Total Quality Management (TQM) is an organization-wide, customer-focused mindset and data-driven approach to eliminating, reducing, or preventing errors.
Total Quality Management (TQM) is an organization-wide, customer-focused mindset and data-driven approach to eliminating, reducing, or preventing errors. Total Quality Management emphasizes a whole-company approach across functions and departments. Senior leadership leads TQM through goal setting, training, and effective communication.
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A fundamental part of TQM is assessing and redefining processes, monitoring performance, and using the results to drive further improvements. Improvement ideas should be identified holistically beyond function-specific activities. Each area should feel accountable for the overall quality of the final product or service. This creates a virtuous cycle of continuous improvement that boosts production, customer satisfaction, and profits.
How Is Total Quality Management Implemented?
To succeed, TQM requires companies to:
Assess current customer satisfaction and demands
Understand present and future customer needs
Map the critical processes through which the organization meets its customers’ needs
Develop solutions to deliver quality
Identify the key problem areas in processes and work on them until they approach zero-defect levels
Design products and services that cost-effectively meet or exceed customer needs
Align the organization to a TQM approach and build key enablers
Assess current culture and quality management systems
Identify core values and principles and communicate them across the organization
Train and coach employees on new processes and problem-solving techniques
Develop effective measures of product and service quality
Create incentives linked to quality goals
Promote a zero-defect philosophy across all activities
Encourage management to lead by example
Develop feedback mechanisms to ensure continuous improvement
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