Was There A Conscious Effort To Develop Six Sigma Into A Competitor To
Existing Systems?
This is a naïve and unfounded
question, as Six Sigma was developed as independently as any other school of
quality management systems. If we value the famous quote of M.K. Gandhi that
the end result justifies the means, then it clarifies the need to have more
than one quality system.
Evolution Of Six Sigma
Six Sigma has its roots in the
early industrial era of Europe during the 18th century and was
introduced with just one conceptual normal curve metric by Carl Frederick
Gauss. In the 1920s Walter
Shewhart showed how 3 sigma deviations from the mean required process
correction. Later, a Motorola engineer, Bill Smith, coined the term Six Sigma,
which was then copyrighted by Motorola.
The Japanese Mark
The ever quality-conscious
Japanese perfected the Six Sigma concept when they took over a Motorola factory
in 1970, which manufactured TV sets. The new Japanese management set out on a
mission to change the way activities were going on in the factory, placing high
emphasis on all activities leading to production. With their zealous approach
they later begin producing TV sets with just a 5% number of defects in comparison
to the original records under Motorola.
Motorola’s Contribution
Mikel Harry, who is regarded as the godfather of Six
Sigma, along with Bill Smith, the father of Six Sigma, wrote and codified a
research report on the quality management system, which highlighted the
correlation between the performance of a product in the market with the amount
of adjustment required at the point of manufacturing. This report clearly
established that the lesser the number of nonconformities at each stage of manufacturing,
the better the performance. The report paved for implementation of “logical
filters”, a key approach to problem solving. With the then Motorola CEO, Bob
Galvin, playing a key role, later this four stage logical filter came to be
known as the skeleton of the present Six Sigma. The four stages, then
identified, were Measure, Analyze, Improve and Control (MAIC).
A New Road Map
With the results of the efforts
of Mikel Harry and Bill Smith paying rich dividends, Motorola’s Corporate
Policy Committee had set goals for further improvisation of the system by
declaring (in 1989) that they would achieve ten times better quality in service
and products, with further improvement to 1/10th by 1991.
Galvin was instrumental in
spreading the sense of quality in every sphere of business activity until total
customer satisfaction was achieved. Until now, Motorola’s approach was limited
to a disciplined statistical approach to problem solving. This approach still got Motorola the coveted
Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award.
Major Contributors On Its Journey To Perfection
We can’t forget the
contributions made by Unisys Corp in 1988.
Asea Brown Boveri in 1993 developed Six Sigma into its current form,
which places importance on bottom lines and customer satisfaction. The current
form of Six Sigma has implementation being carried out by key role players:
Champions, Master Black Belts, Black Belts, and Green Belts.
Since then, the Six Sigma
methodology has been and is applicable to different industries. The evolution
of Six Sigma continues.