Issue ABRIL 2013 PDF
Issue ABRIL 2013 PDF
Issue ABRIL 2013 PDF
QUALITY PROGRESS
Managing
manage risk
Risk
Find firmer footing
with a well-balanced
data management
plan p. 16
Plus:
Corral your documents
and data p. 22
Team up to improve
efficiency p. 28
Get Emotional:
Understand Its Role
In the Workplace
p. 34
Volume 46/Number 5
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PDM
NCMR
QMS Software
ISO/TS FMEA
ISO
Nonconforming
Quality
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CAPA
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Contents
Putting Best Practices to Work | May 2013 | www.qualityprogress.com
FEATURES
16
16
DATA MANAGEMENT
Balancing Act
22
Avoiding an Avalanche
by Greg Milliken
28
PROCESS IMPROVEMENT
34
EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE
Mood Righting
Only @
www.qualityprogress.com
by Scott Thor
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34
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QP Reviews
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Up Front
Data disarray.
Innovation Imperative
Controlling risk within the
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Quality in the
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46
Author Guidelines
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Standards Outlook
48
Statistics Roundtable
54
57
Career Corner
64
Special section:
ASQ enterprise and
site members p. 50
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Data Disarray
Get your house in order to reduce risk
Associate Editor
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Assistant Editor
Dont you just hate it when your house gets messyyou look away for just a sec-
Amanda Hankel
ond, and now there are stacks of mail in three separate places, clothes on the floor of
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Production
Spreadsheets and paper records will never be completely eliminated, but the right
technology system helps significantly reduce the errors and risks associated with these
components, they wrote. It enables companies to leverage existing IT systems in a way
that invites management, IT, quality and manufacturing to support important risk mitigation initiatives.
Document control is also an important aspect of reduced risk and increased productivity. Organizations today are overloaded with data and documentation, and need to take
a step back to get their arms around the magnitude of it, and figure out how to manage it
best. In Avoiding an Avalanche, p. 22, the author provides very specific tips for making
records electronic and storing them in an organized and searchable fashion. Its amazing
the effect careful data management can have.
On a sad note, QP editorial review board member Christine Robinson passed away
last month after a brave battle with pancreatic cancer. For more than two decades,
Christine offered her time and expertise in reviewing countless manuscripts and maintaining the editorial integrity and reputation readers expect and value from QP. She
will be greatly missed. QP
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May 2013 QP
logon
+Seen&Heard
The art of measurement
Peter Merrill's March 2013 column on
food safety, Seize the Opportunity,
(pp. 44-45) deserves huge kudos for
articulating the fundamental dichotomy
that our society faces: cheap and quick
initiatives that generate huge return on
capital employed, yet can have irreversible damage and consequences to the
general health of society. Well done,
Peter.
Alex T.C. Lau
Whitby, Ontario
Acting on feedback
In response to the One Good Idea article,
Survey Fatigue (October 2012, p. 87):
Joel Pecoraro writes about ways to
improve customer response rates to
surveys and points out several relevant
questions. However, one of the most
important points was not raised: Provide
feedback to customers responding to
the surveyindividually or notinforming them of the measures taken to introduce improvements based on customer
survey responses. This is the only way to
ensure that they will answer your next
survey.
Basilio V. Dagnino
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Following up on LSS
In response to The Right Blend, (February 2013, pp. 18-26): Good article on
lean Six Sigma (LSS) implementation in
an environment other than manufacturing. I am curious about the following:
1. How long did it take for the project
to go through the define, measure,
analyze, improve and control (DMAIC)
process? Would it have been pos-
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PAST CHAIR
More on collaboration
Read two online sidebars that accompany the feature article, Balancing Act, (pp. 1621) and view an additional figure. Also, in this months Author Audio, listen in as authors
Eda Ross Montgomery and Justin Neway talk more about how collaboration among
quality and manufacturing teams, along with the use of technology, is key to managing
quality data and reducing risk.
CHAIR
CHAIR-ELECT
TREASURER
View two additional tables that round out Scott Thors article, Mood Righting (pp. 3440), about using emotional intelligence to increase work engagement.
PARLIAMENTARIAN
Karla Riesinger, ASQ
65.2%
21.7%
13%
DIRECTORS
QualityNewsToday
Administrative Committee
Technical reviewers
May 2013 QP
expertanswe
Leveraging lean
Q: I am looking for case studies on successful lean programs that give details on
how to undertake a lean program at an IT
satisfaction), were deliberate about identifying root cause issues, and figured out the
management decision?
Santosh Mishra
New Westminster, British Columbia
A: The best example I can provide in which
circuits.
customer-centric.
We set up teams,
questions:
created business
Goals
/ figure 1
Stage two
Stage three
Stage four
Validate
projects
Prioritize
projects
Charter
projects
Strategic
questions
Talk to customers
Identify key metrics
and pain points
Strategic
(early in the cycle)
Project
prioritization
scorecard
Business alignment
framework / figure 2
Project charter
template
Define problem
Strategy
High potential
areas
High potential
Projects
Project
Project
Project
High potential
Project
Project
Pulling for the creation of projects that are aligned with our goals, strategies and metrics.
