Many Total Quality improvement efforts did not achieve their objectives
because
there was a lack of commitment to the specific improvement actions
and to their
effective implementation. Six Sigma, as a system, overcomes
that weakness by
-
focusing on the common commitment to meeting customer requirements,
-
developing a consensus set of improvement actions,
-
prioritizing those actions, and
-
establishing measures that assure accountability in implementation
-
Many companies today are achieving dramatic results with a company-wide
Six
Sigma Improvement System based on the previously described Six Sigma
Process
Improvement methodology -- MAIC. Large numbers of technical
personnel are
trained as "black belts" to lead teams in applying the
statistically-based
methodology. Most black belt training programs focus
heavily on
these
advanced statistical techniques.
-
High level executives are appointed as "champions" to drive the Six
Sigma
Program within their segment of the company. Master Black Belts
coach black
belts and coordinate Six Sigma projects. Some companies
provide basic process
improvement training to Six Sigma project team
members and refer to them as
"green belts." Black belts and / or teams
are assigned process improvement
projects with specific performance
improvement goals.
To reduce the workload on their key personnel, to lessen the need for
extensive
training, and to minimize costs, small organizations (and some
large ones, too)
obtain external facilitation and statistical methods
support.
|