The TQM Magazine: Volume 3 Issue 6

Subject:

Table of contents

Levelling out the future

D.M. Lascelles, B.G. Dale

Research carried out at the University of Manchester Institute of Science & Technology over a ten‐year period has led to the authors identifying six levels of TQM adoption. The…

Processing Business Improvement

Lisa Albitz

Argues that business process management can improve efficiency and effectiveness across each process and throughout an entire organization. Drawing mainly on experience at the NCR…

Building for the future

Steven Kirk

Examines a European Commission Institute survey investigating TQM and its application to the European construction industry and suggests that the short‐term nature of construction…

A strategic approach

Paul Davies

Poses the question: what is a business strategy? Refers to an earlier article (TQM 3,3) describing a three‐stage evolution of TQM companies and highlights eight key strands that…

Putting the ″M″ in TQM

Clem Smyth

Reveals the key steps to managing the organisation as a whole to facilitate company‐wide continuous improvement. Describes the management systems and structure necessary to steer…

Bridging business boundaries

Jan de Vries, Lonni Rodgers

Examines the fact that Philips adopted a quality campaign in 1983 with mixed results, culminating in a $2.2 billion loss in 1990, and the reasons for the failure. Illustrates, for…

A united approach

Anna Kochan

Charts the progress of French sub‐contractor SRPI in its attempt to gain ISO 9002 approval in the wake of customers demanding ever higher standards. Defines the steps taken to…

To sink or to swim?

William McEwan, Sherif El‐Araby

Shipbuilding has been slow to adopt TQM practices, but the author argues that recession is forcing the industry to consider quality techniques as a matter of survival. Charts the…

Strategic change

James Creelman

Examination of BP Chemicals′ integration of TQM into its corporate strategy, helping to turn around a £200 million loss in 1981. Shows how the crisis led to a will to survive…

A window of opportunity

Terry Finlow‐Bates

Argues that a TQM programme can reduce the COPQ (cost of poor quality) by between 20% and 40 per cent. Suggests benchmarking is the first step to estimate an organisation′s…

Constructing harmony

R Baden Hellard

Suggests that the construction industry′s reputation for poor quality, including the failure to complete on time and within budget is well‐deserved, but that quality management…

ISSN:

0954-478X

Renamed to:

The TQM Journal

Online date, start – end:

1988 – 2007

Copyright Holder:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Merged from:

Training for Quality