newsdigest
Registrar Forced to Change Ads
ISO 9000 Grows Globally
Four Companies Win 1996 Baldrige Award
Geon's In Control
Conference Attendees Say "No" to
OH&S Standard
Employees Want More Quality Time
Which Directive Do You Choose?
Understand Those Critical Incidents
Four Steps for Peer Coaching
ISO 14001 Aspects and Impacts
Women Manage Better Than Men
Registrar Forced to Change Ads
One of the world's largest registrars, BSI Quality Assurance, got the word
this September that it must amend its latest series of U.K. advertisements
to avoid the implication that, in BSI's words, ISO 9000 certification would
"almost always" bring about improved productivity, efficiency
and profitability, according to the Advertising Standards Authority.
The ASA's adjudication was the result of a complaint lodged with the U.K.'s
advertising watchdog group by John Seddon of Vanguard Consulting, a U.K.
management consulting firm, and others. Although BSI provided independent
research information that supported the ad's claims, the ASA ruled that
it was not possible to support those claims when applied to small companies.
Therefore, the advertisement would have to avoid that implication. The ruling
affects only U.K. advertising.
Putting a positive spin on the ruling, a BSI spokesperson said that the
company welcomed the "minor clarification offered by the ASA adjudication."
BSI will change a phrase in the advertisement regarding ISO 9000 registration
from "It improves productivity" to "It can improve productivity,"
according to BSI. The judgment also asks BSI to make it clear that small
companies may not find registration beneficial. BSI agreed to take this
into account.
Vanguard first complained to the ASA in March. "I firmly believe ISO
9000 registration to cause suboptimization of performance; it cannot be
claimed to improve productivity," says Seddon, an occupational psychologist
and long-time opponent of ISO 9000. Seddon has published a study which claims
that ISO 9000 does not improve productivity, even in those companies claiming
success with the standards.
Although the ASA's judgment could be seen as minor, Reg Blake, BSI's North
American director of sales and marketing, fears that some may construe ASA's
judgment as implying that there are no productivity gains with ISO 9000.
"And that simply is not the case," says Blake. "There are
enough companies which demonstrate that you can improve productivity."
At the same time BSI was fighting off Seddon's attack, one of BSI's competitors,
National Quality Assurance, also complained to the ASA disputing BSI's claims
in the same ad that "BSI 'wrote the book' when they published BS 5750"
(a forerunner to ISO 9000) and the ad's implications that BSI registration
was of greater value than that of any other accredited certification body.
The ASA ruled in favor of BSI in both cases.
ISO 9000 Grows Globally
At least 127,389 ISO 9000 certificates have been awarded in 99 countries
worldwide-an increase of 34 percent from the March 1995 total. The United
Kingdom and Europe continue to lead the world in the number of certificates,
with the United Kingdom holding 41.3 percent of all certificates and the
rest of Europe with 31.4 percent.
Source: John Symonds, Mobil Europe Ltd., London, telephone 44-171-412-4897
or fax 44-171-412-2549.
Four Companies Win 1996 Baldrige Award
resident Clinton and Commerce Secretary Mickey Kantor have announced the
winners of the 1996 Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award. The awards
are presented in recognition of a company's achievements in quality and
business performance. This year's winners are:
ADAC Laboratories of Milpitas, California
(manufacturing category)
Dana Commercial Credit Corp. of Toledo, Ohio
(service category)
Custom Research Inc. of Minneapolis (small
business category)
Trident Precision Manufacturing Inc. of Webster,
New York (small business category)
The Baldrige Award is presented each year to a maximum of two companies
in each of three categories: manufacturing, service and small business.
Awards are presented only to companies that meet the stringent award criteria.
Not since 1992 have awards been presented in all three categories.
Read next month's "News Digest" for a more detailed report on
this years' Baldrige Award winners.
http://www.quality.nist.gov
Geon's In Control
Geon, a $1.2 billion maker of polyvinyl chloride compounds and resins, makes
sure that all employees keep top-notch customer service and product quality
as their main goals. "Consistency" teams play an important role
in attaining that goal.
