ABSTRACT

The results of the quality revolution have been mixed. Global competition has elevated the most successful companies, in terms of providing goods and services, but even then initiatives such as total quality, business process re-engineering and Six Sigma have been heralded as the solution, only to have been replaced with the next 'big thing' when it came along. Hoshin Kanri is not the next big thing in quality, it is a strategic approach to continuous improvement that provides a context for all of the individual elements such as Six Sigma or Lean Manufacturing. David Hutchins' Hoshin Kanri shows you how to develop a dynamic vision for continuous improvement; to implement effective policies to support it; to link key performance indicators to Six Sigma, Lean Manufacturing and Kaizen and to sustain a strategy-led programme for improving business performance.

chapter 1|11 pages

Hoshin Kanri – An Overview

chapter 2|6 pages

Creating the Vision

chapter 3|12 pages

Strategy and Tactics

chapter 5|6 pages

Driver Measures to KPIs

chapter 6|9 pages

Benchmarking

chapter 7|11 pages

Prioritising KPIs and Cost of Poor Quality

chapter 8|16 pages

Risk Management

chapter 9|9 pages

The Loose Brick

chapter 10|14 pages

Policy Deployment and Control

chapter 11|10 pages

The Voice of the Customer

chapter 12|5 pages

Supply Chain Management

chapter 13|19 pages

Six Sigma

chapter 14|18 pages

Lean Manufacturing

chapter 16|14 pages

The Principles of Continuous Improvement

chapter 17|32 pages

Quality Circles

(Small group improvement activities such as Quality Circles, Kaizen, Autonomous Work Groups, Self Managing Work Groups)

chapter 19|17 pages

Quality Function Deployment

chapter 20|4 pages

Education

chapter 21|10 pages

Suggestions for Performance Indicators

chapter 22|4 pages

Implementation Plan