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Bureaucratic and Quality Control Tools and Techniques
Management Textbooks Boundless Management Control Bureaucratic and Quality Control Tools and Techniques
Management Textbooks Boundless Management Control
Management Textbooks Boundless Management
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Management
Concept Version 11
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The Quality Control Cycle

Quality control is used to evaluate and address the quality of the goods a business provides.

Learning Objective

  • Describe effective quality control processes as they are employed in the business environment


Key Points

    • Quality control is used to evaluate an organization's products or services.
    • Standards of quality need to be established first, using a set of quality criteria created by the manufacturer or by the requirements of the client/customer.
    • Quality assurance is preventive and process-oriented while quality control is reactive and product-oriented.
    • Quality control emphasizes process, control, competence, and personal integrity.
    • Quality control is very important to increasing customer satisfaction and the success of the overall business.

Terms

  • locus of control

    A theory in personality psychology referring to the extent to which individuals believe that they can effect or dictate how events affect them.

  • quality control

    A procedure or set of procedures intended to ensure that goods adhere to a defined set of soundness criteria or meet the requirements of the client or customer.

  • quality

    The degree to which a man-made object or system is free from bugs and flaws, as opposed to scope of functions or quantity of items.


Full Text

Quality control is a business procedure used to assess the quality of a company's products or services against benchmarks determined by the company, industry standards, or clients/customers. Quality control includes inspecting a product before it enters the marketplace to make sure it is defect-free.

Quality Checking

A U.S. Navy Aviation Electrician's Mate performs a maintenance check during the course of his duties.

Quality Control (QC) and Quality Assurance (QA)

Quality control and quality assurance have different purposes. Quality control emphasizes product testing to discover defects and report them to management, which decides how to respond (by delaying the product release date, for example). Quality assurance attempts to improve and stabilize production to prevent defects. In this way, QA is preventive and process-oriented while QC is reactive and product-oriented.

Guidelines for Quality Control

To maintain an effective quality control program, a business must follow these important guidelines:

  • Decide on a specific standard for the product or service.
  • Determine the extent of quality service actions.
  • Collect real-world data to improve product quality and adjust the QC process.
  • Submit the result to management. If the percentage of defective products is too high, management should take corrective action to improve quality.
  • Most importantly, a quality control process should be an ongoing process.

Three Major Aspects of Quality Control

  1. Elements, like controls, job management, defined and well-managed processes, performance and integrity criteria, and identification of records.
  2. Competence, such as knowledge, skills, experience, and qualifications.
  3. Soft elements, such as personnel integrity, confidence, organizational culture, motivation, team spirit, and quality relationships. Deficiency in any of these three aspects increases the risk of inferior products or services getting to market. Quality control is one of the most important procedures for any business because it lowers that risk of customer or client dissatisfaction and prevents losses for the business.
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