Six Sigma Process Quality
In 1985, Bill Smith at Motorola demonstrated a correlation between how
often
a
product was repaired during manufacture and its life in the
field.
Defect
levels in the parts per million (ppm) rather than in
parts per
hundred (%) were
needed to improve the reliability of
semiconductors
and
electronic products in order to compete with the
Japanese. Hence, the
development of the Motorola Six Sigma quality
program
with its landmark
quality level of 3 ppm defects.
Six Sigma was intended to improve the quality of processes that are
already
under control -- major special causes of process problems have
been removed.
The output of these process usually follows a Normal
distribution with the
process capability defined as ± 3 sigma.
The process mean will vary each time a process is executed using
different
equipment, different personnel, different materials, etc. The
observed
variation in the process mean was ± 1.5 sigma. Motorola
decided a design
tolerance (specification width) of ± 6 sigma was
needed so that there will
be only 3.4 ppm defects -- measurements outside
the design tolerance. This was
defined as Six Sigma quality.