Lean Enterprise Institute Logo
  • Contact Us
  • Newsletter Signup
  • Cart (78)
  • Account
  • Search
Lean Enterprise Institute Logo
  • Explore Lean
        • What is Lean?
        • The Lean Transformation Framework
        • A Brief History of Lean
        • Lexicon Terms
        • Topics to explore
          • Operations
          • Lean Product & Process Development
          • Administration & Support
          • Problem-Solving
          • Coaching
          • Executive Leadership
          • Line Management
  • The Lean Post
        • Subscribe to see exclusive content
          • Subscribe
        • Featured posts
          I’ve heard you say the quality department is the worst enemy of quality. I find this offensive.

          Lean Product and Process Development at Scale:...

          craftsmanship

          Pursuing Perfection: Craftsmanship in Product Development

          • See all Posts
  • Events & Courses
        • Forms and Templates
        • Featured learning
          • The Future of People at Work Symposium 

            July 18, 2024 | Detroit, Michigan

          • Hoshin Kanri

            September 06, 2024 | Coach-Led Online Course

          • Lean Warehousing and Distribution Operations

            September 11, 2024 | Plant City, Florida and Gainesville, Florida

          • Key Concepts of Lean Management

            September 16, 2024 | Coach-Led Online Course

          • See all Events
  • Training & Consulting for Organizations​
        • Interested in exploring a partnership with us?
          • Schedule a Call
        • Getting Started
        • Leadership Development
        • Custom Training
        • Enterprise Transformation​
  • Store
        • Book Ordering Information
        • Shopping Cart
        • Featured books
          Managing to Learn: Using the A3 management process

          Managing to Learn: Using the A3 management process

          A3 Getting Started Guide 2

          A3 Getting Started Guide

          • See all Books
  • About Us
        • Our people
          • Senior Advisors and Staff
          • Faculty
          • Board of Directors
        • Contact Us
        • Lean Global Network
        • Press Releases
        • In the News
        • Careers
        • About us

The Lean Post / Articles / I’ve heard you say the quality department is the worst enemy of quality. I find this offensive.

Article graphic image with repeating icons

Problem Solving

I’ve heard you say the quality department is the worst enemy of quality. I find this offensive.

By Michael Ballé

March 3, 2014

Dear Gemba Coach: I’m in the quality department of a large company and I’ve heard you say quality is the worst enemy of quality. I find this offensive, but I’m willing to keep an open mind. How would you back up such an outrageous statement?

FacebookTweetLinkedInPrintComment

Dear Gemba Coach,

I’m in the quality department of a large company and I’ve heard you say quality is the worst enemy of quality. I find this offensive, but I’m willing to keep an open mind. How would you back up such an outrageous statement?

Oops! That does sound like the kind of things I would say, so first of all let me apologize if I’ve given offense. I do get carried away as I try to make difficult points and I’m in no way suggesting that people in quality departments do their work wrong or are disengaged – not at all. I don’t know in what specific context you heard me say this, but usually what I have in mind is a more fundamental point. Please bear with me as I try to explain, and, please, again, accept my apologies if this has hurt feelings in your department. Let me backtrack some.

Yesterday, as I came back from a plant with the COO and the lean officer of an industrial group we sat down in a café to have a beer before waiting for our respective trains. As we’re about to order, the waiter asks us to move to a table further inside the restaurant, because he had to set the tables close to the window for dinner. The waiter was denying us our preference for a table by the window for the sake of this own process. This example might seem mundane, but, to me, it has profound implications:

  1. First, by adhering to the process in order to support efficiency and quality this bar has lost three customers – we won’t go back.
  2. Second, the waiter wasn’t responsible in any way – he was told to work this way, and embarrassed about it. By imposing such as silly process on him, his manager was taking away the deeper meaning of waiting on people: being a welcoming host. The waiter was reduced to a pair or arms doing the job, suffered friction with customers and lost a tip (okay, after we discussed it, we tipped him anyhow, but grrr!)
  3. Thirdly, as long as the process doesn’t acknowledge the variety of customer preferences, there is no hope for kaizen.

The jury is in, the verdict is read: quality is the key to profitability. In an influential article, HBR authors Raynor and Ahmed conclude from their statistical study of thousands of companies that there are three rules for making a company truly great:

  1. Better before cheaper
  2. Revenue before cost
  3. There are no other rules

In a similar vein, the in-depth study of the PIMS database for over 30 years from Robert Buzzell concludes that the one thing to emerge from the data is that:

  1. Market share drives profitability
  2. Perceived quality drives market share

Where’s the Beef?

All well and good. What’s my beef with the quality department then? The problem is in “better” and “perceived quality.” For many years, we’ve obsessed (rightly) that quality lay in consistency. Nothing wrong with that; one of Deming’s core lessons. But, if we’re not careful, consistency can easily split into “single process mentality.” As team members explained to me on the shop floor just last week, if you want us to be consistent, let us build just one product. To be fair, as we all looked at what they had to go through to shift from assembling product A to product B, we got their point.

The simplest way to deliver consistency is to educate the customer to fit within our (consistent) processes. Unfortunately, in this day and age, this is also the surest way to enrage the customer.

