Quality Function Deployment – Mohamed Sami

Introduction

Quality Function Deployment was developed by Yoji Akao in Japan in 1966. By 1972 the power of the approach had been well demonstrated at the Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Kobe Shipyard [1]and in 1978 the first book on the subject was published in Japanese and then later translated into English in 1994. [2]

The QFD methodology can be used for both tangible products and non-tangible services, including manufactured goods, service industry, software products, IT projects, business process development, government, healthcare, environmental initiatives, and many other applications.

What is Quality Function Deployment (QFD)

Definition

Quality function deployment (QFD) is a “method to transform user demands into design quality, to deploy the functions forming quality, and to deploy methods for achieving the design quality into subsystems and component parts, and ultimately to specific elements of the manufacturing process.” as described by Dr. Yoji Akao, who originally developed QFD

Moreover, Quality Function Deployment is a systematic approach to design based on a close awareness of customer desires, coupled with the integration of corporate functional groups. It consists in translating customer desires (for example, the ease of writing for a pen) into design characteristics (pen ink viscosity, pressure on ball-point) for each stage of the product development.  [1] [2]

Goals

There are 3 main goals in implementing QFD [1]:

  1. Understand and prioritize customer needs.
  2. Translate these needs into technical characteristics and specifications.
  3. Build and deliver a quality product or service by focusing everybody on the customer.

Usage of QFD

Since its introduction, Quality Function Deployment has helped to transform the way many companies work:

  • Plan new products
  • Design product and system requirements
  • Determine process characteristics
  • Control the manufacturing process
  • The documents already existing product specifications
  • Reduce time to market
  • Reduce product development time by 50%

The Quality Function Deployment Process

  • Identify the Customers/stakeholders
  • Determine Customer Requirements/Constraints
  • Prioritize each requirement
  • Competitive Benchmarking
  • Translate Customer Requirements into measurable engineering specifications
  • Set target values for each engineering specification

QFD uses some principles from concurrent engineering in that cross-functional teams are involved in all phases of product development.  Each of the four phases in a QFD process uses a matrix to translate customer requirements from initial planning stages through production control.

Each phase, or matrix, represents a specific aspect of the product’s requirements. Relationships between elements are evaluated for each phase.  Only the most important aspects of each phase are illustrated in the next paragraphs [1].

  • Phase 1, Product Planning: It is building the House of Quality which is initiated by the marketing team, Phase 1 is also called The House of Quality. Many organizations only get through this phase of a QFD process. This phase documents customer requirements, warranty data, competitive opportunities, product measurements, competition for product measures, and the technical ability of the organization to meet each customer requirement. Getting good data from the customer in this phase is critical to the success of the entire QFD process.
  • Phase 2, Product Design: This phase is initiated by the engineering department. Product design requires creativity and innovative team ideas. Product concepts (goals and objectives) are created during this phase and part of the specifications are documented. Parts that are determined to be most important to meet customer needs are then transferred into process planning or the next Phase.
  • Phase 3, Process Planning: Process planning comes next and is owned by manufacturing engineering. During that, process planning, manufacturing processes, flowcharts and process parameters (Target Values) are documented.
  • Phase 4, Process Control: finally, in production planning, performance indicators are created to monitor the production process, maintenance schedules, and skills training for operators. Also, in this phase decisions are made as to which process poses the most risk and controls are put in place to prevent   The quality assurance department in concert with manufacturing leads Phase 4.

picture1picture1

The figure illustrates QFD phases

QFD Tools

The House of Quality

House of Quality is a diagram [3], resembling a house, used for defining the relationship between customer desires and needs, and the organization/product capabilities. It is a part of the Quality Function Deployment (QFD) and it utilizes a planning matrix to relate what the customer wants to how the organization (that produces the products) is going to meet those wants.

House of Quality appeared in 1972 in the design of an oil tanker by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries. Akao has reiterated numerous times that a House of Quality is not QFD, it is just an example of one tool.

QFDQFD

The figure illustrates the house of quality matrix

Decision-matrix method

Invented by Stuart Pugh the decision-matrix method [4], also the Pugh method, Pugh Concept Selection is a quantitative technique used to rank the multi-dimensional options of an option set. It is frequently used in engineering for making design decisions but can also be used to rank investment options, vendor options, product options or any other set of multidimensional entities.

picture3picture3

The figure illustrates the Decision matrix

Modular Function Deployment

Modular Function Deployment [5]uses QFD to establish customer requirements and to identify important design requirements with a special emphasis on modularity.

Example of QFD using house of quality

This particular QFD example was created for an imaginary Chocolate Chip Cookie Manufacturer (a.k.a. a “Bakery”). The example maps customer requirements to parts/materials to be purchased in order to meet and/or exceed the customer expectations. (The prioritization comes into play when assuming the limited availability of funds for making purchases.) [6]

The example can be accessed using URL: http://www.qfdonline.com/qfd-tutorials/house-of-quality-qfd-example/

 

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Findings of the example:

  • The QFD ends with HOQ #3. This is due primarily to the fact that all of its parts/materials are purchased rather than manufactured. Had a different product been chosen, a 4th HOQ could have been added that mapped parts/materials attribute to processes and/or initiatives for manufacturing the parts that met those specifications.
  • The “Weight” requirement (column #4) in HOQ #1 may not be a valuable requirement. You can tell that this requirement is suspect by the fact that its “Max Relationship Value in Column” is only 1. (Note: the template auto-highlights warning values).
  • The “Weight” requirement (row #4) in HOQ #2 is not being addressed. Similarly, “Tensile Ultimate Strength” (Row #3) and “Size (diameter)” (Row #5) are not being substantially addressed. (Note their “Max Relationship Value in Row” values).
  • HOQ #3 has examples of both of the issues listed in #1 & 2 above.

Cite this article as: Mohamed Sami, (December 7, 2016). “Quality Function Deployment,” in Mohamed Sami – Personal blog. Retrieved April 7, 2023, from https://melsatar.blog/2016/12/07/quality-function-deployment/

References

  • [1] Sullivan, 1986.
  • [2] Mizuno and Akao, 1994.
  • [3] I. R. Institute, “Quality Function Deployment,” Creative Industries Research Institute.
  • [4] Wikipedia, “Quality function deployment,” Wikipedia, [Online]. Available: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quality_function_deployment. [Accessed 7 1 2012].
  • [5] Wikipedia, “House of Quality,” Wikipedia, [Online]. Available: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Quality. [Accessed 1 7 2012].
  • [6] Wikipedia, “Decision matrix method,” Wikipedia, [Online]. Available: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decision-matrix_method. [Accessed 1 7 2012].
  • [7] Wikipedia, “Modular Function Deployment,” Wikipedia, [Online]. Available: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modular_Function_Deployment. [Accessed 1 7 2012].
  • [8] Q. Online, “House of Quality (QFD) Example,” QFD Online, [Online]. Available: http://www.qfdonline.com/qfd-tutorials/house-of-quality-qfd-example/. [Accessed 4 7 2012].
  • [9] Harvard Business Review, The House of Quality [Online]. Available: https://hbr.org/1988/05/the-house-of-quality

 

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Summary

Quality Function DeploymentQuality Function Deployment

Article Name

Quality Function Deployment

Description

he QFD methodology can be used for both tangible products and non-tangible services, including manufactured goods, service industry, software products, IT projects, business process development, government, healthcare, environmental initiatives, and many other applications.

Author

Mohamed Sami

Publisher Name

https://melsatar.blog

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https://melsatar.bloghttps://melsatar.blog