Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Baby Journaling Ideas

The return of the Lord of Thorns



time ago we developed a post (even today among the most read blog) about the famous Fishbone Diagram (or Cause and Effect) created by Kaoru Ishikawa . On this occasion, we bring more data about this champion of the quality, very sensitive area in our projects.

Ishikawa was the first author who tried highlight the differences between the styles of Japanese and Western management. Its main hypothesis was that different cultural characteristics in both societies were instrumental in Japan's success in quality. Defined management philosophy that is behind the quality, the elements of quality systems and what he calls the "seven basic tools of quality management", where it is considered a strong leaning toward statistical techniques. He was also responsible for developing the audit process used to determine whether a company is selected to receive the Deming Prize , solving problems based computers.

What is Quality Ishiwaka? Here are his famous principles:

1. Quality education begins and ends with education.
2. The first step in quality is to know what the customer requires.
3. The ideal state of quality control occurs when the inspection is not required.
4. Eliminate the root cause and not the symptoms.
5. Quality control is the responsibility of all workers in all areas.
6. Do not confuse the means with objectives.
7. Put Quality first and put the long-term gains.
8. Trade is the input and output quality.
9. Senior management must not show anger when his subordinates were present facts.
10. 95% of a company's problems can be solved with simple tools for analysis and troubleshooting.
11. Those data are not dispersed information (ie, variability) are false.

this list is evident a great sense of humor and, of course, Eastern philosophy. It is clear that a people like the Japanese know to succeed in relation to the fateful moment is going through after the earthquake and tsunami that struck the island and the emerging nuclear crisis.

Go from this humble blog this post as a symbol of admiration for the Japanese people as a sign of our solidarity.

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