Question 52
of 100
We are working to reduce
variation in all our products and services.
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Why this is important
Measuring consistency
Error trapping
Six Sigma
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Avoid doing these poor practices
Working at the levels of one, two or three sigma.
Error checking is done by eye.
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Do these good practices
Working in the levels of five or six sigma.
The company makes processes easier and simpler to use or with
less variation in their output.
Working to reduce the variation in all major processes, products
and services.
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Principle 6: Variability (Item 8)
All systems and processes exhibit variability, which impacts on
predictability and performance.
The last several questions have made a strong case to reduce your variation.
We will not repeat it. When you reduce your variation, you reduce your
rework and all the costs associated with rework. For most companies,
rework costs are significant.
How does your company know that it provides products and services
at consistent quality to your customers? How do you measure what you
provide? If you say "we ask our customers if they are satisfied",
wrong answer! You must measure your processes that make a difference
to your customers, before they get to you customers.
For example, most customers
have a need for timeliness. You must constantly measure your response
time. Even if your customer has never set a formal time. You must measure
response time and be constantly reducing it by identifying common
causes and one-by-one eliminating them.
Customers also usually have need for accuracy. Measure your accuracy
(or lack of it) with invoices and all transactions.
If you were a manufacturer of cement, your customers would have set
specifications about the lime and silica content for different usages.
You would have to monitor your processes to ensure you stayed within
those specification limits. (For cement, these specifications are usually
described in a `standard'.) That is, you must measure to make
certain that you can produce within the customer's specifications every
time. In terms of our discussion from Principle 4 (`To Improve the
Outcome, Improve the System'), you measure make certain that
your process is capable of delivering to these specification limits.
As you work to reduce your rework, you to work more and more at the
errors that are not detectable by eye.
Most company's systems work at the easy-to-do level. At these levels,
you can use methods like proofreading to find typing errors. They are
OK when errors occur as often as a typo every page or so one
in a thousand. However, you cannot use the same methods when your errors
are as infrequent as a typo per library.
The methods you use to trap errors by eye break down when you have
many transactions. Most companies still use the same old paper based
error trapping systems of 100 years ago. That is, proofreading.
Six sigma is a methodology pioneered by Motorola. It is very useful
for reducing the range of variation. Six sigma forces you to look at
the different orders of magnitude that are necessary at each stage when
reducing variation. Here are two examples.
If you have one typing error in every six words, that is one sigma.
It would be easy to find. Two sigma is an error every four lines
also easy to find. Three sigma is a typo about every two pages
becoming more difficult. Four sigma is a typo every 70 pages. Five sigma
is a typo every 20 books a shelf full! Six sigma is a typo every
5,500 books a library full! Most of our systems work at the easy-to-do
level. At these levels, you can use methods like proofreading to find
typing errors. They work to find errors that occur as often as three
sigma a typo every page or so. However, we cannot use the same
method when our errors are so infrequent as a typo per library and we
want to find and remove them. Who would care anyway?
Airline passengers do care when the errors are lost luggage rather
than typos. Three sigma is one piece of luggage lost every two jumbos.
Four sigma is one piece of luggage lost every 90 jumbos a morning
at LA airport. Five sigma is one piece of luggage lost every 10,000
jumbos. Six sigma is one piece of luggage lost every three million jumbos.
Judging by the frequent use of lost luggage facilities, luggage handling
systems work at about three or four sigma. Misplaced luggage (rather
than lost forever) probably operates at one or two sigma.
It is clear from these examples that the solutions we use at one sigma
level will not work at the next. Suppose we decide to reduce typos or
lost luggage to the six sigma level. How would we go about it? Nothing
we know about trapping or eliminating errors at our current level would
help us at the next level down. How do we shift our thinking to the
next level? Why would we want to?
Consider the banks. How many transactions a day does a big bank handle?
Despite the huge transaction volume, most banks still operate at levels
of two to three sigma error trapping is done by eye. It is based
on the old paper systems of 100 years ago. What is the risk to them
of these errors? How much do they spend on error trapping and rework
at this sigma level? What cost saving would they make if they could
eliminate all that error trapping and move to the next level of sigma?
Four sigma is an error every 31,000 transactions. Given the volumes
of transactions involved, four sigma does not even sound extraordinary.
It would be only an error every hour in most very large banks. However,
it would need a huge change of thinking to even get to that level.
[Of course, `sigma' is based on the `sigma' used by statisticians to
represent `variance' when they describe the normal distribution. The
exact values are:]
Z (sigma) |
1 error in |
1 |
6 |
2 |
44 |
3 |
741 |
4 |
31,574 |
5 |
3,488,556 |
6 |
1,013,594,863 |
7 |
782,010,701,054
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8 |
2,251,799,813,685,250
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