My Objective is to Help You Achieve Yours
In Search of Quality© Fred Nickols 2012
|
Quality
is one of those words that surrounds us, smothers us and, at times,
threatens to overwhelm us. It
is used by so many people in so many ways as to run the risk of signifying
nothing at all. Yet, even if
only in self defense, we must come to grips with its meaning. After all, how are we to improve it if we do not know what it
is?
Many
companies embark upon voyages of discovery with respect to Quality.
In today's incarnation of the quality movement, they typically
sail off aboard the S.S. Six Sigma. They
are in search of its meaning not just for their products and services, but
also for their processes, their systems, their operations, their company,
and their people. If they are wise, they adopt the view that Quality must be an
integral part of everything they do.
The history of some companies gives ample testimony to their
commitment to Quality. Their
continued success justifies their commitment.
Most important, the future they face demands it of them.
But, just what is this thing called Quality?
My
research into matters typically begins with the words used to name,
define, or describe that which is to be understood.
Defining one's terms has always seemed such sound advice.
Consequently, I have in my keeping several old dictionaries that I
find useful in studying words and how their meanings change over time -
or remain constant, as the case may be.
The
oldest of my dictionaries is Webster's High School Dictionary, published
in 1868, only 40 years after Noah Webster's very first dictionary of the
American language appeared. It contains these definitions of the word quality:
"Nature; character; distinguishing property; attribute; high
rank."
I
also have a copy of a dictionary published 100 years later, in 1968:
Webster's New World Dictionary of The American Language (Second
College Edition). It offers
these definitions of quality:
1.
any of the features that make something what it is; characteristic
element; attribute
2.
basic nature; character; kind
3.
the degree of excellence which a thing possesses
4. excellence; superiority
5. position, capacity, or role [Rare]
6.
high social position or people of high social position [Archaic]
Three
other definitions are given but they are technical, relating to acoustics,
logic, and phonetics. I will
not burden you with these technical definitions.
Incidentally,
in this 1968 dictionary, just below "quality" is "quality
control," defined as follows:
"a system for maintaining desired
standards in production or in a product, esp. by inspecting samples of the
product"
Sometime
during the century spanning 1868 and 1968, things changed.
Quality had come to imply excellence and the notion of quality
control had appeared. Then,
again, perhaps things hadn't changed.
In 1868, the dictionary was itself still a relatively new product,
and a high school dictionary of that time, although a useful indicator as
to meanings then in use, is hardly the last word on the matter.
So, I turned to the earliest of the big dictionaries I own: Webster's Universal Dictionary of The English Language (1908-9).
It is most illuminating (and well illustrated, too).
Here are its offerings on the subject of quality:
1.
That which belongs to a body or to an entity and renders or helps
to render it such as it is; characteristic attribute; nature; a belonging;
as, purity of tone is an important quality of music; a man is
admired and respected for his good qualities.
2.
Any character or characteristic which may render an object good or
bad, commendable or reprehensible; as, a fabric of poor quality; a
mind of superior quality.
3. Superiority of character; excellence of nature; as, a person of quality.
4.
Power to accomplish; capability of doing a specific thing; as,
certain substances having healing qualities.
Note: The fifth, sixth, and seventh
definitions are technical, dealing with logic, music, and acoustics,
respectively.
8.
Superior rank or station; as, he belongs to the quality.
Clearly,
as the second definition establishes, the notion of goodness in products
existed shortly after the turn of the century.
But, why shouldn't it? The
exodus off the farms and into the factories, begun in earnest in 1875, was
well underway if not largely completed by then.
King Cotton had been deposed by the Barons of Business.
One
of the more recent dictionaries in my library is a paperback edition of Webster's
New World Dictionary (1982). It
carries only four listings for quality, none of which are technical:
1.
that which makes something what it is; characteristic element
2.
basic nature; kind
3.
the degree of excellence of a thing
4. excellence
(Hmm.
Do you suppose the "search for excellence" that occupied
all our time in the 1980s was really a quest for Quality?)
Here,
too, are signs of the times circa 1982.
Directly beneath "quality" is this listing for
"quality circle":
"any of the small groups of workers
that meet regularly to suggest improvements in production"
Sound
familiar?
Certainly
the biggest, and arguably the best, of my dictionaries is a Christmas
present from my wife, The Compact Oxford English Dictionary (1991).
It consists of all 25 definitive volumes of the English language packed
into one, in print so fine a special magnifying glass is required to
access its contents.
In
it, I encountered for the first time a distinction between the concept of
quality as it applies to people and as it applies to things.
For obvious reasons, we will deal here with the concept of Quality
as it applies to things. Setting
aside all the technical, archaic, and obsolete definitions leaves us with
just two of interest:
7.a.
An attribute, property, special feature or characteristic.
8.a.
The nature, kind, or character (of something).
