Table of Contents
Introduction
Learning Organizations
Five Core Capabilities
Creating an Organizational Symphony
The man most often identified as the father of total quality management, Dr. W.
Edwards Deming, took offense at the assumed parentage. "The term is
counterproductive," said Dr. Deming. "My work is about a transformation in
management and about the profound knowledge needed for the transformation. Total
quality stops people from thinking." "Neither total quality nor total quality
management describes what this approach is all about," says Dr. Edward Baker,
director of Ford's corporate quality office. "It's about improving the total
behavior of organizations, about developing the capability of a system to do what
its members actually want it to do -- anywhere in life."
Without a unifying
conceptual framework, the quality movement in the U.S. risks being fragmented
into isolated initiatives and slogans. The voice of the customer, fix the
process, competitive benchmarking, continuous improvement, policy deployment,
leadership -- the more we hear, the less we understand.
"Trying to put together the alphabet soup of SPC, JIT, QIP, and QFD can be
confusing without a unifying theme," says Analog Devices CEO Ray Stata.
For many, it doesn't add up to much more than management's latest flavor of the
month that must be endured until the next fad comes along. Even those firms where
there has been significant commitment to quality management for several years are
encountering slowing rates of improvement. "We've picked all the low-hanging
fruit," as one Detroit executive put it. "Now, the difficult changes are left."
The "difficult changes" are unlikely without a coherent picture of where we are
trying to take our organizations through the quality management process.
The best of our international competitors are not fragmenting, they are steadily
advancing an approach to improving quality, productivity, and profitability.
The roots of the quality movement lie in assumptions about people, organizations,
and management that have one unifying theme: to make continual learning a way of
life, especially improving the performance of the organization as a total system.
This can only be achieved by breaking with the traditional authoritarian, command
and control hierarchy where the top thinks and the local acts, to merge thinking
and acting at all levels.
The evolution of learning organizations can be understood as a series of waves.
What most managers think of as quality management focuses on improving tangible
work processes. This is the first wave. In the first wave, the primary focus of
change was frontline workers. Management's job was to champion continual
improvement, remove impediments (like quality control experts and unnecessary
bureaucracy) that disempowered local personnel, and support new practices like
quality training and competitive bench-marking that drive process improvement.
In the second wave, the focus shifts from improving work process to improving how
we work -- fostering ways of thinking and interacting, conductive continual learning
about the dynamic, complex, conflictual issues that determine system-wide
performance. The primary focus of change is management.
These two waves will gradually merge into a third, in which learning becomes
institutionalized as a way of life for managers and workers alike.
We are still in the first wave. American industry is, with a few exceptions,
primarily operating in the first wave. "Despite all our improvements, the basic
behavior of our managers, especially our senior managers, hasn't really changed
much," laments the head of a major corporation's quality office.
By contrast, the second wave is well under way in Japan, driven by their seven
new tools for management, as distinct from their traditional seven quality tools
that drove the first wave. The challenge today, as American companies endeavor to
master the basic tools and philosophy of quality management, is not to be caught
short-sighted with mechanical "quality programs." If we fail to grasp the deeper
messages of the quality movement, we will one day awaken to discover ourselves
chasing a receding target.
Introduction
Why do many leaders of the so-called "quality movement" hate the term "the
quality movement"?
Learning Organizations
I believe that the quality movement is the first wave in building learning
organizations that continually expand their ability to shape their future.
Five Core Capabilities
Our work suggests developing an organization=s capabilities in five areas.
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