EBITDA = earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization
Source: Peter Sherman, Pick Your Spots, Quality Progress, September 2012, pp. 36-42.
QP www.qualityprogress.com
Source: Peter Sherman, Pick Your Spots, Quality Progress, September 2012, pp. 36-42.
rs
us? Now, we were asking: Whats the prob-
Its a process
Overcoming challenges
a year.
break-even analysis.
measure results.
We customized the training around
week?
What setbacks did we have this week?
How can we learn from them?
Did we affect our partners or customers
positively this week? How will we do so
next week?
its a process.
Cbeyond Communications
Peter J. Sherman
Atlanta
May 2013 QP
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12 QP www.qualityprogress.com
nt
obituary
box, statistical
giant, passes away
George E.P. Box, considered by many to be one
of the most influential statisticians of the 20th
century, died last month at his Madison, WI,
home. He was 93.
Box was a pioneer in quality control, time
series analysis, design of experiments and
Bayesian inference, a statistical approach to
problem solving.
A native of Gravesend, England, Box earned
a bachelors degree in mathematics and statistics. While pursuing his
masters degree, he began
work at Imperial Chemical
Industries and eventually
became head of the statistical techniques research
section of the company.
He later served as visiting
professor at the University of North Carolina
and was at Princeton University as the director
of its statistical research group.
Box encouraged the creation of a journal
devoted to statistics and statistical implications. ASQ and the American Statistical Association responded to his encouragement by
creating Technometrics.
In 1960, Box moved to Madison, where
he was professor and first chairman of the
statistics department at the University of
Wisconsin (UW). His accomplishments in the
field of statistics earned him ASQs Shewhart
Medal in 1968. Box published numerous
articles and papers, and authored or coauthored many books, including Statistics for
Experimenters, Time Series Analysis: Forecasting and Control and Bayesian Inference
in Statistical Analysis.
Box was also professor emeritus at UWs
Center for Quality and Productivity Improvement. He was an honorary member of ASQ and
a three-time recipient of ASQs Brumbaugh
Award.
Whos Who in
NAME: Ron Berglund.
RESIDENCE: Canton, MI.
May 2013 QP 13
keepingcurrent
AsQnEWs
SECTION RENAMED ASQS Ozark
Section 1413 has been renamed the
Northwest Arkansas Section 1413 to
better represent the geographic area
it serves.
TEAM EXCELLENCE FORMS Intent
to submit forms for next years
International Team Excellence Award
are due July 1. For more information
on the competition, visit http://wcqi.
asq.org/team-competition/timeline.
html.
quality group.
mance compensation.
14 QP www.qualityprogress.com
MANUFACTURING
Software Quality
Professional
F I F T E E N
I S S U E
T W O
M A R C H
www.asq.org
2 0 13
By Mike Crossen
baldrige program
WordtotheWise
To educate newcomers and refresh
practitioners and professionals, QP occasionally features a quality term and
definition:
Right size
Matching tooling and equipment to
the job and space requirements of lean
production, right sizing is a process that
challenges the complexity of equipment
by examining how equipment fits into
an overall vision for workflow through
a factory. When possible, right sizing
favors smaller, dedicated machines
rather than large, multipurpose batch
processing ones.
SOURCE:
Quality Glossary, Quality Progress, June 2007, p. 55.
CORRECTION
In the March 2013 Quality in the First
Person column, Show and Tell
(pp. 48-49), author Marcia M. Weeden
was misidentified as the chair of the
ASQs Olde Colony Section. She is the
sections voice of the customer chair.
QP regrets the error.
May 2013 QP 15
Balancing
Act
Collaboration
reduces risk
in quality data
management
by Eda Ross Montgomery
and Justin Neway
data MANAGEMENT
Quality has long been an initiative, a goal andespecially in regulated industriesa requirement for staying in business.
Todays quality professionals are pushing the envelope to take quality
to new levels and make it a way of life for their organizations.
Risk reduction is a driver for quality improvements across corporate and global boundaries. Standards, such as ISO 9001, have been
widely adopted to minimize risks to consumers. The ISO 9000 series
of standards have been interpreted to fit specific requirements in
various industriesfrom automotive and aerospace manufacturers to
telecommunication and software providers.
These tools are in the early stages of being adopted in the pharmaceutical industry as part of the implementation of quality by design
(QbD). In parallel with implementing risk-reducing quality improvements, it is important to also undertake a technical evaluation program of product and process improvements to ensure they remain in
place and new risks do not unexpectedly arise.
With common methods and standards in
place, manufacturing organizations also share
a daunting challenge: an increased volume of
electronic and paper-based data collected during
process development and manufacturing. Overwhelming amounts of data stored in disparate
systems result in the inability to easily access
pertinent data for quality investigations. Quality
teams need easy ways to get accurate views of
product quality, and better manage the time and
resources required to produce standard quality
reports.
In 50 Words
Or Less
International standards
organizations recommend that life sciences
manufacturers implement quality by design,
making data management central to an organizations quality strategy.
