The Path to Product Excellence: Avoiding Common Pitfalls and Enhancing Commun...
Six Sigma
1. Six Sigma – A Strategy for Achieving World
Class Performance
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2. Share concepts and application of Six Sigma
with a case study;
Deployment of Six Sigma as a strategy to
achieve World Class Performance;
Integration of Six Sigma with EFQM framework;
Lessons Learnt
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3. With 99 % With Six Sigma
Quality Quality
For every 300000 3,000 misdeliveries 1 misdelivery
letters delivered
For every week of TV 1.68 hours of dead air 1.8 seconds of dead
broadcasting per air
channel
Out of every 500,000 4100 crashes Less than 2 crashes
computer restarts
Source: The Six Sigma Way by Peter Pande and Others
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4. • Based on teachings of Dr. Walter Shewhart,
Dr. W. E. Deming & Dr. J. Juran.
• Process Control;
• Plan Do Check Act;
• Common and Special Causes;
• Improvement can be done project by project
• Statistical tools
• Hawthorne Plant Experiences
• Developed by Bill Smith at Motorola in
1980s
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5. σ
• Degree of variation;
Sigma is a letter
• Level of performance in terms of defects;
• Statistical measurement of process capability;
• Benchmark for comparison;
• Process improvement methodology;
in the Greek •
•
•
It is a Goal;
Strategy for change;
A commitment to customers to achieve an acceptable level of performance
Alphabet
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6. • Business Definition
A break through strategy to significantly improve
customer satisfaction and shareholder value by
reducing variability in every aspect of business.
• Technical Definition
A statistical term signifying 3.4 defects per million
opportunities.
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7. Sigma Defects Per Million Rate of
Level Opportunities Improvement
1σ 690,000
2σ 308,000 2 times
3σ 66,800 5 times
4σ 6,210 11 times
5σ 230 27 times
6σ 3.4 68 times
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8. Goals
# 1 in Customer Satisfaction
Worlds’ most admired company
Worlds’ largest bank
Strategy - “ Develop business process
excellence by applying voice of the customer to
identify and engineer critical few business
processes using Six Sigma
Created Quality & Productivity Division
Source: Best Practices Report
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9. Wanted results in 1 year;
Hired more than 225 MBB & BBs from GE, Motorola,
Allied Signal for rapid deployment
Developed 2 week Green Belt training programs
Introduced computer simulation of processes
Trained 3767 Green Belts, certified 1230 - Minimum
value target per GB project – $ 250K
Trained 305 Black Belts, certified 61 - Minimum
value target per BB project – $ 1 million
Trained 43 MBB,
1017 in DFSS
80 % of Executive Team trained in GB and 50 %
Certified
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10. Results of first 2 years:
Reduced ATM withdrawal losses by 29.7 %
Reduced counterfeit losses in nationwide
cash vaults by 54%
Customer delight up 20%;
Added 2.3 million customer households
1.3 million fewer customer households
experienced problems
Stock value up 52%
Y 2002 – BOA named Best Bank in US &
Euro money's Worlds Most Improved Bank
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11. • Revenue
• Quote Time • Capital Utilization
• Defect Rate • Return on Assets
• Waste • Profits
• On Time Delivery
• Inventory;
• Machine Utilization
Strategically: Used by Leadership as a vehicle to develop
sustainable culture of Customer, Quality, Value and Continuous
improvement.
Operationally: By Quality Managers to reduce cycle times, costs,
errors, rework, inventory, equipment downtime.
Deployment across all types of processes and industries -
worldwide
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12. Six Sigma & EFQM/ DQA Framework
Enablers Results
Personally People Recognizing Establishing People Competency Key Perf
Productivity
actively People Process Results Results
Involved in management
improvement
Aligning System to be
Developing Individual & used Satisfaction Gross margins
Team skills Organization Involvement Recognition Net profit
Goals Sales
Market Share
Customer Results
Implementing
Identifying & Process Delivery, Response
Encouraging Process cycle time
& enabling people designing Measures Value, Time to
customers Process costs
To participate in processes to deliver reliability
Defect rates
Improvement strategy Productivity
Time to
Repurchase
satisfaction
Market
Policy & Strategy
Cash flow
Maintenance cost
Improving Return on assets
processes
Recognizing to satisfy and
Individual & Generate value
Team effort For customers
Partnerships Society Utility
consumption
Resources Results Timeliness
Inventory
Leadership Processes
Innovation and Learning
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13. At least 25% of the fortune 200 claim to
have a serious six sigma program -
Michael Hammer.
Financial - Bank of America, GE
Capital, Electronics - Allied Signal,
Samsung, Sony
Chemicals - Dupont, Dow Chemicals
Manufacturing - GE Plastics, Johnson
and Johnson, Motorola, Nokia,
Microsoft, Ford.
Airline - Singapore, Lufthansa,
Bombardier
And hundreds of others in Americas,
Europe, Sub Continent.