"In the plastics industry, it's sometimes hard to test the product
and predict how well it will perform for our customer," explains Barry
Hendrix, director of quality and operations planning for the Cleveland-based
company. "The main feedback we get from customers is: 'All we want
is for your product to be the same every time. We can adjust to it if it
is the same.' "
Geon's consistency teams, usually five to six employees, look beyond measuring
product properties and instead concentrate on how accurately a process is
controlled, thus ensuring product consistency. Depending on the process
to be examined, the teams may be cross-functional or narrowly focused around
a set of operators. The most successful teams have been those comprised
of plant process people, Hendrix points out.
Consistency teams first determine which processes are out of control, then
do a fishbone diagram to identify critical areas and develop control plans
to aid process workers to bring a process back under control. The control
plan focuses energy on determining why a process is out of control rather
than trying to bring a product into specification by changing the recipe,
says Hendrix.
Since these teams were put into place, the number of consistently in-control
processes has increased by a factor of three, says Hendrix.
"That translates into a better, more consistent product, which will
ultimately lead to savings and much more hassle-free service," says
Hendrix. "Customers won't complain as much, and employees will know
that they are making a top-quality product all the time."
ISO Conference Attendees Say "No"
to OH&S Standard ISO
As prophesied by occupational health and safety stakeholders, little support
was voiced for an international occupational health and safety management
standard at the International Organization for Standardization's Geneva
meeting this September.
In general, according to ANSI, opposition arguments included: a lack of
existing national or regional OH&S management standards prevents harmonization;
there is insufficient experience with ISO 9000 and ISO 14000 to embark on
yet another standard; such a standard could conflict with existing national
OH&S regulations; and cost-benefit concerns.
Those in favor of the proposed standard argued that it could improve global
health and safety, would provide for integration of OH&S into quality
management systems and could help start the process of improvement in countries
with weak or nonexistent OH&S standards.
ANSI Chairman Lawrence Wills points out that with the big-five ISO members-France,
Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States-against the idea,
there is little chance that it will carry.
Several attendees of the Geneva meeting provided Quality Digest with an
unofficial report of how some countries felt about the development of an
international OH&S standard.
Australia-Strongly recommended the idea and offered to lead the effort.
Canada-No.
Columbia-Yes, or else they will pursue it at the national level.
Denmark-Yes. Suggested the formation of a strategic advisory group to make
recommendations.
Finland-No. Costs too much.
France-No.
Germany-No.
Italy-No. European Union directive 89391 already covers the issue.
Ireland-Yes, but perhaps not yet. Currently drafting a guidance document.
Japan-Not at this time.
Korea-No. Wanted specific standards rather than management standards.
New Zealand-Yes.
Norway-Yes. They already have a draft document that integrates OH&S,
environmental and quality standards.
Spain-Qualified yes. They suggested forming an advisory group and are already
working on a draft OH&S and environmental standard.
Trinidad and Tobago-Yes.
United Kingdom-No.
United States-Definite no.
Employees
Want More Quality Time
For an increasing number of men and women, family, rather than work, comes
first. Consequently, an increasing number of quality industries may have
to modify their process to keep pace with the growing trend.
Today, employees are more willing to take larger cuts in pay and work hours
to spend time with their families than they were almost a decade ago, according
to a poll conducted by Robert Half International Inc., a staffing service
specializing in accounting, finance and information technology.
The poll revealed that nearly two-thirds of Americans would reduce their
hours and compensation in exchange for more "family or personal time."
Which Directive
Do You Choose?
If you manufacture electrically operated machinery, you may be wondering
whether to use the Machinery Safety Directive, the Low Voltage Directive
or both. The answer is: You must comply with the most relevant of the two
directives, according to Technology International Inc., a subsidiary of
Interference Technology International Ltd., a U.K.-appointed Competent Body.
Nonetheless, the legal opinion in the European Union is that while it is
the manufacturer's duty to determine if its product presents more of an
electrical-safety hazard or a mechanical-safety hazard and to choose the
appropriate directive, it must still make an effort to meet the essential
safety elements of the other directive.
For more help understanding CE Marking and for free downloads of Windows
95 Helpfiles "Understanding Product Safety" and "Understanding
the Medical Devices Directive," visit Technology International's Web
site.
http://www.techintl.com
Understand Those Critical Incidents
When preparing a customer-satisfaction questionnaire, understanding the
behaviors critical to good customer service is key. Therefore, interviewing
customers in order to find "critical incidents" is an important
first step, according to NCS, a Minneapolis-based information services company.