The collaboration of quality and manufacturing
teams to understand and
analyze data to improve
processes, along with
the use of technology,
can help an organization
reduce risk.
May 2013 QP 17
variance exists.
pressure for reduced pricing, driving the need for life sci-
Continuum of
manufactured
goods / figure 1
Adverse consequences of low quality
High
Pharmaceuticals
edge.1
industries,
Other
Imagine a continuum of
manufactured goods (FigTextiles to
discount
retailers
Low
Low
18 QP www.qualityprogress.com
High
system to enhance the quality and availability of medicines around the world in the interest of public health.
data MANAGEMENT
requirements:3
A quality team might see trend charts and ask how the
manufacturer, he said.4
workflows, control of standards and analyststhe current organizing principles on which LIMS are based.
For example, results may be posted and verified
about the selenium content of a particular sample, but
why would someone want to see the data for an individual sample? Ultimately, the goal is to better control the
process that produces the samples, so there needs to be
May 2013 QP 19
validation guidance.9
Collaboration tools /
CAPA
MES
figure 2
HIST
Collaboration tools
(Data aggregation, analysis, contextualization
and reporting)
cycle implementation
efforts to translate
manufacturing
20 QP www.qualityprogress.com
into
nal communications.
might be applied by
industry.7
Meanwhile,
Manufacturing
maQbD.com, ISPEs
the
Society
terials is developing
standards
American
Quality
Global. Provide a Part 11 compliant (a Code of Federal Regulations requirement for integrity and security
LIMS
in-
practical approach-
Study.
for
data MANAGEMENT
gation initiatives. QP
groups.
Train. Provide basic statistical training across groups to
ensure uniform capabilities. Guidance documents assist
in eliminating subjectivity that might affect results.
Communicate. Teams must meet regularly to review
data so quality, plant and manufacturing operations
groups can communicate consistently. There may be
initial resistance to global visibility of data when producing the same product at multiple sites and contract
sites, but the payoff is a more thorough and routine
examination of variation and a consequent reduction
in variability across sites.
Automate. The right technology tools enable routine
monitoring without interruption. Manual data must be
incorporated using automation and technology that
minimizes error. Automating data access, aggregation
and contextualization, which involves organizing related data into groups or batches in preparation for
analysis is a massive time-saver. While monthly analysis is a minimum requirement to ensure that trends in
high-volume products are identified and controlled,
technology tools allow the option for daily updates
References
1. Erik Greb, Moving From a Reactive to a Systemic Approach to Manage Risk,
Pharmaceutical Technology Equipment and Processing Report, Dec. 21, 2011,
http://pharmtech.findpharma.com/pharmtech/Online+Only/Moving-from-aReactive-to-a-Systemic-Approach-to-/ArticleStandard/Article/detail/752605?co
ntextCategoryId=40939 (case sensitive).
2. International Conference on Harmonization of Technical Requirements for
Registration of Pharmaceuticals for Human Use, ICH Q10, 2008 www.ich.
org/fileadmin/Public_Web_Site/ICH_Products/Guidelines/Quality/Q10/Step4/
Q10_Guideline.pdf (case sensitive).
3. Ibid.
4. Patricia Van Arnum, ICH-Q10: A Recipe for the Product Life Cycle, Pharmaceutical Technology, Sept. 2, 2007, http://pharmtech.findpharma.com/pharmtech/
Special+Report/ICH-Q10-A-Recipe-for-the-Product-Life-Cycle/ArticleStandard/
Article/detail/452944 (case sensitive).
5. Margaret A. Hamburg, Import Safety: Status of FDAs Screening Efforts at the
Border, testimony before the U.S. House Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, April 13, 2011, www.fda.gov/newsevents/testimony/ucm250710.
htm.
6. Greb, Moving From a Reactive to a Systemic Approach to Manage Risk, see
reference 1.
7. Another QbD Milestone: PQLI Releases Introductory Good Practice Guide,
PharmaQbD.com, Oct. 22, 2010, www.pharmaqbd.com/pqli_releases_good_
practice_guide.
8. ASTM International, ASTM E2500-07 (2012): Standard Guide for Specification,
Design and Verification of Pharmaceutical and Biopharmaceutical Manufacturing Systems and Equipment, www.astm.org/Standards/E2500.htm (case
sensitive).
9. U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Guidance for Industry: Process Validation:
General Principles and Practices, January 2011, www.fda.gov/downloads/
drugs/guidancecomplianceregulatoryInformation/guidances/ucm070336.pdf.
10. Greb, Moving From a Reactive to a Systemic Approach to Manage Risk, see
reference 1.
products with the least acceptable outcomes (for example, high variability in pH values). They can triage the list
to drive goals and priorities for the manufacturing and
quality organizations.
New products, as well as additional manufacturing
sites, can be brought into the quality data trend monitoring program. The same approach can be used to develop
Justin Neway is vice president and chief science officer of analytical, development, quality
and manufacturing solutions for Accelrys in
Boulder, CO. He has a doctorate in biochemistry
from the University of Illinois in Champaign.