Now restricted to cases in which there is comparison (expressed or
implied) with other things of the same kind; hence, the degree or grade of
excellence, etc. possessed by a thing.
Tucked
away under this heading, in the explanatory notes, I also found these two
related constructs:
quality circle,
a group of employees (orig. in Japanese industry) who meet to consider
ways of resolving problems and improving production in their organization;
quality control,
the maintenance of the desired quality in a manufactured product, esp. by
means of critical examination of a proportion of the output and its
comparison with the specification.
Being
of a persistent as well as curious nature, I next resorted to an older
(1879) version of Roget's Thesaurus but, except for linking quality
with quantity, it was of no help whatsoever.
A later edition (1962) makes the link between quality and goodness.
It also maintains the link to quantity made in the 1879 version.
Then,
by way of seeing what the ancients and other thinkers of note have had to
say about Quality, I referred to Bartlett's Famous Quotations: the
eighth edition, 1882; and the most recent edition, the 15th, 1962.
I found nothing worth mentioning in the 1882 edition but the newer
one contains this comment by Lucius Annaeus Seneca ("Seneca the
younger"), Roman philosopher, dramatist, and statesman (c. 4
B.C.--A.D. 65): "It is quality rather than quantity that matters."
Seneca's
words have a nice ring to them but we probably ought to keep in mind that
he was a cynic and a hypocrite, a murderer, and tutor to the young Nero.
Ultimately, owing to Poppaea's ascent to power as well as to his
own conspiratorial bent, Seneca was forced to commit suicide (leading me
to conclude that one should move cautiously with respect to this Quality
thing).
What
have I learned? What have I
concluded about Quality after all this rummaging around in those
conceptual chests of drawers called dictionaries?
Well,
the term that won't leave the forefront of my thinking is actually from my
youth: Quality Merchandise. It still appears where I first saw it, on signs in store
windows. It means, of
course, goods that are well made, free from defects.
It might or might not mean that these goods possess the attributes
and characteristics sought after by their would-be purchasers.
These qualities vary from product to product and customer to
customer. In shoes, one buyer
might look for sturdiness, another for style; some demand both.
Tensile strength might be important in certain tools or other items
fabricated from metal or plastic, whereas lack of this same characteristic
marks fine china and crystal. "Delicate,"
a term which applies to some lingerie, also applies to certain pastries,
but it is a totally inappropriate quality in a cutting board or a chain
saw. On and on the
possibilities go. How are we
to resolve the confusion?
The
solution lies in recognizing that Quality is a relative construct.
Its definition hinges on whom you ask and with respect to what.
David Hume (1711-1776) captured this thought 250 years ago when he
wrote, "Beauty in things exists in the mind which contemplates
them." More than 100
years later, Margaret Wolfe Hungerford (1855-1897) wrote the more
familiar, "Beauty is in the eye of the beholder."
Thus,
the first order of business in improving Quality (or anything else for
that matter) is always to define it, to say what you mean by it.
Once defined, ways can be found of measuring it.
And, once it is measurable, it can be improved.
(The same holds true for "service," by the way.)
In
the end, partly because I fancy myself "a systems thinker," but
mostly because I've been influenced by the writings of Joseph M. Juran, I
am inclined to take an internal or production view of Quality, and
an external or marketing view as well.
Internal
quality
refers to the extent to which a company's products and services meet
specifications, that is, the extent to which they are free from defects.
Managing
internal quality is an engineering problem, a matter of building
systems that perform to specification, a matter of doing things right.
External quality refers to the extent to which the company's
products and services are of value to its customers.
This is traceable to the extent to which the company's product and
service specifications reflect its customers' wants, needs, requirements,
and constraints. These
usually can be expressed in terms such as cost, suitability, reliability,
accuracy, timeliness, speed, and so on.
Managing
external quality is a communications problem, a matter of engaging
your customers in dialogue and getting to know them.
Eventually, it is a matter of doing the right things.
If the requirements for external quality are not met, then to
paraphrase Peter Drucker, the result is apt to be "beautifully
engineered products that should not have been built at all."
Quality,
or what some seem to mean by "total quality," including "total
quality management," is not the simple arithmetic sum of internal and
external quality but, rather, a more complicated function of the two (see
the equation below).
Q
= f (Q i & Q e )
In
the final analysis, even if you're wearing a totally modern Six Sigma
black belt, Quality means what it has meant all along:
value in goods and services. On
the one hand, this means goods that are well made and services that are
properly delivered. On the other, it includes the notion of value.
Value, to play off the earlier Hume and Hungerford quotations about
beauty, is in the eye and mind of your customers.
Which, by the way, is why they know it when they see it.
Ultimately,
to go in search of Quality is to go in search of your customer, for there
is where value is determined and where the definition of Quality begins.
|
This page last updated on August 2, 2019 |