Critical incidents are examples of positive or negative performance on the
part of a service provider as viewed from the customer's perspective.
To locate critical incidents, interview a sample of customers and ask them
about positive and negative service experiences with your company. Interviewing
20 customers should provide you with several hundred incidents from which
to develop your questions.
Be sure to break down a customer's experience into its component parts.
For instance, suppose a customer says that he liked the service he got from
an automotive service manager because: "She called to tell me what
the problem was and how much it would cost to fix. When I got there, the
car was fixed, and I got a detailed description of the charges and the service
performed." This indicates at least two positive critical incidents:
The service manager called to inform the customer of the problem, and she
provided a detailed description of the work performed.
Once you have gathered the critical incidents and edited them to be specific
and behavioral, you can turn them into satisfaction items on a customer-satisfaction
survey.
Source: "Research Notes," August 1996, National Computer Systems
Inc.
Four Steps for Peer Coaching
In today's climate of increased downsizing, peer coaching is a skill that's
more critical than ever, according to Ron Zemke and Kristin Anderson, authors
of Coaching Knock Your Socks Off Service (AMACOM Books). Here's a four-step
model to smooth and successful peer coaching.
Step 1: Positioning-Allows the coach peer to state why the session
is needed and then ask permission to discuss the performance.
Step 2: Discussion-Provides the person being coached the opportunity
to clarify the situation. The peer coach must make an effort to acknowledge
the positive and affirm the peer's good intentions.
Step 3: Advice giving-Must be forward-looking, specific, actionable
and, above all, respectful. The focus must not be on criticizing a colleague
for past performance.
Step 4: Closure-The peer support session should end on a positive
note. If appropriate, closure may include an offer for future assistance.
ISO 14001 Aspects and Impacts
Many people who have completed the first stage of implementing the ISO 14001
standard-identifying environmental aspects and impacts-can tell you that
it isn't an easy task.
For the process to be credible, it must be performed by individuals who
know the organization's operations, products and services, according to
Thomas Ambrose, an advisor with HSE Management. These individuals must also
have sufficient multidiscipline expertise to make informed judgments to
identify, access and prioritize significant environmental impacts.
The following is a suggested analysis for ISO 14001 aspects and impacts,
which, according to Ambrose, should also involve nonenvironmental people
to validate judgments.
Assemble a cross-functional team that knows
the organization's activities and issues.
Devise a structured process to identify the
environmental aspects of operations, products and services.
Establish boundaries regarding what you will
manage.
Align criteria with the scale, severity and
duration of each aspect.
Develop a first-cut list of obvious and nonsignificant
aspects.
Refine the list. Locate individuals throughout
the organization to obtain input and feedback from research and development,
marketing, production, law, etc.
Rank aspects that can have a significant impact
on setting initial priorities.
Develop objectives, targets and metrics to
measure progress and reduce impacts.
Hold quarterly team updates and an annual
senior management strategic review.
Women Manage Better Than Men
When it comes to managerial skills, women are not equal to men. They're
better, according to a study recently conducted by Janet Irwin and Michael
Perrault, authorities in executive assessment.
Using a peer-assessment tool directed toward team performance without reference
to gender, a total of 645 men and 270 women (a ratio that coincides with
the ratio of men to women managers in the workplace) evaluated themselves
and their teammates in 31 skill areas within seven categories: problem solving,
planning, controlling, managing self, managing relationships, leading and
communicating. Because women comprised only 30 percent of the database,
they were evaluated more often by men than by other women.
Female managers outperform males in 28 of 31 skill areas, lagging behind
only in handling pressure and coping with their own frustrations. They scored
identical to men in delegating authority.
Based on a third-party evaluation of the data conducted by the California
Lutheran University statistics department, the differences between the men's
and women's scores are statistically significant in 25 of the 31 areas at
the 0.01 level. "That means that the differences have been caused by
something other than a mere statistical fluke," say Irwin and Perrault.
The highest scores for women were in the controlling category, which includes
meeting commitments, producing high-quality work, organizing and orchestrating
events, monitoring and controlling performance, and meeting schedules and
deadlines. In short, women managers are more likely to keep commitments
and turn projects in on time, say the authors.
http://www.ateamware.com/study.html