May 2013 QP 21
Avoiding an
Avalanche
In 50 Words
Or Less
Organizations can be
overwhelmed by an
avalanche of information and documentation, which can lead to
process inefficiencies
and lost productivity, as
well as increased risk
and liability.
Centralized electronic
document and data
control processes
within a quality management system help
organizations manage
critical and sensitive
content and make more
informed decisions.
Proper control
of documents and
data within a QMS
will reduce risk
and liability
by Greg Milliken
data management
May 2013 QP 23
ic, day-to-day approach to managing quality information not only operate at a vastly superior level, but also
reduce risk and liability.
ments.
Manual information control procedures are errorprone, and may inadvertently compromise an or-
24 QP www.qualityprogress.com
data management
reduce risk.
A global environment
systems are falling behind, and the reason for the lag
The following are examples of broad content categories organizations typically establish within their
QMSs:
3. Merchandising.
6. Personnel.
Clearly, regulatory information management involves far more than just tracking submissions. The
May 2013 QP 25
tures include:
ture.
HR documents, such as I-9 forms, annual performance reviews and training certificates.
Periodic maintenance tasks, quality checks and
change logs.
Request approvals (for example, authorizing access
to an IT system or organization premises).
Documents related to CAPAs based on deviations
or audit findings.
Industry-specific document types, such as those associated with monitoring reports for clinical trials.
have some similarities, but there are also distinct differences that are often misunderstood. For electronic
signatures:
26 QP www.qualityprogress.com
data management
tional information.
To be competitive in todays global marketplace,
nals.
REFERENCE
1. U.S. Food and Drug Administration and International Conference on Harmonization, Guidance for IndustryProcess Validation: General Principles
and Practices, January 2011, p. 18, www.fda.gov/downloads/drugs/
guidancecomplianceregulatoryinformation/guidances/ucm070336.pdf.
May 2013 QP 27
What Makes
You Tick?
PROCESS IMPROVEMENT
In 50 Words
Or Less
Uncoordinated internal
operations create organizational inefficiencies, a
lower level of customer
service and unnecessary
delays in management
decisions, resulting in
increased costs.
A cross-functional process management system
can help organizations
break through operational
logjams, allowing business
functions to work together
to effectively perform
co-dependent business
requirements, thereby
improving business performance.
May 2013 QP 29
Symptomatic patterns
Table 1.
tasks.
system.
Long-term solution
overall corporate performance going forward. To resolve the CQP dilemma, five basic operational steps
are required to develop and maintain a robust crossfunctional priority management system:
1. Develop a single overall flow process of the crossfunctional events involved. This should be performed by a seasoned cross-functional specialist
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
1-2
Marketing
function
Operations
function
30 QP www.qualityprogress.com
PROCESS IMPROVEMENT
plan.
and ownership.
tions involved.
to cross-functional processes.
cedure.
May 2013 QP 31
involved.
the procedure.
continuously accommodated.
Example
al competitor.
the scale of the operational entities, however, functional gaps were starting to occur when two or more busi-
processes, including:
32 QP www.qualityprogress.com
PROCESS IMPROVEMENT
changes to resolve.
Corporate benefits
ment opportunities.
will follow. QP
to help him or her achieve a more broadly based understanding of the process.
The CFS also must be process literate about proven
and emerging systems, particularly when processes
are required to span multiple geographies that cannot
H.F. Ken Machado is president of Nonpareil International Inc. in Woodside, CA. He has a bachelors
degree in industrial engineering from the University
of California, Berkeley, and a masters degree in
industrial management from San Jose State University
in California. He is a member of ASQ.
May 2013 QP 33
emotional intelligence
Mood
Righting
Increase work engagement
through emotional intelligence
U.S. ORGANIZATIONS FACE monumental
challenges as a global economy has emerged. Arguably, the
global economy is driving competitive forces to levels unimaginable only a few decades ago.
In response to global economic pressures, many organizations are embracing process improvement initiatives such as
lean Six Sigma. Process improvement expertsthose tasked
with developing and implementing lean Six Sigma initiatives
play a critical role in the process. Research also suggests leadership and teamwork are key elements to success in process
improvement initiatives.1, 2
In 50 Words
Or Less
by Scott Thor
May 2013 QP 35
In general,
3-5
$340 billion.9
Author Andrew Milivojevich focused on the personal characteristics of belts working within the
Peter Salovey and John Mayer coined the term emotional intelligence, developing what has evolved into
Emotional intelligence
model / figure 1
Managing
emotion
Controlling emotions.
Keeping an open mind with feelings.
Most difficult of emotional abilities.
Understanding
emotion
Facilitating
thought with
emotion
Perceiving
emotion
36 QP www.qualityprogress.com
emotional intelligence
Summary of study
ment experts.
