Quality and Power in the Supply Chain reconciles two divergent worlds for the beleaguered quality manager. The first is that of quality and managerial fads, promoted by quality professionals and the quality 'industry' - with its seminars, certification programs and the pressures of an ever increasing number of international standards, state and national legislation and powerful corporations. The second is a virtual antithesis to this world of mission statements, quality policies, procedures and statistical techniques, and is embodied in the international phenomenon that is the Dilbert (TM) cartoon strip. Across America and Europe millions of ordinary employees revel in the truths that are exposed concerning corporate absurdities and a blind reliance upon acronym-laden quick-fixes.
Here you will find the gap bridged between the vast literature of quality fads (including the recent tranche of international standards) and that more humorous portrayal of these worlds. The origins of today's quality ideology and industry is traced, followed by a description of how the quality profession popularizes, promotes and ultimately benefits from the fads that come and go. Finally it is shown that despite the propaganda of the profession, there is a separate reality to "quality" and that management principles in this field can only ever be a small limiting factor in corporate success.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
"This book will be useful to quality professionals in any manufacturing industry and engineers working in any quality field." --Chemical Industry Digest, Jan-Feb 2003
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Elsevier Science & Technology
Zielgruppe
Für Beruf und Forschung
Quality professionals in any manufacturer, OEM, or supplier in industry. Engineers working in any quality field.
Maße
Höhe: 235 mm
Breite: 152 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-7506-7343-3 (9780750673433)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
1 Power and its Impact on Customer Supplier Relation2 On Registrars and Bureaucratic Power
Part III: The Limits of Quality: Essays on a Separate Reality3 Thoughts on the Relativity of Quality4 How Old Can a Company Hope to be?5 Built to Last for a While6 On Servicing the Customer7 Fads, Incompetence, Ignorance and Stupidity
PART III Colbertism and the Dawn of Power in Customer-Supplier Relations8 Colbertism: The Dawn of Regulatory Practices9 The Quest for Repeatability10 Military as Customer and Controller of Subcontractors11 The Value of Standardization12 The ISO 9000 Phenomenon and The Privatization of Military Standards13 Quality Professionalism and the Ideology of Control14 On The Origin of Procedures15 Writing Procedures16 By Way of Conclusion: Dos and Don'ts; Challenges of the 21st Century: General conclusions; For the quality professional; Need to integrate many methods; For companies; Final Thoughts on Don'ts; What to do; How to Simplify?; ISO 9000 Software: No panacea; On quality speak; Teamwork: Another view; Smaller would be better.