Project Quality Management
Quality Certification (PMP is an ISO 9000 certified credential)
ISO 9000: 2005
Quality Principles:
Principle 1 Customer focus
Principle 2 Leadership
Principle 3 Involvement of people
Principle 4 Process approach
Principle 5 System approach to management
Principle 6 Continual improvement
Principle 7 Factual approach to decision making
Principle 8 Mutually beneficial supplier relationships
9-2
Project Quality
- Understand the importance of project quality; what is it?
- Describe quality planning and its relationship to project scope management
- List the three outputs of the quality control process
- Understand a few tools and techniques for quality control
What is Quality?
Car
Ride, Reliability, Fit and Finish, Audio System
Food
Taste, Smell, Color, Texture, Freshness
Clothes
Fit, Stitching, Comfort, Wear?
Means different things to different stakeholders
What is Quality?
The International Organization for Standardization defines quality as the totality of characteristics of an entity that bear on its ability to satisfy stated or implied needs
Other experts define quality based on
– Conformance to requirements; meeting written specifications.
– Fitness for use; ensuring a product can be used as it
was intended.
Purpose of QM
To Ensure that the Project Will Satisfy the
Needs for Which it was Undertaken.
–scope
–cost
–performance
–Meet or exceed customer satisfaction
The Customer or End User Ultimately Decides if Quality is Acceptable. Period.
PQM Processes
1. Quality planning: identifying which quality standards
are relevant to the project and how to satisfy them
2. Quality assurance: evaluating overall project
performance to ensure the project will satisfy the
relevant quality standards
3. Quality control: monitoring specific project results to
ensure that they comply with the relevant quality
standards while identifying ways to improve overall
Quality
We will restate/review all this a bit later.
Quality is Planned In
1. It is important to design in quality and communicate important factors that directly contribute to meeting the customer’s requirements
2. Design of experiments helps identify which variables have the most influence on the overall outcome of a process – (tests of change)
3. Many scope aspects of IT projects affect quality - like functionality, features, system outputs, performance, reliability, and maintainability (underscoring scope mgt.)
8-10
Objectives Related to Goal
Steps to Attain The Objective Related to my Goal
Measures Timeframe – Date Objective is to be Accomplished
Notes
Scope, Time, Risk, Human Resources, Procurement, Quality, Communication, Cost, Stakeholders, Integration
Quality Assurance
Quality assurance includes all the activities related to satisfying the relevant quality standards for a project
Another goal of quality assurance is continuous quality improvement
Benchmarking can be used to generate ideas for quality improvements
Quality audits help identify lessons learned that can improve performance on current or future projects
Quality Assurance Plan
For big projects, it can look like a book complete with chapters and indices if not on e-doc
Key projects of any size require some sort of plan to ensure quality standards are met
Quality Control
The main outputs of quality control are
– acceptance decisions
– rework
– process adjustments
A few tools and techniques include
Pareto analysis
statistical sampling
Six Sigma – major quality endeavor
quality control charts
Using your own critical eye
Pareto
Pareto analysis involves identifying the vital few contributors that account for the most quality problems in a system
• Also called the 80-20 rule, meaning that 80% of problems are often due to 20% of the causes
• Pareto diagrams are histograms that help identify and prioritize problem areas
Statistical Sampling and Standard Deviation
• Statistical sampling involves choosing part of a
population of interest for inspection. The size of the sample depends on how representative you want the sample to be.
Six Sigma (Represents a Standard Deviation)
Six Sigma is “a comprehensive and flexible system for achieving, sustaining and maximizing business success. Six Sigma is uniquely driven by close understanding of customer needs, disciplined use of facts, data, and statistical analysis, and diligent attention to managing, improving, and reinventing business processes.”*
*Pande, Peter S., Robert P. Neuman, and Roland R. Cavanagh, The Six Sigma Way. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2000, p. xi
Six Sigma Basic Info
The target for perfection is the achievement of no more than 3.4 defects per million opportunities
The principles can apply to a wide variety of
Processes. It represents a standard - an ideal.
Six Sigma
It is an operating philosophy that is customer-focused and strives to drive out waste, raise levels of quality, and improve financial performance at breakthrough levels
Requires organization-wide commitment
Modern QM - Noted Quality Experts – Recognize their Names
Modern quality management
– requires customer satisfaction
– prefers prevention to inspection
– recognizes management responsibility for quality
Noteworthy quality experts include Deming,
Juran, Crosby, Ishikawa, Taguchi, and
Feigenbaum
Deming was famous for his work in rebuilding Japan car industry and his 14 points.
Juran wrote the Quality Control Handbook and 10 steps to quality improvement.
Re-defined quality focused on the customer’s view, fitness for use
not the manufacture’s view, conformance to requirements.