Work engagement
model / figure 2
Survey participants
industries / Table 1
Industry
Education
140
2.7
36
0.7
Educational services
48
0.9
0.2
Percentage
of total
48
0.9
Government
254
4.9
Healthcare
389
7.5
Hospitals
178
3.4
72
1.4
126
2.4
13
0.3
Manufacturing
2554
49.2
505
9.7
Electronics
294
5.7
Vigor
Work
engagement
Dedication
Absorption
Survey participants
gender and age / Table 2
Gender/age
Female
Percentage
n
2,021
39
19 to 25
23
1.1
26 to 35
304
15
36 to 45
532
26.3
Fabricated metals
354
6.8
223
4.3
104
46 to 55
788
39
Medical devices
668
12.9
56 to 65
354
17.5
406
7.8
20
1.1
Service
Over 65
Male
3,166
61
0.03
1.2
663
12.8
420
8.1
19 to 25
38
18
0.3
26 to 35
308
9.7
104
36 to 45
742
23.4
Transportation/logistics services
47
0.9
46 to 55
1,171
37
Wholesale/retail
74
1.4
56 to 65
766
24.2
1,187
22.9
Over 65
140
4.4
Consulting/business services
Entertainment/hospitality/recreation
Financial/insurance
Other
n = 5,187
18 or under
n = 5,187
May 2013 QP 37
p < 0.001).
trust and loyalty, which can result in higher productivity by individuals, teams and organizations.16
Research conclusions
A number of conclusions can be drawn from this re-
Implications of findings
This research provides a potential pathway to process improvement experts who want to better under-
results.
38 QP www.qualityprogress.com
emotional intelligence
ture.19
Intentional change
line measures.
gence competencies.
you can write about any event that lets you explore
real self are similar, and identifying the gaps that exist between the two.
manage emotions.24
Caruso and Salovey also described a technique
May 2013 QP 39
emotional intelligence
REFERENCES
1. Janet Jacobsen, Avoiding the Mistakes of the Past: Lessons Learned on
What Makes or Breaks Quality Initiatives, Journal for Quality and Participation, Vol. 31, No. 2, 2008, pp. 4-8.
2. Low Sui Pheng and Mok Sze Hui, Implementing and Applying Six Sigma in
Construction, Journal of Constructing Engineering and Management, Vol.
130, No. 4, 2004, pp. 482-489.
3. James P. Corrigan, The Art of TQM, Quality Progress, July 1995, pp. 61-64.
4. Herbert W. Hoover Jr., What Went Wrong With U.S. Business Attempt to
Rescue its Competitiveness? Quality Progress, July 1995, pp. 83-86.
5. Jacobsen, Avoiding the Mistakes of the Past: Lessons Learned on What
Makes or Breaks Quality Initiatives, see reference 1.
6. Rodd Wagner and James K. Harter, 12: The Elements of Great Managing,
Gallup Press, 2006.
7. Gallup Consulting, Employee Engagement: Whats Your Employee Engagement Ratio? 2008, www.gallup.com.
8. Towers Perrin/Towers Watson, Closing the Engagement Gap: A Road Map
for Driving Superior Business Performance, 2003, www.towerswatson.
com.
9. Aurelio Rivera and Jacob Flinck, Employee-led, Employee Engagement in
the Federal Government: SAMHSA Peoplefirst, Advances in Developing
Human Resources, Vol. 13, No. 4, 2011, pp. 479-493.
10. Andrew Milivojevich, Emotional Intelligence and Six Sigma, Quality
Progress, Vol. 39, No. 8, 2006, p. 45.
11. Peter Salovey and John D. Mayer, Emotional Intelligence, Imagination,
Cognition and Personality, Vol. 9, No. 3, 1990, pp. 185-211.
12. Arnold B. Bakker, Wilmar B. Schaufeli, Michael P. Leiter and Toon W. Taris,
Work Engagement: An Emerging Concept in Occupational Health and
Psychology, Work and Stress, Vol. 22, No. 3, 2008, p. 187.
13. Moshe Zeidner, Gerald Matthews and Richard D. Roberts, What We Know
About Emotional Intelligence: How it Affects Learning, Work, Relationships
and Our Mental Health, MIT Press, 2009, p. 302.
14. D. Robinson, A. Rafferty, J. Maben and E. West, What Makes a Good
Employer? The Links Between Effective Human Resource Practice, Staffing
Levels, Staff Involvement and Care Outcomes, The Global Workforce Initiative, International Council of Nursing, March 2005.
15. Izabela Robinson, Human Resource Management in Organizations, Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development, 2006.
16. Robert K. Cooper, Applying Emotional Intelligence in the Workplace,
Training and Development, Vol. 51, No. 12, 1997, pp. 31-38.
17. Xingxing Zu and Lawrence Fredendall, Enhancing Six Sigma Implementation Through Human Resource Management, Quality Management Journal,
2009, Vol. 16, No. 4, pp. 41-54.
18. Robert R. McCrae, Emotional Intelligence From the Perspective of the
Five-Factor Model of Personality, which appeared in The Handbook of
Emotional Intelligence: Theory, Development, Assessment and Application
at Home, School and in the Workplace, Reuven Bar-On and James D.A.
Parker, eds., Jossey-Bass, 2000, pp. 263-276.
19. Robert J. Emmerling, and Daniel Goleman, Emotional Intelligence: Issues
and Common Misunderstandings, Emotional Intelligence Consortium,
2003. www.eiconsortium.org.