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14. Company Annual Savings
General Electric $2.0+ billion
JP Morgan Chase *$1.5 billion (*since inception in
1998)
Motorola $ 16 billion (*since inception in 1980s)
Johnson & Johnson $500 million
Honeywell $600 million
Six Sigma Savings as % of revenue vary from 1.2 to 4.5 %
For $ 30 million/yr sales – Savings potential $ 360,000 to $
1.35 million.
Investment: salary of in house experts, training, process
redesign. 14
15. Project Phases
Define Measure Analyze Improve Control
Identify, Collect data Analyze Improvemen Establish
evaluate on size of data, t strategy standards to
and select the selected establish Develop maintain
projects for problem, and confirm ideas to process;
improvemen identify key the “ vital remove root Design the
t customer few “ causes controls,
Set goals requirement determinant Design and implement
Form teams. s, s of the carry out and
Determine performance experiments monitor.
key product . , Evaluate
and process Validate Optimize financial
characteristi hypothesis the process. impact of
c. Final the project
solutions
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16. Background
M/s Alpha Inc. manages out bound cargo
from a distribution centre to different stores.
Deliveries made on trucks - owned and hired.
Customers dissatisfied at delivery schedules.
Leadership decision to deploy Six Sigma;
Team of 1 Black Belt and 3 Green Belts
formed
Sponsor of the project – Distribution Manager
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17. Focus on customers generating annual
revenue of USD 400,000/-.
Customer Improved delivery
needs performance
Level 1 CTQ Timely delivery
Level 2 CTQ On time delivery to schedule
Level 3 CTQ Delivery within +/- 1 hour of
scheduled delivery time
Current process sigma level - 2.43 or 175889 DPMO
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18. Reduce number of delayed deliveries
by 50 % by 31st December Y 2002 to
better meet customer requirement of
timely delivery defined as within +/- 1
hour of scheduled delivery.
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19. Output unit A scheduled delivery of freight
Output Timely delivery
characteristic
Project Y measure Process starts when an order is received
Ends when goods are received & signed
for at customers desk.
Process measurement – Deviation from
scheduled delivery time in minutes.
Specification limits LSL = -60 minutes
USL= +60 minutes
Target Scheduled time or zero minutes
deviation
Defect Delivery earlier or later than 1 hour.
No. of defect 1 opportunity for a defect per scheduled
opportunities per delivery of freight.
unit
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20. Supplier Stores Manager
Input Stores Order
Process Steps Receive order
(high level) Plan delivery
Dispatch Driver with goods
Deliver goods to stores
Receive delivery
Output Received freight with
Documents
Customer Store Manager
• Detailed process maps drawn
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21. Driver and Distance identified as key
factors influencing delivery
performance.
Driver selected for focus.
Potential root causes as to why Driver
influenced the time:
Size of the vehicle
Type of engine
Type of tyres
Fuel capacity
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22. Experiments designed and conducted
using truck type and tyre size.
Findings:
Larger tyres took longer time at certain
routes where area was cramped and time
lost in maneuvering.
High incidence of tyre failures since tight
turns led to stress on tyres thus increasing
number of flat tyres.
Team modified planning of dispatch
process by routing smaller trucks at
more restrictive areas.
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23. Test implementation.
Process sigma level up from 2.43 or
175889 DPMO to 3.94 or 7353 DPMO.
Performance still fell short of best in class
4.32 or 2400 DPMO.
Improvement led to significant customer
satisfaction.
Process continually monitored and data on
new cycle times, tyre failure collected as
per defined methods and frequency,
analysed and monitored.
Customer satisfaction measured and
monitored.
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24. Define
Difficulty in identifying the right project and
defining the scope;
Difficulty in applying statistical parameters to
Voice of the Customers;
Trouble with setting the right goals;
Measure
Inefficient data gathering;
Lack of measures;
Lack of speed in execution;
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25. Analyse
Challenge of identifying best practices
Overuse of statistical tools/ under use of practical
knowledge
Challenge of developing hypotheses
Improve
Challenge of developing ideas to remove root
causes
Difficulty of implementing solutions
Control
Lack of follow up by Managers/ Process Owners
Lack of continuous Voice of the Customer
feedback
Failure to institutionalize continuous
improvement.
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26. “ Define “ ranked most important step but gets
the lowest resource allocation
Project scoping and its definition is critical to its
success/ failure;
“Measure” is considered most difficult step and
also gets the highest resources
Source: Greenwich Associates Study Y 2002
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27. Versatile
Breakthrough improvements
Financial results focus
Process focus
Structured & disciplined problem solving
methodology using scientific tools and
techniques
Customer centered
Involvement of leadership is mandatory.
Training is mandatory;
Action learning (25% class room, 75 %
application)
Creating a dedicated organisation for problem
solving (85/50 Rule).
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28. Generates sustained success
Sets performance goal for everyone
Enhances value for customers;
Accelerates rate of improvement;
Promotes learning across boundaries;
Executes strategic change
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An organisation cannot do today’s job with yesterdays methods & be in business tomorrow. Issue is not whether SS should be considered or not – but it is a question of When as continuous improvement is here to stay.