A Review of Deming’s Essential Points
Source: Walton, Mary, The Deming Management
Method, Putnam/Perigee: NY, 1986.
Management goals are gained through processes like chain reactions. First, employee perceptions have to change for the better through morale building. Then, quality will improve. That leads to improved productivity that leads to customer satisfaction that leads to business success that leads to better employee perceptions that leads to....
Deming views management goals as shaped by the forces with which the business has to deal. Goals are reshaped through systematic purposes affecting suppliers, materials, design and research, customer needs, employee needs, and needs of the public in the way of truth in advertising and improving quality while maintain price ceilings. But it hinges on the perception that is produced. Maintaining the appropriate perception is based on the fourteen points briefly given below:
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A constancy of purpose for improving quality requires innovation, research and education, continuous attention to products and service, and careful maintenance of facilities and equipment.
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The philosophy of improvement must focus on people emphasizing improved quality to reduce cost, the importance of quality over progress and business growth, the "reasons for" doing something rather than "reasons not to",and planning for management growth over retaining the status quo.
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The cessation of dependence on end goals to drive changes. This includes concentrating on cost reductions not price, viewing price as only a variable value that can be controlled, finding ways to develop superior
products/services, disregard competition and their goals, measure value rather than amount, build a team approach to quality.
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Make quality improvement a mainstay through basic statistical controls, planned, patient approachs, and locating and dissolving problems.
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Superior products/services come from utilizing mastery training concepts. The elements in this are measuring performance statistically (objectively), measuring only positive (gain) performance, recognize internal performance even when not measured.
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View (perceive) performance as having no limits and resulting from a shared (person-person) effort.
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Advocate supporting, helping, and person centered leadership that emphasizes reducing employee confusion and internal turmoil, removing barriers,planning for personal success, and promoting solutions over problem stating.
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Reduce fear of employee mistakes through encouraging query
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Reduce barriers and resistance through encouraging direct manager-employee interaction at all levels.
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Eliminate company formed external goals, encourage worker
formed internal goals.
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Eliminate numerical or line quotas, instill team goals and improvements described by the team.
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Provide opportunity for personal, selfish pride of workmanship and productivity, and recognize it formally.
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Utilize outside specialists and consultants to develop and implement training in management techniques. Ideas often stagnate within or are manipulated to retain the status quo.
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Start with the top management and powers. Until they commit to what lower echelons must learn and do, nothing better will occur. That’s why the previous point is made. External experts can clarify while the rank and file hesitates.
Deming outlines seven deadly diseases that he believed
affected mid twentieth century management. These seem to be
epidemilogical even today. Management is afflicted with
these conditions that need to be faced and cured:
- A severe lack of constancy of purpose that creates
insecurity and inaction throughout the working populace.
- An acute emphasis on short term profits that undermines
quality.
- A phobic need to shortchange worker performance while
neurotically taking credit for any evident progress.
- A snobbish need to ignore worker needs that, if met,
could produce more job and personal satisfaction.
- A numerlogical manifestation of counting coins rather
than customer needs which multiplies company problems.
- A chronic tendency in problem situations to rely on
technology advances rather than people which increases
resistance and produces other unnecessary obstacles.
- A plague of problem centered activity rather than
solution possible orientations
Deming produced a list of what he called his “attention
obstacles”(AO’s). He criticizes management from the
standpoint of being more concerned with obstacles to
improvement than to the things that would remove or
reduce these obstacles. It is almost as if he accuses
management of needing to deal with these things to justify
their being there. Among these he cites Attention TO:
- Fire Fighting(looking for flare ups to quell.
- Short term over long range plans.
- Ends rather than processes for achieveing goals.
- Transforming management by "newness" rather than by new
types of relationships and interactions (teams)
- "What" is happening rather than to "why".
- Reliance on stored information rather than used or
active processes.
- Reliance on blame, excuses, and "we can't" reather than
their opposites.
- Accepting on unreasoned or misguided orders and false
expectations rather than challenging these
constructively.
Deming demonstrated a red bead experiment requiring an observer to predict which of two colors would be randomly
drawn. The results showed what he wanted to call a
management analogy. He stated the following:
- Predicting probability is easy.
- Predicting outcomes is difficult.
- Empirical evidence is never complete.
- Variation is part of any process.
- Planning is useful but not definitive.
- The system determines individual performance.
- The system is under control of management.
There appears no question that Deming had a view that management had its roots in a patriarchal, family oriented culture and that what is best for one is best for all. Modern capitalism, industry, technology, and ambition for acquired individual and corporate wealth strive to make the worker a number and an object of mis-use. Management needs a historical perspective as well as advocates for a change of values to keep an enlightened perspective. It appears that Deming and his contemporaries attempt to do this.
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