20. Richard E. Boyatzis, Developing Emotional Intelligence Competencies,
which appeared in Applying Emotional Intelligence: A Practitioners Guide,
Joseph Ciarrochi and John D. Mayer, eds., Psychology Press, 2007, pp.
28-52.
21. Richard E. Boyatzis, Scott S. Cowan and David A. Kolb, Innovations in Professional Education: Steps on a Journey to Learning, Jossey-Bass, 1995.
22. David A. Caruso and Peter Salovey, The Emotionally Intelligent Manager:
How to Develop and Use the Four Key Emotional Skills of Leadership,
Jossey-Bass, 2004, p. 136.
23. Ibid, p. 137.
24. Ibid.
25. Joseph Wolpe, Psychotherapy by Reciprocal Inhibition, Stanford University
Press, 1958.
40 QP www.qualityprogress.com
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Innovation Imperative
BY Peter Merrill
novation perspective.
The January 2012 issues theme was
Fail early
concept.
especially to generate
risk.
42 QP www.qualityprogress.com
solutions, we do need to
manage risks.
die.
After we have the dataand unfortunately it will not all arrive in perfect
managing risk.
new offerings.
/ Figure 1
/ Figure 2
Aim here
High
High
High ROI
Highly radical
Low risk
Try a few of
these ideas
Healthy
companies
also invest
here
Medium
ROI
High
High
Radical
Risk
Low
Low
Pressure to
invest here
2 years
4 years
6 years
May 2013 QP 43
Innovation Imperative
es and develop the new product portfolio.
The portfolio must be a mix of short,
medium and long-term projects. The size
of the mix will depend on the size of the
business. A small to medium-sized enterprise will have probably only two or three
selections. However, we should never put
all our eggs in one basket and focus on
market.
Risk in innovation
quarterly basis.
lowest risk.
External risk
precise. QP
References
44 QP www.qualityprogress.com
BY Fitz-George a. Carty
Whos on Top?
Quality can be an uphill battle
Im puzzled by the approaches that
Facing fear
A quality revelation
to berate me.
the supervisorhad
Recently, a friend
an overseas customer
at my friends com-
a solution. My friend
May 2013 QP 45
Standards Outlook
BY Sandford Liebesman
World View
Risk management is a must in todays global economy
the global economy has provided
needs.
land security.
objectives.
be determined.
46 QP www.qualityprogress.com
internal control:
Reference
updating.
ment are:
May 2013 QP 47
Statistics Roundtable
BY Roger W. Hoerl
and Ronald D. Snee
solution-unknown problems.
Problem complexity
solving method.
48 QP www.qualityprogress.com
and methods.
Low complexity
Type of problem
WorkOut.
Nike projects.
High complexity
Solution unknown
How should we
implement the
solution?
*Structured team problem solving, using the magnificent seven tools, for example.
Low complexity
1
Leadership training for
management.
Solution unknown
2
Bottlenecking analysis of equipment
and personnel.
3
Create 50-parameter
measurement system.
4
Improve process yield.
May 2013 QP 49
statistics roundtable
suring the blockbuster drug supply would
expected.
your consideration.
racy is increased.
Probability of success is increased.
Many practitioners have told us over
the years that they understand different
methods, such as lean Six Sigma, kaizen
events, reengineering and WorkOut, but
they are confused as to which improvement approach is the best. They also wonder if one method is best for all problems.
Business Improvement to Improve the Bottom Line, Quality Progress, October 2009, pp. 52-54.
4. Roger W. Hoerl and Ronald D. Snee, Statistical Thinking;
Improving Business Performance, second edition, John
Wiley and Sons, 2012.
5. Snee, Six Sigma Beyond the Factory Floor, see reference 1
6. Thomas L. McGurk, Ramping Up and Ensuring Supply
Capability for Biopharmaceuticals, BioPharm International,
January 2004, pp. 1-4.
7. Roger W. Hoerl and Ronald D. Snee, Closing the Gap, Quality Progress, May 2010, pp. 52-53.
8. Ronald D. Snee and Roger W. Hoerl, Further Explanation,
Quality Progress, December 2010, pp. 68-72.
9. Ronald D. Snee and Roger W. Hoerl, Proper Blending,
Quality Progress, June 2011, pp. 46-49.
2013 Roger W. Hoerl and Ronald D. Snee
ROGER W. HOERL is Brate-Peschel assistant professor of statistics at Union
College in Schenectady, NY. He has
a doctorate in applied statistics from
the University of Delaware in Newark.
Hoerl is an ASQ fellow, a recipient of
the ASQs Shewhart Medal and Brumbaugh Award, and an academician in
the International Academy for Quality.
RONALD D. SNEE is president of
Snee Associates LLC in Newark, DE.
He has a doctorate in applied and
mathematical statistics from Rutgers
University in New Brunswick, NJ.
Snee has received ASQs Shewhart
and Grant Medals. He is an ASQ
fellow and an academician in the
International Academy for Quality.
50 QP www.qualityprogress.com
Aerojet
Aerotek
Banner Pharmacaps Inc.
