07 TQM
07 TQM
07 TQM
Quality Action teams; Boeing Airlift and Tanker Division has more than 100
integrated product teams (IPTs) that are typically made up of engineering,
work-team, customer, and supplier representatives. Granite Rock, with fewer
than 400 employees, has about 100 functioning teams, ranging from 10 corpo-
rate quality teams to project teams, purchasing teams, task forces, and function
teams composed of people who do the same job at different locations.
Why are there so many teams? The TQ philosophy recognizes the inter-
dependence of various parts of the organization and uses teams as a way to
coordinate work. Teamwork enables various parts of the organization to work
together in meeting customer needs that can seldom be fulfilled by employees
limited to one specialty. Teams promote equality among individuals, encour-
aging a positive attitude and trust. The diversity inherent in teams often pro-
vides unique perspectives on work, spontaneous thought, and creativity. In
addition, teams develop a greater sense of responsibility for achieving goals
and performing tasks. In short, teams provide a variety of benefits that are not
derived from individuals working alone.
TQ organizations recognize that the potential contributions of employ-
ees are much greater than in the traditional organization, and teams are an
attempt to take advantage of this potential. Further, the competitive envi-
ronment of modern business requires flexible, fast reaction to changes in cus-
tomer demands or technological capacity. Teams can provide the capacity for
rapid response. During the past few years, many companies have gone pub-
lic with stories of their successful teams as well as sharing their recognition
efforts (see the box on Motorola). Managers are always looking for ideas that
produce results, and teams certainly fall squarely within this category.
TYPES OF TQ TEAMS
TQ uses so many different types of teams that sometimes it is difficult to tell
one from another. Some common types of teams include:
• Steering committees (or quality councils)—management teams that lead an
organization and provide direction and focus.
• Problem-solving teams—teams of workers and supervisors that meet to
address workplace problems involving quality and productivity, or ad-
hoc teams with a specific mission such as organizational design teams
that act as architects of change as discussed in the previous chapter.
• Natural work teams—people who work together every day to perform a
complete unit of work.
• Self-managed teams—Work teams that are empowered to make and con-
trol their own decisions.
• Virtual teams—teams whose members communicate by computer, take
turns as leaders, and jump in and out as necessary. Virtual teams are
beginning to play an increasingly important role because of the Internet
and electronic communication.
Steering Committees
Most organizations practicing total quality have a steering committee, called
a quality council by Juran and a quality improvement team by Crosby.3 Steer-
ing committees are responsible for establishing policy for TQ and for guid-
ing the implementation and evolution of TQ throughout the organization.
The top manager of the organization is usually on the steering committee, as
is the manager with overall responsibility for quality—for example, the Vice
President/Director of Total Quality.
The steering committee may meet fairly often when a TQ effort is getting
started, but usually meets only monthly or quarterly once things are under
way. This group makes key decisions about the quality process—how qual-
ity should be measured and what structures and approaches should be used to
improve quality. The steering committee also periodically reviews the status of
238 Part III: Total Quality and Organizational Behavior
Problem-Solving Teams
The second, and probably most common, type of team used in TQ is the
problem-solving team. As the name implies, problem-solving teams work to
improve quality by identifying and solving specific quality-related problems
facing the organization. Such teams are sometimes referred to as corrective
action teams, or quality circles (see box), although many organizations have
created their own names for them. Two basic types of problem-solving teams
are departmental and cross-functional.
Departmental Problem-Solving Teams
These teams are limited in membership to employees of a specific department
and are limited in scope to problems within that department. Such groups
typically meet once a week for one to two hours and progress through a stan-
dardized problem-solving methodology. First they identify a set of problems
and select one to work on. Then they collect data about the causes of the
problem and determine the best approach to solving it. (Often this will entail
using many of the techniques described in chapter 3.)
If the solution does not require any major changes in procedures or sub-
stantial resources, the group frequently can implement its own solution. If
this is not the case, group members will make a presentation to some level
of management, requesting approval for their solution and the resources to
implement it. These teams typically remain relatively intact as they address
a number of problems in succession.
