I have evolved to using fewer, simpler tools in my consulting and have never been more effective, as I commented upon in my last column. It made me ponder the relevance of much of what I learned in my master’s statistics program. Thinking of the most basic concepts, I decided to look up what the American Society for Quality considers the (Six Sigma) Green Belt body of knowledge. If you click on its link, I want to draw your particular attention to: “III. Six Sigma—Measure (B, C, D),” “IV. Six Sigma—Analyze (A. B),” and “V. Six Sigma—Improve & Control (A, B).”
ADVERTISEMENT |
In the foreword to Quality Improvement Through Planned Experimentation, by Ronald Moen, Thomas Nolan, and Lloyd Provost (McGraw-Hill, 2012)—which I believe is the best book on industrial design of experiments—Deming himself writes:
…
Comments
Great, great example, Davis!
It remains as true as ever...any fool can make a trend out of two points! What does it say about those who manage using those "trends?"
statistics
Do you suppose they got what they were looking for? Not necessarily what the data says. A set of numbers can be manipulated to get what you are looking for.
Add new comment