What Is Quality?

Yonatan Reshef
School of Business
University of Alberta
Edmonton, Alberta

Garvin, D.A. 1988. Managing Quality: The Strategic and Competitive Edge. Free Press.

Quality is a multi-dimensional perspective-based concept:

Deming, W.E. 1986. Out of The Crisis. MIT Press: 168-9:

Juran, J.M. 1989. Juran on Leadership for Quality. Free Press: 15-6.

Crosby, P.B. 1985. Quality Without Tears. Signet: 17:

 

OLD PARADIGM* NEW PARADIGM
Quality is just one of many functional specialties A "market-in" orientation in which every effort is made to internalize external customer preferences
Quality is not seen as a competitive element as long as you match your competitors Quality is a common corporate-wide language of problem identification and problem solving
Quality is a specialized function carried out by a small number of experts reporting to their superiors Quality is a strong corporate competitive strategy 
An emphasis on downstream (post-manufacturing) fixes All-employee involvement in quality improvements
Quality improvement activities are limited repetitive cycles of detect and repair An upstream prevention focus
Quality is a stand-alone effort, with each functional specialty (e.g., design, manufacturing, marketing) acting to maximize its own goals A well-defined problem-solving methodology
Quality evaluation is based on whether a product or service is built or delivered according to agreed-upon standards Training activities are tied to continuous quality improvement
  Integration of quality into the corporate-wide control system of goals, plans, and actions
  Emphasis on cross-functional cooperation to achieve quality improvement objectives
  Anticipation of customer needs sometimes even before customers are aware of them

*Robert E. Cole. 1998. "Learning from the Quality Movement: What did and didn't Happen and Why?" California Management Review, 41: 43-73.