The Dilemma of
Improving Quality In New Product Development
Larry
R. Smith, Ford Motor Company
Boris Zlotin, Ideation
International, Inc.
Alla Zusman, Ideation
International, Inc.
*
First presented at the Altshuller Institute Conference
"TRIZCON99" March 7-8, 1999
CONTENTS:
Abstract
Introduction
Process
Insights
Summary and Conclusions
References |
[ATTACHMENT 1:]
Problem Formulation
Problem Statements Analysis
Developmental Management
Fire Fighting
Ideal Engineering I
Ideal Engineering II
Main Inhibitors
Operational Management
Poor Quality Reinforcement
Quality Inhibitors
Quality System
Short Term Drivers
Strategic Management |
[ATTACHMENT 2:]
Applying Operators (knowledge base) for
generating suggestions
Revealing and analyzing similar projects in other
areas
Revealing the main trends in design methods
evolution |
Abstract
Winning companies improve
at a rate faster than that of their competitors. What can
be done to overcome system inhibitors and accelerate
change associated with quality improvement? The authors,
with a team at Ford, studied this problem using TRIZ.
Generic system models containing inhibitors and enablers
for quality improvement were created. From these models,
contradictions were formulated. Solution ideas were then
generated using selected TRIZ tools. Specific insights
obtained by looking at this problem with TRIZ will be
discussed.
Key Words: Change,
Inhibitors, Quality Improvement, TRIZ
Introduction
Dr. Deming used to say,
"The best thing you could do at Ford is to make your
customers so happy that they begin to brag about your
product to others. When it comes time to buy a new one,
not only do they come back to buy yours
. they
bring their neighbors with them." This is the
problem we choose to work on: "How do we design the
product right the first time?" "How do we
introduce into an organization like engineering, the
necessary skills and methods so that changes are not
needed after the drawings are released?"
The problem is generic.
"How do you introduce methodology 'XXXXX' in an
organization?", where "XXXXX" might be
Taguchi methods, TQM, QFD, or even TRIZ. "How do you
accelerate the process of implementation of new, more
powerful methods?" The company that implements
effectively and learns the fastest will eventually win,
no matter the starting competitive position.
The objectives of this
study are to:
- Share an important,
generic problem with others, get more people
thinking
- Demonstrate how TRIZ
may be utilized in a non-technical situation
- Provide an example of
working with a Problem Formulator and Operators
- Provide an example of
a situation related to the introduction of new
engineering technology
Process
Our process steps were as
follows:
- TEAM: The first step
in working with any problem is to form an
effective team. Ours was one of the best and
consisted of: Don Brock, Vince Hagedorn, Joseph
Hughlett, Radha Krishnan, Larry Smith, Dmitry
Tananko, Bill Tinney, Boris Zlotin, and Alla
Zusman.
- CREATE PROBLEM
FORMULATORS: Because our problem was generic, the
system, enablers, and issues we wanted to explore
were well documented in literature. In particular
the article, "The Barriers to Total Quality
Mangement," (Tamimi and Sebastianelli,
1998), contained comments from a sample of 188
quality professionals. We used input from this
source and others (for example, Jones, 1982) to
construct models of the problem. Each model
mapped causal relationships (both reinforcing and
balancing) between the system elements (Senge,
1991). George Box, from the University of
Wisconsin, states, "All models are wrong,
but some are useful." These models are not
perfect, nor do they need to be. They are,
however, useful in providing a context for idea
generation. The models created, shown in Attachment 1, are titled:
Fire-fighting, Quality Inhibitors, Main
Inhibitors, Operational Management, Developmental
Management, Strategic Management, Quality System,
Poor Quality Reinforcement, Short Term Drivers,
Ideal Engineering I, and Ideal Engineering II. Attachment 1 also
contains an operational description of Problem
Formulation, written by Alla Zusman and Boris
Zlotin.
- CREATE PROBLEM
STATEMENTS: Problem statements were generated
from the problem formulator models. These
statements define high leverage areas of the
system, where change could redefine the system
archetypes and modify system performance. These
high leverage areas are contradictions, system
nodes where reinforcing and balancing loops come
together. Our system models and problem
statements, shown in Attachment 1, were generated with
software (Ideation, 1998). Our team worked by
using the software as a facilitation tool. We
projected the software image onto a screen, then
used the software to record our ideas and
thoughts, which we could later print for
everyone's use.