The problems that such teams work on can be quite diverse. A team of
hourly workers at U.S. Steel’s Gary Works has solved a number of crippling
quality problems, helping to reduce the amount of steel rejected by automo-
tive customers by 80 percent.4 A team of service technicians at an equipment
rental company simplified the form used to perform preventive maintenance,
saving the company considerable time in the process. A team of people from
the “resort” department at Federal Express improved the process of package
sorting, which created savings in labor costs and helped to avoid the cost and
embarrassment of having to send overnight packages via commercial air-
lines.5 An information systems team for a manufacturing company addressed
Chapter 7: Quality Teamwork 239
Quality circles were among the first Japanese management practices used in
the United States. When visiting Japan in the 1970s, American managers
noticed groups of workers meeting to address quality problems. The managers
recognized this as a practice that could easily be copied and returned home to
institute it in their own companies. Quality circles (QCs) took off in the United
States as the Japanese management mania peaked, and firms like Lockheed
and Westinghouse reported early successes with QCs. The movement boomed
in the early 1980s as most large American companies introduced the practice.
The bloom was soon off the rose, however, as firms found themselves
devoting a lot of time and attention to QCs and receiving relatively little in
return. There were a number of reasons for the lack of results. Employees
were only encouraged to work on quality problems during their meetings (usu-
ally about an hour a week) and spent the rest of their week just “doing their
job.” Supervisors were often not involved in the program and were indiffer-
ent, if not downright hostile, to it. Perhaps the biggest problem was that QCs
were “just a program,” cut off from and often opposed to the way the organ-
ization usually worked. Managers preached about the importance of quality
work during their QC events, but when crunch time came, their attitude was,
in the words of one QC member, “If it doesn’t smoke, ship it!”
Not surprisingly, companies started to disband their QC programs, which
were soon dismissed as just another passing fad. In the context of the cur-
rent interest in total quality, many managers look back on QCs as essentially
a false start on the road to quality. It is interesting in this light to note that
many Japanese companies still operate QCs and that they are seen as a crit-
ical part of the total quality control (TQC) effort in these companies.6
According to the Union of Japanese Scientists and Engineers, 5.5 million
workers take part in 750,000 circles. Managers as well as frontline employees
are involved, and the circles are considered a normal part of working life,
rather than a “program.” In fact, QCs often work to achieve the objectives set
in the kaizen process (see chapter 6), which puts them in the mainstream of
TQC activity. Some organizations provide monetary incentives for suggestions
provided by circles, and employees in some firms make dozens of sugges-
tions per year. It appears that the mistake made in the U.S. introduction of
quality circles was not in introducing them, but in not taking them seriously.
Have you ever sent a letter only to have it returned as “undeliverable” by the
post office? How about 7,000 undeliverable pieces of mail every week? This
was the problem faced by New York Life Insurance Company. Most of the
mail being returned was notices to people that their premiums were due, so
a great deal of revenue was being lost. In fact, the company estimated the
problem to be costing them as much as $80 million.
The team formed to attack this problem became known as the Gravedig-
gers, because of their relentlessness in “digging up” addresses so that pre-
mium notices could be delivered. The 18-member team, whose members
were drawn from around the nation, met via teleconference once or twice a
week. Following total quality principles, the team began by looking for the
root causes of undeliverable mail. Some of the most common were: (1) poli-
cyholders who forgot to notify New York Life when they moved, and (2) long
addresses that did not fit into the window on the mailing envelope.
The Gravediggers instituted a number of corrective measures to deal
with the problem. They created units in each of the company’s service offices
to find addresses and keep company records up to date, they worked out a
deal with the post office to forward mail and provide the company with cor-
rected addresses, and they used a more elaborate mail-sorting system with
bar codes. Early results found that the volume of returned mail was reduced
by more than 20 percent, and the postal service provided the company with
61,000 correct addresses in a nine-month period. In fact, the Gravediggers
are already among the most successful teams in the history of New York
Life’s total quality effort.
Our team is down one good player. Join our group of multiskilled
Maintenance Associates who work together to support our assem-
bly teams. . . . We are looking for a versatile person with . . . ability
to set up and operate various welding machinery . . . willingness to
work on detailed projects for extended time periods, and general
overall knowledge of the automobile manufacturing process. . . .
