Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Course Outline WEEK 1. Introduction to Course WEEK 2. Quality Concepts

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Course Outline WEEK 1. Introduction to Course WEEK 2. Quality Concepts"— Presentation transcript:

1 Course Outline WEEK 1. Introduction to Course WEEK 2. Quality Concepts
WEEK 3. Total Quality Management, Philosophy and Principles WEEK 4. Quality Gurus: Their Philosophies, principles and methods WEEK 5. Focusing on Customers WEEK 6. Techniques in Total Quality Management

2 Course Outline WEEK 7. Managing Human Resources In a Total Quality Environment WEEK 8. MIDTERM WEEK 9. Building and Sustaining Total Quality WEEK 10. Total Quality in Hospitality Sector WEEK 11. Benchmarking WEEK 12. ISO WEEK 13,14 ORAL PRESENTATIONS WEEK 15 FINAL

3 TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT
The leading trend in competition within the market was by having effective cost management strategies up to the 1970’s. However, after the 70’s, this has left its place to the fast growing trend of Total Quality Management.

4 TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT
TOTAL - stands for the inclusion of all areas of the business and all staff Principle of staff briefing QUALITY - stands for the consistent gearing of all activities to the quality requirements of internal and external customers/guests Principle of guest-led action MANAGEMENT - stands for the responsibility of the top management as regards systematic quality development and assurance Principle of management responsibility.

5 .Integrates all functions and processes within an organization to improve the quality of goods and services. .People-focused management system .Focuses on increasing customer satisfaction and reducing costs. .Stresses learning from and adaptation to change .Based on the scientific method

6 Advantages of TQM TQM offers firms several advantages such as having less bureacratic work environment, more flexibility, opportunity of working in groups, freedom of speech and thoughts, creating an environment within complaints, being customer oriented, implication of continuous development and education,realizing the importance of the staff and an environment where responsibilities are greater. Staff within the firm are seen as inside customers and motivation through this.

7 Like any other industry, TQM is very important for the tourism industry and the outcomes are highly visible. Tourism ind. based on service and the employes within this industry must be highly skilled and educated. If these 2 requirements are fullfilled, customer satisfaction and profits will be at high levels.

8 TQM can be seen as a sort of a philosophy
TQM can be seen as a sort of a philosophy. It aims for greater level of service commintment and satisfying customers within a democratic and visible management strategy.

9 Quality is meeting or exceeding customer expectations.

10 Modern Importance of Quality
“The first job we have is to turn out quality merchandise that consumers will buy and keep on buying. If we produce it efficiently and economically, we will earn a profit, in which you will share.” - William Cooper Procter

11 Quality Assurance are methods to ensure costumer quality.

12 History of Quality Assurance
Skilled craftsmanship during Middle Ages Interchangeable parts (H. Le Blanc, T. Jefferson & E. Whitney) Early 20th Century: scientific management (Taylor), Henry Ford, Bell System (Western Electric) (Hawthorne Effect, statistical methods (Walter Shewhart, Deming,Harold Dodge, etc.))

13 Quality control during World War II:
MIL-STD.

14 History of Quality Assurance
Post-war Japan: evolution of quality management Kaizen: Continuous improvement Deming Prize

15 History of Quality Assurance
Quality awareness in U.S. manufacturing industry during 1980s: from “Little Q” to “Big Q” - Total Quality Management Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award (1987)

16 History of Quality Assurance
European Foundation for Quality Management: European Quality Award ISO 9000 standard Turkish Quality: Turkish Center for Quality (KalDer) (

17 History of Quality Assurance
Emergence of quality management in service industries, government, health care, and education Evolution of Six Sigma Current and future challenges: “A race without a finish line.” –David Kearns, Xerox.

18 Contemporary Influences on Quality
Partnering Learning systems Adaptability and speed of change Environmental sustainability Globalization Knowledge focus Customization and differentiation Shifting demographics

19 Definitions of Quality
Transcendent definition: excellence Product-based definition: product attributes/capabilities User-based definition: fitness for intended use Value-based definition: quality vs. price Manufacturing-based definition: conformance to specifications

20 Customer-Driven Quality
“Meeting or exceeding customer expectations” Customers can be... Consumers External customers Internal customers


Download ppt "Course Outline WEEK 1. Introduction to Course WEEK 2. Quality Concepts"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google