The TQM Magazine: Volume 5 Issue 1

Subject:

Table of contents

Riding the waves

Frank Price

These are hard times. It seems that the harder we try, the poorer we become. Cash which flowed like a Mississippi of money in the 1980s has dried to a fitful trickle, seeped…

Employing the uniqueness factor

Chris Ashton

To successfully ride out the stormy recession, a company needs to sustain its competitive advantage. A major part of this is due to the inclusion of ‘factor X’ — that indefinable…

Improvement framework

B.G. Dale, R.J. Boaden

Following research on the subject of TQM, the authors decided that what was lacking was a framework for the introduction and development of the process for continuous quality…

A dynamic collaboration

Andrew Lee‐Mortimer

Especially in a recession, organisations should try and support one another by developing supplier partnerships to help reduce both costs and risks. Some companies have already…

Supporting cooperation

Anne Matthews

When ITS Belfast decided to introduce the Deming approach into the company, bells began to ring for one department. The support staff realised that this approach could be the key…

A variation in understanding

John Morgan

To be successful, the voice of the customer needs to be matched to the voice of the process. SPC can be used to close that gap by defining the type of variation that causes the…

The Spanish experience

Penny Levene

According to Sistecal, a Spanish quality management consultancy, Spain is going through a TQM boom. Companies are looking both home and abroad for experiences of successful…

Food for thought

David Hutchins

To survive and grow in the future, organisations need to become lean, fast, fit and hungry for success. Like dieters, to change their ‘shape’ organisations need to re‐educate…

Applying quality in redundancy

Graham Oddey, Owen Bull

To many people, the thought of quality companies making employees redundant makes a mockery of the whole idea of TQM. This article looks at how both TQM and redundancies can not…

Fuelled by change

Chris Ashton

According to Ian Wood of John Wood Group Plc, the key to surviving the recession is to continuously diversify and adapt to your strengths.

Cottoning on to the need for change

Melanie Williams

John Cotton Automotive realised that it needed to change the company's culture to one of growth in order to survive.

Sservice you can bank on

Robert Crawford

According to the Royal Bank of Scotland, service in the recession is only more of the same. To help it remain competitive, both in and out of recession, it has refocused itself on…

Building up from the recession

P. Leslie gunaratne

The construction industry has been one of the hardest hit industries in this recession. To help ‘make up’ for the inevitable loss of manpower, the need to reduce rework and remain…

ISSN:

0954-478X

Renamed to:

The TQM Journal

Online date, start – end:

1988 – 2007

Copyright Holder:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Merged from:

Training for Quality