As 2.0 is spreading through all aspects of our lives, immense choice and personalization are now the rule. Customers like things just the way they like them. And, sure, they’re inconsistent – aren’t we all? I can guiltlessly blame a favorite shirt brand for changing a minor thing on the shirts I usually buy as well as berate them for not carrying the exact new model I suddenly fancy.

Our organizations, from the design department to the quality department are set up to deliver on specifications. engineering builds to specification, quality makes sure they’re enforced. Engineering tries for specifications that will satisfy the largest user base, but that’s precisely the problem. Specifications are only the entry ticket – not the sale. Sure, all cars need to respond to safety, performance, and style specs – but is that why you pick a Toyota over a Nissan? A BMW over a Merc? A Chevy over a Kia? This is not about functionality but taste: preferences.

Responding to customer preferences without losing product or service consistency is a major headache. Most organizations simply don’t attempt to solve it. They just do what they do, and, as a customer, you deal with it or not.

Indeed, most bureaucracies treat their customers as alibis. Teachers treat kids as an opportunity to teach (have you noticed that when you try to talk to the teacher about your kid, the teacher explains about the class?), hospitals treat patients as opportunities to nurse (have you noticed that when you try to talk about your grandmother, they explain about the ward?), and so on. Quality departments treat people and products as the opportunity to maintain and defend processes.

Let Me Explain

I never meant that quality departments are the enemy of quality in their terms – of course most quality departments fight for the rigorous adherence to process. But that’s exactly the point. As they drown engineering and production in processes, they burden the company with an added layer of costs (how much does it cost to obtain a quality qualification?) to the detriment of flexibility and following customer preferences. Yes, I understand that variability makes it harder to maintain consistency – no one is arguing against that. But that is precisely the job. How do we maintain consistency and flexibility?

This can’t happen through a quality specialist department. It has to come from the value-adding team members themselves. The waiter needs the flexibility to let three tired, bossy middle-age men have a beer just where they want it as they want it, as well as setting up tables for dinner. Such flexibility can’t be obtained without deep team member engagement, just as one-product-batch on the line can’t be obtained without working steadily with the team members themselves to make the product change easier in a way that they own the flexibility and are proud of it.

I’m sorry if I’ve expressed it tactlessly, but the point remains. Is the mission of the quality department to support value-adding team members in catering to customer preferences as well as product consistency (which, yes, it’s hard) or is it the mission of the quality department to make sure the existing processes are respected, regardless of what happens at the sales point? Is quality defending customer preferences? Or is quality using customers and operators as an alibi to do quality? These, I find, are deep fundamental questions about the nature of the firm and how well it performs on its markets.

If you are certain that your particular department is fighting for customer preferences every day (did you defend a customer preference today?) and for the engagement of team-members in greater flexibility (have you contributed to energizing team members on flexibility today?) then I’ll admit that my remarks are out of place. Gladly. But, if on the contrary, you have found yourself telling value-adding employees that their work is to conform to the quality system then I stand by my words – no language is strong enough to wake up companies to the true meaning of perceived quality. Better means better for customers, not better for quality departments.

FacebookTweetLinkedInPrintComment

Written by:

Michael Ballé

About Michael Ballé

Michael Ballé is co-author of The Gold Mine, a best-selling business novel of lean turnaround, and recently The Lean Manager, a novel of lean transformation, both published by the Lean Enterprise Institute. For the past 25 years, he has studied lean transformation and helped companies develop a lean culture. He is…

Read more about Michael Ballé

Leave a Comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related

WLEI POdcast graphic with DHL logo

Problem Solving

Revolutionizing Logistics: DHL eCommerce’s Journey Applying Lean Thinking to Automation  

Podcast by Matthew Savas

WLEI podcast with CEO of BEstBaths

Problem Solving

Transforming Corporate Culture: Bestbath’s Approach to Scaling Problem-Solving Capability

Podcast by Matthew Savas

Podcast graphic image with repeating icons and microphones

Problem Solving

Teaching Lean Thinking to Kids: A Conversation with Alan Goodman 

Podcast by Alan Goodman and Matthew Savas

Related books

A3 Getting Started Guide 2

A3 Getting Started Guide

by Lean Enterprise Institute

The Power of Process book cover

The Power of Process – A Story of Innovative Lean Process Development

by Eric Ethington and Matt Zayko

Related events

September 26, 2024 | Morgantown, PA or Remond, WA

Building a Lean Operating and Management System 

Learn more

October 02, 2024 | Coach-Led Online and In-Person (Oakland University in Rochester, MI)

Managing to Learn

Learn more

Explore topics

Problem Solving graphic icon Problem Solving
Coaching graphic icon Coaching

Subscribe to get the very best of lean thinking delivered right to your inbox

Subscribe
  • Privacy Policy
  • Sitemap
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Facebook

©Copyright 2000-2024 Lean Enterprise Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
Lean Enterprise Institute, the leaper image, and stick figure are registered trademarks of Lean Enterprise Institute, Inc.

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Learn More. ACCEPT
Privacy & Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT