Beyond the Gospel:
A Critique of TQM
Yonatan Reshef
School of Business
University of Alberta
Edmonton, Alberta
T6G 2R6 CANADA
American managers have become enamored with TQM
following the NBC program, "If Japan Can, Why Can't We?"
that was aired in June of 1980. TQM gurus have been clear about
their expectations of a quality-based ideal-type organization where every
effort is made to stay close to the customers and internalize their
needs, preferences, and expectations; quality becomes a common
language of problem identification and problem solving; quality is
the competitive strategy; quality is integrated into the
corporate-wide control system of goals, plans, and actions; a
well-defined problem-solving methodology is established; there
are extensive training activities which are tied to quality improvement; all
employees
are involved in quality improvements; there is a heavy
emphasis on cross-functional cooperation to achieve quality improvement
objectives; and customer needs are
sometimes anticipated even before customers are aware of them (Robert
Cole. 1998. "Learning from the Quality Movement: What did and what
didn't Happen and Why?" California Management Review, 41: 43-73).
1. Is TQM a theory? Deming
emphasizes the importance of theory to effective management.
Theory makes it possible to predict future and understand past
and present events. It follows that without theory there is no
management. For Deming, a theory of management seems to be
tantamount to "profound
knowledge,"
that is appreciation of a system, knowledge about variation,
understanding of the theory of knowledge, and a deep understanding of
human behavior. A scientific theory, on the other hand, is a tool
that makes it possible to predict the occurrence of certain events
given the behaviors of specific antecedents, and understanding the
reasons for past and current events. Seen this way, TQM is not a
coherent theory. Rather, it is a story with a (more or less)
known beginning, a wishful ending, and a thick and messy plot.
The upshot is, TQM is not
a sceintific theory. However, it can be viewed as a paradigm, a
theory of life. It provides a set of assumptions on how an
orgnaization should be run economically and socially. It provides
very useful information on the role management, workers, customers, and
suppliers should play. It gives us a good idea on desired and
undesired practices and behaviors, how we should view an organization,
the role of quality in business strategy, etc.
2.
TQM's theoretical ambiguity breeds practical uncertainty.
The middle part of TQM, the plot that should take users from the
beginning to the coveted ending (i.e., implementation/TQM becomes the
way we operate), is rich with practices, processes, n-point
lists, and enlightening philosophical notions about the roles and
relationships of people with other people within and without the
employing organizations.
However, the "gospel" fails to provide a clear path to reaching desired goals. TQM's
theoretical vagueness breeds practical ambiguity, which renders the
implementation process a
challenge. This ambiguity manifests itself in several ways.
At a
most basic level, TQM advocates provide no guidelines for
implementation. How should management enroll employees/unions in
the
TQM vision and campaign? How should management encourage employee
creativity and, at the same time, control the
production system? How can fear be driven out of the North American
workplace where job security is a rarity, and downsizing a prevalent
HRM practice? How does the notion of continuous improvement, the core of TQM,
squares with the request for standardization?
TQM advocates fail to deal with the effects on the
employment relationship of the introduction of TQM.
Implementation may affect the mix, content, status and number of jobs,
and employee entitlements. This may introduce anxiety to the
employment relationship that may be detrimental to the implementation
process.
The meaning of "teamwork,"
a core element in TQM, is unclear. Does it mean self-managing
groups of workers whereby members are allowed to decide on work
methods, pace, and personnel issues? Or, does it
mean a new form of control, whereby a small number of highly
disciplined
employees are grouped under the direction of a management-appointed
team leader? The small group may thus become a mechanism to
secure worker consent for management policies. Similarly, what is the meaning of "coach," the new role
managers should assume? How should managers step out of their
traditional roles and become coaches?
TQM experts advocate abandoning traditional HRM practices, such as
individual-based evaluation and reward systems. Yet, they do not
suggest any clear alternatives. It is important to create HRM
systems that are consistent with the overall thrust of TQM and, at the
same time, with the North American culture that puts a premium on
individualism.
3.
Paradigm issues.
TQM advocates fail to recognize that each of the different workplace groups
may react differently to TQM's promises/threats.
The reason being, each group operates out
of its own paradigm regarding the TQM intervention, its own understanding of the important
variables involved in the TQM transformation, and its own perception of the likely sequence of events once
the change process is initiated.
Paradigms, are cognitive structures,
or frameworks, that people use to impose structure on and impart meaning
to events. Or, paradigms are self inflicted rules
that set an emotional and cognitive boundary to our thinking and feeling. Paradigms thus are data reduction
mechanisms derived from the perceiver's past experience. They
guide people to attend to some aspects of their current experience and
ignore others; they also guide subsequent behavior. Paradigms make us know how to behave without knowing how we know.
People who are accustomed to one particular paradigm often have great difficulty
adopting, or even understanding, a new one. Rather than immediately accepting a new
perspective, even when there are problems with an old one, people often try to fit
information that seems ambiguous to them into their preexisting paradigm to preserve their
existing cognitive and emotional structures. This is why, often,
subordinates deduce superiors'
intentions from the subordinates' own fears. Unless the new approach is convincingly and
coherently articulated, it may have little chance of making the expected impact.
In addition, multiple paradigms due
to differing positions (top management, middle management, clerical
employees, line employees, etc.) and demographics are likely to
generate resentment as well as conflicts. The reason
being, as mentioned before, each of the different workplace groups may
operate out of its own paradigm regarding the TQM transformation and
consequences. For example, top management might be mainly
interested in increased productivity; front-line employees may be more
interested in keeping their jobs; skilled workers may wish to preserve
their status vis-a-vis the rest of the workforce.
If none of the groups appreciates the
different perspectives of the other groups, the intervention will
likely intensify existing conflicts, and/or create new ones.
Unfortunately, change agents, such as consultants, may
overestimate the similarities among the various group
paradigms and thus might be unprepared for conflict. When a
paradigmatic conflict occurs, a comparatively powerful perspective,
likely the one held by top management, is likely to prevail.
If a paradigmatic change is likely to
succeed change agents must not only propose an alternative unifying paradigm, but
also initiate new ways of handling conflicts that are consistent with
the new paradigm that acknowledges the merit of consultation,
cooperation, respect, and the existence of different perspectives.
4.
Context. Organizations are influenced and shaped by the social world in which they are embedded. Cultural
effects, external and internal to the organization, on TQM
implementation should be
understood. Looking externally, TQM should be compatible with
the larger societal system. For example, in North America, as
long as the labor-management relationship is governed by an adversarial
philosophy, relying on a single supplier may give some employees a political
advantage. Yet, TQM writers assume that
industrial conflicts are either do not exist or have only little
effect on the production process, so little that TQM experts hardly
mention
such conflicts.
The education system
offers an example where the quality of the product may not be
sufficient to attract customers. The success of the education
system depends not
only on the quality of the education it offers, but also on factors
such as peer pressure, family circumstances, the economic situation, school location.
Measures of individual
performance (e.g., ranking, evaluation, rewarding, status) are a
cornerstone of our social world, the one that lies outside
business. Can TQM disregard this, and other, macro social
constraints?
Looking internally, before launching TQM, managers
should investigate how the organization culture may affect (moderate)
the relationship between quality improvement and competitiveness.
Are they themselves ready for the transformation? Is their
management team on-board? Are their employees going to
pull in the expected direction? Will the customer buy into the new
system? An internal factor that can influence TQM implementation is tenured and/or professional employees. Such employees
may resist the change process with management finding it difficult to
sell these employees on the idea. Deming (Out of The Crisis: 85-6) believes that "the 3 per cent that apparently don't care
will erode itself by peer pressure." This scenario, however, should be confirmed.
Moreover,
implicitly, TQM is geared toward high performers, that is people who
are willing and able to assume new responsibilites, learn new skills, desire to be empowered, work in teams, etc. Is there
a room for low-performers in a TQM-based work system?
Bottom line, we may need to adopt a contingency approach to TQM implementation.
5. Built-in Contradictions. TQM contains contradictions that should be acknowledge and addressed. Below, I provide a few examples:
- standardization vs. continuous
improvement
- do it right the first time vs.
innovate, take risks
- quality
enhancing practices may upset customers (security checks at airports;
no smoke rules; phone calls to collect feedback info)
- commitment to the customer vs. commitment to the bottom line
- empowerment vs. control
- empowerment vs. employees who do not want to be empowered/employees who ask for more empowerment
- management
by fact vs. hard data may not tell the full story; hard data may tell a
wrong story; not every important element can be measured; not everything that is measured is important
- you are not smarter than your customers vs. exceed customer expectations
6. Does TQM fit with our society's outlook? TQM is a long-term organizational transformation. A
transformation of such magnitude creates new competencies and at the same time renders
existing ones obsolete. This may make the achievement of a short-term success
difficult. At the
same time, our natural tendency is to look for short, intensive
bursts of activity in search of breakthroughs that represent a whole
new approach to a problem.
Another potentially problematic aspect of the
long-term nature of the TQM transformation is that if the market shifts
suddenly in a way that threatens the
company's existence, the long-term is likely to give way to the
urgent.
To deal with what is urgent, the organization may revert to the old
ways of doing business (a survival instinct). Once a long-term strategy has been
shelved, it may be hard to get it back
on-track and re-generate the commitment necessary to move it forward.
Therefore, whereas it may take
years before TQM comes to full fruition, an organization may have
less time to arrive at a-point-of-no-return where, notwithstanding
mounting pressures to revert to the "dethroned" system, TQM cannot be
undone.
TQM gurus preach the
elimination of individual ranking. Yet, society "admires" ranking
and find it a very effective means to dealing with individuals (e.g.,
job applicants, grant competitions, applications to university).
7. Getting bogged down in process. During
the gestation period of the TQM transformation, employees and managers
are involved in extensive process (procedures, measurements, data
analyses, training, team meetings, presentations) that may not be
directly related to the company's core mission. This process
should be managed carefully lest it becomes an end in itself.
8.
Size. The transformation can be very costly and, therefore, may
be less feasible in small businesses. Yet, small businesses are the fastest growing segment of the
Canadian economy.
9. Unions. The role of unions under TQM presents a conundrum. According to Deming
(Out of The Crisis: 47),
"company
unions are the rule." Yet, Japanese-style enterprise unions, or any other version of
company-controlled unions, is forbidden by law in Canada (and the USA).
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