You must be a real team player, have excellent interpersonal skills,
and be motivated to work in a highly participative environment.11
Self-Managed Teams
Self-managed teams (SMTs), also known as self-directed teams or
autonomous work groups, are natural work teams with broad responsibili-
ties, including the responsibility to manage themselves. SMTs are empowered
to take corrective action and resolve day-to-day problems; they also have
direct access to information that allows them to plan, control, and improve
their operations. Although self-managed teams have been used for decades,
(the SMT concept was developed in Britain and Sweden in the 1950s, and one
of the early companies to adopt it was Volvo, the Swedish auto manufacturer),
their popularity has increased in recent years, due in part to their use in TQ.
In the absence of a supervisor, SMTs often handle budgeting, scheduling, set-
ting goals, and ordering supplies. Some teams even evaluate one another’s
performance and hire replacements for departing team members. For exam-
ple, as part of a self-directed restaurant team at a Ritz-Carlton hotel, employ-
ees frequently arrive before the maître d’ to set up. If a server calls in sick,
employees take responsibility for a replacement. Servers are also closely
involved in planning menus with chefs.12 In short, members of such teams
are more like managers than employees in the traditional sense, hence the
term self-managed teams (see the box on AT&T Credit Corporation).
SMTs have resulted in improved quality and customer service, greater flex-
ibility, reduced costs, faster response, simpler job classifications, increased
employee commitment to the organization, and the ability to attract and retain
the best people.13 Experts estimate that SMTs are 30 to 50 percent more pro-
ductive than conventional teams. FedEx, for instance, reduced service errors by
13 percent; one 3M facility increased production by 300 percent; in a Mercedes-
Benz plant, defects were reduced by 50 percent. A study of 22 manufacturing
plants using SMTs found that more than half of them made improvements in
quality and productivity, removed at least one layer of management or super-
vision, and decreased their levels of grievances, absenteeism, and turnover.14
Virtual Teams
Virtual teams are groups of people who work closely together despite being
geographically separated. Virtual teams rarely meet face-to-face; their pri-
mary interaction is through technologies such as telephone, fax, shared data-
bases and collaborative software systems, the Internet, e-mail, and video
conferencing. In 1998, over 8 million workers were members of such teams,
and this number has undoubtedly grown as new technology has prolifer-
ated. Virtual teams are becoming important because of increasing globaliza-
tion, flatter organizational structures, an increasing shift to knowledge work,
and the need to bring diverse talents and expertise to complex projects and
Chapter 7: Quality Teamwork 243
EFFECTIVE TEAMWORK
Teams are the main structure of many TQ organizations.17 Thus, effective team-
work is critical to a successful TQ effort. If teams are not effective, TQ processes
will suffer. Steering committees will choose poor directions and policies for
the organization; departmental and cross-functional problem-solving teams
will choose inappropriate problems or won’t be able to solve the problems
they identify; and self-managed teams will not be able to fulfill the promise
of an empowered, creative workforce.
This section explores what it takes for teams to be effective in a TQ envi-
ronment. Although the relative importance of these factors will vary from
one type of team to another, they generally apply to any type of team found
in TQ organizations. As you read this section, consider the ideas in light of
your own experiences, rewarding or otherwise, on teams. If you are cur-
rently on a team, you may identify some ideas for improvement.
What is meant by interpersonal skills? Think of people who are easy to work
with in a group. They are good listeners and do not ignore or downgrade
someone else’s ideas in order to promote their own. They try to understand
other people’s positions, even when they do not agree with them. They offer
help to other group members, rather than waiting to be asked. They are will-
ing and able to communicate their opinions, ideas, and any information that
needs to be shared. They can deal with conflict without turning it into a per-
sonal issue. Finally, they are willing to share credit for accomplishments with
other members of the group, rather than trying to keep the limelight for
themselves.22 If you have worked on a team with people who possess even
most of these skills, you are lucky indeed!