City of Milwaukee
Ivy Tech Community College
Orkin LLC
Pinal County Clerk of the Superior Court
Xchanging Technologies Services
India Pvt. Ltd.
BioReliance Corporation
Bio-Tissue Inc.
Bison Building Materials
BJC Healthcare
Blue Cross Blue Shield Arizona
Bonfils Blood Center
Bonneville Power
Administration
BorgWarner Turbo Systems
Boston Scientific (4)
Botswana National Productivity
Bridon American Corp.
Briggs & Stratton
Brigham Young University
Brookhaven National Laboratory
Bunn-O-Matic Corporation
Bureau Veritas Certification
Hong Kong
Bureau Veritas Consumer
Products Services Inc.
Business Excellence
Consulting Inc.
CACI
Calsonic Kansei North America
Cameron International
Cangene Corporation
Candu Energy Inc.
Cargill Inc.
Carlisle Interconnect
Technologies
Carpenter Technology Corp.
Casa Cuervo S.A. De C.V.
Cedarburg Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Celerity IT LLC
Celestica International Inc.
Cementos Lima S.A.
Center for Applied Technology
Development
Center Quality Office
Century Metal Spinning Co.
Cerner Corporation
Cerner Corporation
Innovations Campus
Cerveceria Polar Los
Cortijos C.A.
CGS Administrators
Chemonics International
Cherokee Nation Industries
Chicago Department of
Public Health
ChildNet Inc.
Childrens Hospital
of Philadelphia
Christian Brothers University
Chrysler Group
CIBA Vision Corporation
Cincinnati Precision
Instruments Inc.
Climax Portable Machine
Tools Inc.
Cobham Life Support
Coherent Inc.
Coloplast
COMFRC
May 2013 QP 51
PL Developments
Plow & Hearth LLC
PMT Corporation
Point Lepreau GS
Pontificia Universidad Catlica
del Per
Pratt & Whitney
Premier Bankcard
Procter & Gamble Company
Productivity Quality Systems
PSI Repair Services
Puget Sound Energy
QAI India Ltd.
Qatargas Operating
Company Ltd.
Qatar Quality Plus
Qiagen Shared Services Inc.
QMI-SAI Global (2)
Qualiware Inc.
QualTex
Rauland-Borg Corp.
RDECOMRock Island Arsenal
Refinera ISLA
The Reliable Automatic
Sprinkler Co. Inc.
Rhein-Minapharm B.G.
Ricca Chemical Company
Rio Tinto Minerals
RIT/CQAS
RJ Lee Group
Robert Heely Construction
Roche Diagnostics Corporation
Rohmann Services
R S Software India Ltd.
R. Stahl Inc.
RTI Biologics Inc.
RTI Tradco
SAFC
Salimetrics LLC
SanDisk Corporation
Sani-Tech West
Sanofi Pasteur Limited
Saturn Electronics &
Engineering
Sauder Woodworking
Saudi Airlines
Schleifring Medical Systems
SC Johnson
SC Johnson Home Storage
Sears Holdings
SED Systems
Shaw Industries
Shenzhen Tinno Mobile
Technology Corp.
The Shepherd Color Company
Sid Richardson Carbon Co.
Sigma-Aldrich Biosciences
Simon Fraser University
Singapore General Hospital
Singapore Health Services Pte.
Ltd.
Singapore Quality Institute
Smart Technologies Inc.
52 QP www.qualityprogress.com
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& Technology
University of Northern Colorado
University of Wisconsin
Hospitals and Clinics
University Rovira Virgili
URS
USANA Health Sciences Inc.
U.S. Army ARDEC
U.S. Army CERDEC
U.S. Army Med Res Inst
Chemical Defense
(USAMRICD)
U.S. Cellular Corp.
U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency
U.S. Food and Drug
Administration
USIMINAS
USIMINAS CUBATAO
USMC Blount Island Command
USPS Washington D.C.
UT MD Anderson Cancer Center
Valeant Pharmaceuticals
International Inc.
The Vanguard Group
Vascular Solutions Inc.
Ventana Medical Systems
Verify Inc.
Viastore
Viega LLC
Viracon
Visit Milwaukee
Vistakon
Volvo Powertrain
W.W. Grainger
Wackenhut Services Inc.
Walt Disney World
Warner Chilcott Company LLC
The Washington Consulting
Group Inc.
Water Corporation
Watson Drill Rigs
Waupaca Foundry Inc.
Webco Manufacturing Inc.
Wellmark
Wells Fargo Home Mortgage
Wenatchee Valley
Medical Center
WePackItAll
Wilden Pump & Engineering
WMATA
Xandex Inc.
XLI Corporation
Zippo Manufacturing Co.
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BY Joseph D. Conklin
Roundabout Estimation
their business.
locally.
In this situation, what you wantcounty level numbersis unavailable. The trade
association has state-level numbers that it
Building a solution
several reasons.
