e.g., accounting, design, finance, human resources, marketing,
purchasing, sales).
|
1960s
|
The use of control charts to
monitor an individual industrial process and feedback performance to the
operators responsible for that process. Inspired by control systems.
|
|
Company-wide quality
control (CWQC)
|
1968
|
Japanese-style total
quality control
|
1985
|
Quality movement
originating in the United States Department of Defense that
uses (in part) the techniques of statistical quality control to drive
continuous organizational improvement.
|
|
Six Sigma (6σ)
|
1986
|
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