Chapter 7: Quality Teamwork 247
Team Processes
Many processes are undertaken within TQ teams, including quality plan-
ning, problem selection and diagnosis, communication, data collection, and
implementation of solutions. Team processes are not fundamentally differ-
ent from other processes, such as assembling an electronic device, taking a
patient’s vital signs, or preparing coq au vin. The customers of all these
processes can be identified, their elements can be placed in a flowchart, steps
that do not add value can be removed, and their quality can be improved
continuously.
Most people, however, are not accustomed to thinking of group processes
in this manner. This may be why group meetings are often long and boring
and why so many people try to escape committee assignments and avoid
committee meetings like the plague. A willingness to tolerate poor quality
group processes has no place in organizations practicing total quality. This
section identifies a few of the processes used in teams and provides some
ideas about how teams can use them to operate effectively.
Problem Selection
One of the processes undertaken at least occasionally by most teams and fre-
quently by problem-solving teams is the choice of problems or issues on
which to work. This process can be particularly difficult for newly empow-
ered employees, who are more accustomed to being told what to do than
they are to establishing their own agenda. New teams are often tempted to
select the biggest, most glaring problem in sight that has been haunting them
for years. Selecting such problems—called “world hunger” problems in TQ
jargon—is usually a mistake.
New teams generally are not skilled enough to solve massive problems,
and a failure to address such a visible problem successfully may be difficult
for the team to overcome. It makes more sense for a team initially to select a
problem of moderate importance and difficulty and to move on to more
complex and difficult problems when the team is better established. This
approach is more likely to lead to successful solutions, which will build
momentum for each team and for the quality effort as a whole.
248 Part III: Total Quality and Organizational Behavior
Another common problem among new teams is that they select problems
that are not associated—at least in management’s eyes—with important busi-
ness or quality issues. When given a voice for the first time, many teams ask
for things they have been denied in the past, such as a better lunch area or
break room. Although managers often consider such behavior an indictment
of quality teams, it is in fact an indictment of management itself. It is unreal-
istic to expect employees to focus on business issues when managers have not
taken seriously employee requests for adequate facilities. In fact, it is better
for issues such as these to be worked out prior to initiating a team-based qual-
ity effort, rather than allowing them to undermine such efforts.
The selection of “trivial” problems by teams may also indicate that man-
agement has not done an effective job of sharing information about the busi-
ness with team members. If they truly understand the nature of the impor-
tant problems faced by the organization, teams are much more likely to
choose worthwhile issues on which to work.
Problem Diagnosis
After problems to be addressed are identified, their causes must be ascer-
tained. Thus a second critical process in TQ groups is problem diagnosis, the
process by which the team investigates potential causes of problems to iden-
tify potential solutions. Juran refers to this step as the “diagnostic journey”
and explains that it consists of three parts:
Many teams want to bypass problem diagnosis and begin problem solv-
ing as soon as possible, usually because they mistakenly believe that the
problem’s causes are obvious. Teams that spend more time diagnosing prob-
lems have been shown to be much more effective than those that proceed
immediately to solutions. Spending time pinning down the sources of prob-
lems is consistent with the TQ principle of decision making based on facts
and reduces the potential for what are sometimes called “type 3 errors”—
solving the wrong problem. Training in methods of diagnosis and analysis is
important for team effectiveness.
Work Allocation
Another important process is the allocation of work within the team. Many
teams approach this process haphazardly, assigning tasks to the next in line
or the first person who volunteers. Assigning tasks is one of the keys to team
effectiveness and should not be taken so lightly.24 Each team member has
certain skills and will perform well on tasks that use those skills and not so
well on tasks that use other skills. The team needs to assign people tasks that
will utilize their skills to the greatest extent possible.
Chapter 7: Quality Teamwork 249
Coordination
Another key process is coordinating the team’s work with other teams and
departments in the organization. Teams cannot work in isolation, and main-
taining good relationships outside the team is one criterion of team effec-
tiveness. New product teams, for example, depend on other parts of the organ-
ization for resources, information, and support while also acting as primary
internal suppliers. Coordination often involves resolving issues of interde-
pendent schedules, but may also include some negotiation. Thus, teams often
play a “boundary spanner” role.26 The boundary-spanning literature shows
positive relationships between communication and performance. However,
researchers have often found a tendency among teams to turn inward, believ-
ing that their own needs, ideas, and plans are more valid than those of “out-
siders.” Ironically, the more cohesive the team becomes, the greater the like-
lihood of this occurring.27
Such a tendency is antithetical to TQ, but it is a danger faced by virtu-
ally all groups. Teams can try to overcome this problem by keeping their cus-
tomers in mind and using customer satisfaction as the yardstick against which
ideas and plans are measured. Remaining aware of the need to improve team
processes should also guard against the tendency to downplay the potential
contributions of non–team members, as outsiders are often the source of
ideas for improvement that team members have overlooked.