10
State
total
New permits
1,146
2,004
1,560
6,726
3,501
2,071
7,692
4,549
1,115
2,239
107,168
Percentage of
state total
1.07%
1.87%
1.45%
6.27%
3.27%
1.93%
7.18%
4.24%
1.04%
2.09%
100%
Sidewalk spending
140.90 125.64 146.16 123.72 105.13 188.04 176.16 136.148 176.73 101.38
(thousands $)
Percentage of
state total
3.17%
2.82%
3.28%
2.78%
2.36%
4.22%
3.96%
3.07%
3.96%
2.28%
numbers?
To keep things
simple, say there are
two uses that consume almost all of
the cement in a state:
building and maintaining sidewalks, and new
building construction.
4,450.98
100%
Note: State total includes all counties, not just the ten of interest.
Trade association
Sidewalk tonnage
1,709,979
Roofing tonnage
21,344,437
County
Estimated
cement
used
10
Sidewalk
tonnage
18,286 31,976 24,891 107,273 55,862 33,045 122,734 72,584 17,791 34,726
Roofing
tonnage
675,678 602,500 700,902 593,293 504,145 901,736 844,766 654,483 846,061 486,162
Note: County 1 has 1.07% of the new permits for the state. Take 1.07% of the state total for sidewalk tonnage. 1.07% of 1,709,979 is the
County 1 estimate for sidewalk tonnage. Percents are shown to two decimal places. More precision is used to derive estimated cement used.
54 QP www.qualityprogress.com
25
50
40
15
Tonnage
Tonnage
20
10
20
5
0
30
10
10
Spending or permits
5
6
7
8
Spending or permits
10
company data.
estimate?
state.
of tests in advance.
estimate?
5. Is it possible to take some fraction of
What cautions accompany this procedure? First, you need to appreciate the
suggest?
6. This example starts at state-level
numbers and estimates down to coun-
May 2013 QP 55
ment tonnage.
If the estimates from this
250
200
Tonnage
Curved relation
between variable
and tonnage / figure 3
150
100
In Figure 4, an independent
50
0
10
Spending or permits
yet completed.
sets.
1,000
900
800
700
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
Indirect estimate (in thousands)
56 QP www.qualityprogress.com
1,200
Unacceptable comparison
with indirect estimate / figure 5
Check against sample of county projects (in thousands)
2,500
2,00
1,500
1,000
500
0
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
Indirect estimate (in thousands)
1,200
Career Corner
BY Rosemarie Christopher
instructor-led courses.
volunteer).
or elsewhere.
tions cultures.
laborative strategist.
Employers can only work with what
Soften up
in Los Angeles.
Participating in an industry-focused
May 2013 QP 57
QPToolbox
Conductivity sensor
compact
chometer generators.
758-GF86/
measure speeds of up
one ounce-inch.
This series of AC
tachometer generators are speed transducers in basic form,
Call: 714-895-4344.
Visit: www.sensorex.com.
Tachnometer generators
Call: 800-866-6659.
Visit: www.west-cs.com.
Temperature controllers
West Control Solutions provides a range of
temperature controllers that are designed
58 QP www.qualityprogress.com
temperature readers.
Call: 800-325-7425.
Visit: www.sickusa.com.
Industrial Bluetooth
transmitter
Call: 574-936-2112.
Visit: www.itamco.com/iblue.
May 2013 QP 59
QPReviews
Lean Management Principles
For Information Technology
Gerhard J. Plenart, CRC Press, 2012, 368
is intended for IT
practitioners, it is an
excellent resource
agement principles.
an admirable job of
Marc A. Feldman
providing information
Houston
eliminating waste.
Due to all that occurs and repeats regu-
Gemba is where
In Japanese, kaizen
means continuous
improvement. Kaizen
implies improvements
Sweden
ments.
Bengt Klefsj
Performance-Based
Certification: How to
Design a Valid, Defensible,
Cost-Effective Program
rules:
60 QP www.qualityprogress.com
spot.
The book
Roberto Guzman
is organized
Morrisville, NC
based on the
plan-do-check-
act continuous
improvement
is divided into
Enterprise Performance
Management Done Right
the book.
Recent Releases
$50 (book).
Management: A Concise
Introduction
be those in managerial
positions responsible
needs.
Advertisers Index
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Minitab Inc.
PQ Systems Inc.
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May 2013 QP 61
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May 2013 QP 63
BY william A. levinson
Words of wisdom
organizations survival.
In medieval times, a court jester was
The fool in tarot card decks may symbolize a similar rolethe ability to chal-
William A. Levinson is the author of Easy A, which features tips to ace certification exams. Check out the open-access column, which appeared in QPs July 2012
issue, at http://asq.org/quality- progress/2012/07/one-good-idea/easy-a.html.
64 QP www.qualityprogress.com
1. Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heyoka.
2. Be Stupid, Diesel, www.diesel.com/be-stupid.
3. Shigeo Shingo, (Andrew Dillon, translator), The Sayings
of Shigeo Shingo: Key Strategies for Plant Improvement,
Productivity Press, 1987.
4. Henry Ford and Samuel Crowther, My Life and Work,
Doubleday, Page and Company, 1922.
20
2
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Perspectives of a Clinical Nurse Specialist About Improving the Quality of Nursing Services
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Leadership Issues
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