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Consulting in total quality management

All the above considerations and benefits could be used by consultants in promoting the TQM approach.

21.2 Cost of quality – quality is free

Mediocre managers are likely to ask (or at least think) first how costly a quality improvement or TQM initiative might be. Conversely, they start thinking about losses caused by poor quality only when it is too late. For management consultants, it is important to be well prepared to illustrate the cost of losses due to poor quality and the cost of preventing such losses. The balance is always positive, but you have to prove it.

The cost of quality1 (COQ) includes two components: the costs of attaining quality and the costs of poor quality. The first component includes costs that add value to the business, while the second includes costs that add no value to the business. The activities that generate costs in the first category are planned, which means that these costs can be controlled. The costs of the second category are often due to deficiencies in the way work is carried out in the company, and represent a real loss to the company. Technically, COQ consists of the costs of conformance and of non-conformance. Figure 21.1 shows how these costs might evolve; note that for a small investment in prevention, failure and appraisal costs can be considerably reduced.

Figure 21.1 Typical quality cost reduction

Cost

P

A

F

P = prevention cost A = appraisal cost F = failure cost

NAC = normal activity base cost

P

A

Cost of non-conformance

F

NAC

NAC

Cost of conformance

3 years

 

Time

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Management consulting

Box 21.1 Cost items of non-conformance associated with internal and external failures

Cost items of internal failures

In warranty repairs – correcting defects after delivering products

After-sales support – solving problems when product is in use

Product recall – repairing, handling and investigating recalled products

Scrap – lost material, machine time and labour

Downgraded product – product sold at reduced prices

Rework – labour, equipment and materials used in rework

Lost efficiency – effective capacity diverted to corrective action

Customer complaints – customer pacification

Liability insurance – premium for product liability and settling claims

Administration – meetings and paperwork associated with failures

Excess inventory – because of errors and poor material control procedures

Excessive debt – poor customer vetting, inaccurate invoices

Obsolete stock – storage, overheads, scrap as a result of marketing, sales, engineering, and purchasing errors

Engineering changes – changes in processes and specifications

Overtime – extra hours because of poor planning or control

Excess capacity – the extra capacity required to rework or replace failures

Accidents

Cost items of external failures

Lost opportunities – customers lost because product is late to market, previous non-conformance delivery, poor communication

Customer complaints

Bad debt

Returned products

Product liability

Extended warranty product recall

Overdue accounts receivable

Poor morale – excessive staff turnover and reduced efficiency

The costs of non-conformance are the total costs incurred as a result of things not being done right the first time. They include costs associated with scrap, wastage, repair and rework, and handling of customer complaints. These costs are usually very large and can reach 25 per cent or more of turnover in manufacturing and services. Unfortunately the level of these costs and the places where they occur are often unknown to most managers. The great majority of costs (more than 80 per cent in many companies) are associated with failure, either internal (“not doing things right the first time”) or external (see box 21.1).

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Consulting in total quality management

The costs of conformance are the total costs incurred in ensuring that things are done right the first time. These include planned inspections and tests, and quality-related education and training. The costs are typically associated with designing procedures, defining the processes and process control, and can be classified into two groups: the cost of prevention and the cost of appraisal. Box 21.2 provides examples of the most typical costs for both groups.

Management consultants should explain to clients the major reasons for the need to have data on the cost of poor quality, other than the general one of reducing costs by improving quality. Savings in quality costs would have a significant and positive impact on the bottom line results.

It is of critical importance to advise the client to introduce a COQ system (within the TQM or separately) that will enable the financial consequences of quality problems to be quantified and areas for quality improvement and cost reduction identified. Also the COQ system should enable management to link quality improvement efforts to the bottom line by reducing costs or increasing revenue. It would also show clear links between quality improvement efforts and tangible results in terms of cost reduction, higher sales and profits, and improved productivity. Such a system would provide customers with solid evidence of what the company is doing to ensure high quality in order to differentiate it from the competition and increase customer satisfaction.

The process of setting up the COQ system could be as follows:

The first step will be to identify quality cost items under the prevention, appraisal and failure model (see boxes 21.1 and 21.2).

The second step is to collect and report on quality cost data. Once an organization has identified the poor-quality costs to be captured in the COQ system, it should assign them to specific activities and collect the associated data.

Box 21.2 The cost items of conformance

Prevention costs

Planning and designing procedures and instructions on how to do the task

Vendor assurance

Process capability studies

Quality training and education

Quality improvement programmes and projects

Collection, analysis and reporting of quality data

Maintaining equipment

Planning quality assurance process

Working with suppliers

Appraisal costs

Incoming inspection

In-process inspection and control

Final testing and inspection

Production trials

Materials consumed during inspection and testing

Analysis and reporting of inspection results

Field performance testing

Calibrating test equipment

Audit of the prevention system to ensure its continued effectiveness

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