Chapter 4, Strategic Quality Planning TQM - Revised
Chapter 4, Strategic Quality Planning TQM - Revised
Chapter 4, Strategic Quality Planning TQM - Revised
A vision statement, on the other hand, describes how the future will
look if the organization achieves its mission.
IBM’s Service
Apple’s Computing for the masses
Disney theme park’s the happiest place on the earth, and
Polaroid’s instant photography
The Quality Statements
The process starts with the principles that quality and customer
satisfaction are the center of an organization’s future. It brings
together all the key stakeholders.
The strategic planning can be performed by any organization. It
can be highly effective, allowing the organizations to do the right
thing at the right time, every time.
There are seven steps to strategic Quality Planning:
1. Discover customer needs
2. Customer positioning
3. Predict the future
4. Gap analysis
5. Closing the gap
6. Alignment
7. Implementation
Seven Steps to Strategic Planning
1. Customer Needs: The first step is to discover the future needs of the
customers. Who will they be? Will your customer base change? What
will they want? How will they want? How will the organization meet and
exceed expectations?
3. Predict the future: Next planners must look into their crystal balls to
predict the future conditions that will affect their product or service.
Demographics, economics forecasts, and technical assessments or
projections are tools that help predict the future.
Seven Steps to Strategic Planning
4. Gap Analysis : This step requires the planner to identify the gaps
between the current state and the future state of the organization.
An analysis of the core values and concepts is an excellent
technique for pinpointing gaps.
5. Closing the Gap: The plan can now be developed to close the
gap by establishing goals and responsibilities. All stakeholders
should be included in the development of the plan.
6. Alignment: As the plan is developed, it must be aligned with the
mission, vision, and core values and concepts of the organization.
Without this alignment, the plan will have little chance of success.
7. Implementation: This last step is frequently the most difficult.
Resources must be allocated to collecting data, designing
changes, and overcoming resistance to change. Also part of this
step is the monitoring activity to ensure that progress is being
made. The planning group should meet at least once a year to
assess progress and take any corrective action.
Strategy and Strategic Planning Process in
Business
Product/Market Scope
In terms of strategic planning, an organization needs to think,
“What am I selling and to whom am I selling”
A company does not simply sell a product or service. It sells
value to a particular segment of market.
Value is what customer-not the company-says it is.
Quality is defined differently to different market segment and
each company must define its market segment and customer
value in that segment.
Every purchase decision is a function of price and quality. Price is
generally known, but quality is in the mind of individual customer.
In today’s heightened competitive environment, a product or
service
The Components of Strategic Planning
Objectives
Management Statesman Peter Drucker has said “A company has
but one objective: to create a customer’
1) Marketing
2) Innovation 5) Physical Resources
3) Human Organization 6) Productivity
4) Financial Resources 7) Social Responsibility
8) Profit Requirements
Various Approaches to view quality
Quality means different to different
people. So are the approaches to address
it by the businesses:
1. Marketing: Performance, features,
services focus on customer concerns
2. Engineering: Specifications, Product
based concerns
3. Manufacturing: Conformance to
specifications, Cost reduction
Market Segmentation
Quality means different to different people.
In terms of strategic quality management,
this means that a firm must define that
segment of the industry and the particular
customer group.
The businesses thus need to define
product lines, each of which is marketed to
a different part of the market and each with
differing quality attributes.
The Components of Strategic Planning
Supporting Policies
Policies are guidelines for action and decision
making and facilitate the attainment of objectives.
Policy Wheel
Target Product
Market Line
Finance
and Marketing
Control
Differentiation
Research Differentiation
and
Mission
Mission
Development Objectives Sales
Objectives
Human Distribution
Resources
Supplier Manufacturing
Consistency of Supporting Policy
The test for consistency of supporting policies for a hypothetical firm
Organizational Culture
When organization chooses to make quality a
major competitive edge, it becomes the central
issue in quality planning-form mission to
supporting policies.
Therefore it is imperative to develop an
organizational culture where every employee of
the company have clear idea that product is
customer value rather than a physical product or
service.