- GENERATE SUGGESTIONS:
The team used the problem statements and
associated Operators and examples to brainstorm
ideas. The Operators we used were built into the
software (Ideation, 1998), and are part of the
original TRIZ methodology (Altshuller and
Shulyak, 1997) that has been further enhanced
with the research of Boris Zlotin and Alla
Zusman. The software we used was programmed to
provide the appropriate Operators for the types
of contradiction in our system model. The
software also provided examples of how others
used these Operators. Even though the examples
were technical in nature, we were able to find
many parallels for a non-technical system. For
example, consider the physical principle of
resonance. Is it possible to "resonate"
an organization with a new idea or a new way of
doing things? Systematically introduce the idea
at the appropriate time using a variety of
inputs, to literally get the whole organization
"percolating" in a metaphor of
"resonance"? The Operators and examples
helped to "stretch our minds" and
generate "out of the box" ideas. We
also used Lines of System Evolution to stimulate
ideas (Ideation, 1998).
In a typical
brainstorming session, the idea flow is similar to
the process of popping popcorn. The ideas are slow to
start, then proceed rapidly for a time, and then
slowly stop. When this happens, then another example
of an Operator, or a different Operator is presented
for team consideration. The idea generating process
then proceeds again. By using this aspect of TRIZ, we
were able to develop a much richer idea stream, with
a much greater number of ideas than we could have
obtained by simple brainstorming. Our team continued
this way until the ideas we were generating were
repeats of previous ideas, and we had exhausted all
the ideas that our particular group could contribute
at the time.
- INTEGRATING IDEAS
INTO CONCEPTS: Our team selected approximately
fifty ideas for further consideration. These
ideas and some thoughts with regard to them are
shown in Attachment 2. A few of these ideas were
developed into a strategy proposal for
presentation to Ford senior management.
Insights
Some of our team members
have been thinking about this particular problem for over
fifteen years. The process we used helped to better
understand the situation and generated some new insights
as to why it is so difficult to introduce new technology
that improves the ability to "design it right the
first time":
- Fire-fighting:
Reacting to events, "putting out fires"
with an all-out effort at the last minute, is
fun. No wonder engineers and management like to
do it. In such a situation all constraints that
are normal to the system disappear. The team can
literally, spend whatever they want, obtain
whatever resources they need, over-run budgets,
take any action they like to resolve the
situation. Often team members find themselves
"empowered" in such a way that they
display leadership qualities to senior management
and later get promoted. It is a very different
situation when the engineers are asked early in a
program to "design it right" and
"prevent problems". In the normal
system, budget constraints make it difficult to
get things accomplished - it is a struggle and
not fun. Is there a way to make the process of
preventing problems as much fun, and as
rewarding, as "putting out fires"?
- The Effort of
Designing It Right: Dr. Deming used to say
that, "It costs just as much to manufacture
a defective part as it does to manufacture a good
part." Understanding the truth of this, and
that manufacturing "bad" products is
waste, drives quality improvement in the
manufacturing environment. The situation is
different in design. For the engineer, it is much
easier to develop a poor design, and not use the
new and innovative tools necessary to develop an
ideal design. No one knows whether a design is
good or bad until it is tested, something which
happens very late in the design process (perhaps
years after the design work is initially done).
In addition, testing only identifies gross
problems. The real quality of a design is not
determined until real customers provide feedback,
often five or ten years after the design work is
completed. Is there a way to make it more
difficult for an engineer to do a poor design
than to do a great design?
- The Problem of
Measures: In the Product Development Process,
engineers and management have immediate measures
relating to cost, weight, and timing. Quality and
customer satisfaction estimates are just that,
opinions. Since teams which present a negative
opinion of their quality will receive a great
deal of management attention, only good opinions
are ever reported. The actual results, reported
years later, never reflect the optimistic
opinions of the original design team. Is there a
way to make measurements relating that strongly
correlate with customer quality visable to
engineers and management real time in the Product
Development Process?
Summary and Conclusions
Assisting an organization
to implement new and exciting methods that produce
results years later is a very difficult challenge. Use of
TRIZ methodology to study this problem produced several
useful insights, which help to explain why the problem is
so difficult. By sharing the problem, insights, and ideas
with others, we can all work together to overcome a
difficult generic problem.
References
Altshuller, Genrich and
Shulyak, Lev 1997, 40 Principles: TRIZ Keys To
Technical Innovation, Worchester, Massachusetts:
Technical Innovation Center
Ideation Innovation
WorkBench Software System, 1998, Version
2.2, Southfield, Michigan: Ideation International Inc.
Jones, Christopher J.
1982, Design Methods, New York: John Wiley &
Sons, ISBN 0-442-01182-2
Senge, Peter 1990, The
Fifth Discipline, New York: Doubleday Currency, ISBN
0-385-26094-6
Tamimi, Nabil and
Sebastianelli, Rose 1998, "The Barriers to Total
Quality Management," Quality Progress,
June, 1998, pp. 57-60
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