Crosby wrote Quality is Free and suggested that organizations
strive for zero defect; looked at the total cost of poor quality.
Ishikawa developed the concept of quality circles and pioneered the use of Fishbone diagrams
Taguchi developed methods for optimizing the process of
-- engineering experimentation
-- Quality should be built in not inspected in.
Feigenbaum developed the concept of total quality control
– Quality is the responsibility of people who do the work.
“It is most important that top management be
quality-minded. In the absence of sincere
manifestation of interest at the top, little will
happen below.” (Juran, 1945)
A large percentage of quality problems are
associated with management, NOT technical
Issues. It’s about the PEOPLE.
The Cost of Quality
– the cost of conformance or delivering products that meet requirements and fitness for use
– the cost of nonconformance or taking responsibility for failures…or not meeting quality expectations
PMBOK Processes
Q Planning = used to determine the relevant quality standards…generates the PLAN.
The PLAN becomes a major input item into
1. “perform quality assurance”
2. “perform quality control”
What is Quality Assurance?
The process of *auditing* the quality requirements and the results from quality control measurements to ensure appropriate quality standards and operations definitions are used.
Perform Quality Assurance
Makes recommendations for changes that --after approval by the integrated change control process-- become an input item to the perform quality control process (used to control for compliance to standard and quality).
What is Quality Control?
Identifies defects in a finished product
Ensures functionality
Perform Quality Control Process
Generates quality control measurements, which, in turn, is an input back to the quality assurance process.
Because you never give up on quality!
Remember
Every change order or request has to go through the integrated change control process. Only approved changes are processed.
Know the difference between accuracy and precision.
Accuracy and Precision
Accuracy is the degree of conformity of a measured or calculated quantity to its actual (true) value
Precision is the degree to which further measurements or calculations show the same or similar results.
In other words, the precision of an experiment/object/value is a measure of the reliability of the experiment, or how reproducible the experiment is. The accuracy of an experiment/object/value is a measure of how closely the experimental results agree with a true or accepted value.
Both accuracy and precision are terms used in the fields of science, engineering, statistics – and Project Management.
Memorize for CAPM Exam
Quality is planned not built in
“Perform quality assurance” uses tools and techniques of the quality planning and quality control processes.
Low quality is always a problem but low grade isn’t.
Ishikawa diagram is also called a cause-and-effect, or fishbone diagram.
It all comes together this way
Quality management plan, quality baseline, and quality metrics are the major output items of the quality planning process
Project Management plan and project scope statement are major input items to the quality planning process
The output of 3 processes—Q planning, Q control, and direct and manage project execution become the INPUT to Q assurance.
PDSA Cycles
The plan –do-check-act cycle, aka plan-do-study-act, defined by Shewhart and modified by Deming is the basis for Quality Improvement.
It will be of huge benefit to your career if you represent quality…the higher the grade the better.
Quality Control
Many people get confused between quality control (QC) and quality assurance (QA).
Orgs can define their own internal quality standards, processes, and procedures. The org will develop these over time - and relevant stakeholders will be required to adhere by them.
The process of making sure that the stakeholders are adhered to the defined standards and procedures is called quality control. In quality control, a verification process takes place.
CONTROL
Certain activities and products are verified against a defined set of rules or standards.
Every organization that practices QC needs a Quality Manual. The quality manual outlines the quality focus and the objectives in the organization.
The quality manual gives the quality guidance to different departments and functions. Therefore, everyone in the organization needs to be aware of his or her responsibilities mentioned in the quality manual.
Quality Assurance (QA)
QA is a broad practice used for assuring the quality of products or services.
In QA, a constant effort is made to enhance the quality practices in the organization. (It’s larger in scope than a “team of testers.”)
Therefore, continuous improvements are expected in quality functions in the company & there is usually a dedicated quality assurance team assigned. This is not the same as testers like Tom’s team.
QA team of the organization have many responsibilities…foremost is responsibility to define a process for achieving and improving quality.
QA The QA function of an organization uses many tools for
enhancing the quality practices. These tools vary from simple techniques to sophisticated software systems.
An orgs’ quality assurance professionals often go through formal trainings and get certified.
Since quality is a relative term, there is plenty of opportunity to enhance the quality of products and services – that’s continuous improvement.
The quality assurance teams of organizations constantly work to enhance the existing quality of products and services by optimizing the existing production processes and introducing new processes. In the meantime, Tom’s team will inspect, test, kick out defects and likely collaborate with QA to figure out any consistent failures.
Summing it Up Quality control is a product-oriented process. Quality
assurance is a process-oriented practice.
Quality control makes sure the *end* product meets quality requirements
Quality assurance makes sure that the *process* of manufacturing the product adheres to standards.
Therefore, quality assurance can be identified as a proactive process, while quality control can be considered a reactive process.
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