Finally, good communication should also help to coordinate work with
other teams and departments. The likelihood of following a path that works
against the needs or plans of other groups will be diminished if teams com-
municate with other groups early and often. Tools such as quality function
deployment and affinity diagrams, discussed in chapter 3, can be used to
enhance such communication.
In a sense, quality-oriented process improvement and problem solving
are a minefield for the unsuspecting team. Whenever changes are made in
an organization, vested interests are challenged. By carefully managing the
coordination process, teams will reduce the potential for unnecessary conflict
with groups outside the team and will greatly enhance their potential for
long-term effectiveness.
In summary, team processes can be improved just like any other process.
Several key processes that are candidates for improvement are problem iden-
tification and diagnosis, work allocation, communication, and coordination
of work with other teams and departments.
Organizational Support
However skillful the team, they will find it hard to be successful unless their
efforts are supported by the organization in general and by management in
particular. Organizational support is the foundation for effective teamwork.
Management must provide the following if a TQ team is to be successful.
First, management must issue a clear charge to the group; that is, a descrip-
tion of what the group is and is not expected to do. This is often called a team
Chapter 7: Quality Teamwork 251
charter. Many teams have wasted a great deal of time and energy on issues
that they later found they were not authorized to pursue. Management’s
guidance as to the quality priorities of the organization is crucial, especially
in the early stages of a team’s work. Several organizational researchers have
found that team performance improved for teams with charters and clear
expectations.28
Second, human resource management (HRM) systems often must be
adjusted. Conventional HRM systems may be barriers to effective teamwork
that will undermine TQ if not changed.29 The need for enhanced training is
particularly acute, as team members must be brought up to speed on the var-
ious types of skills necessary for effective teamwork.
Performance appraisal and reward systems are also a concern. Many of
these systems are designed to reward individual effort or the attainment of
functional goals, rather than teamwork. Numerous research studies over the
past several decades have pointed out the problems and pitfalls of perform-
ance appraisals.30 Many legitimate objections can be made:31
• They tend to foster mediocrity and discourage risk taking.
• They focus on short-term and measurable results, thereby discouraging
long-term planning or thinking and ignoring important behaviors that
are more difficult to measure.
• They focus on the individual and therefore tend to discourage or destroy
teamwork within and between departments.
• The process is detection-oriented rather than prevention-oriented.
• They are often unfair, since managers frequently do not possess observa-
tional accuracy.
• They fail to distinguish between factors that are within the employees’
control and system-determined factors that are beyond their control.
This can greatly undermine teamwork and can be fatal to the team if not
addressed.
Performance appraisals are most effective when they are based on the
objectives of the work teams that support the organization.32 In this respect,
they act as a diagnostic tool and review process for individual, team, and
organizational development and achievement. The performance appraisal
can also be a motivator when it is developed and used by the work team
itself. Team efforts are harnessed when team members are empowered to
monitor their own workplace activities. In a TQ culture, quality improve-
ment is one of the major dimensions on which employees are evaluated.
Xerox, for instance, changed its performance review criteria by replacing
traditional measures such as “follows procedures” and “meets standards” to
evaluating employees on the basis of quality improvement, problem solving,
and team contributions. Many companies use peer review, customer evalu-
ations, and self-assessments as a part of the appraisal process.
Selection processes may also be changed in conjunction with TQ imple-
mentation. Companies like Procter & Gamble seek entry-level college grad-
uates who understand total quality principles. They specifically want their
252 Part III: Total Quality and Organizational Behavior
new employees to think in terms of creating quality and value for consumers,
to understand their customers and needs, and to work toward results despite
obstacles. The members of self-managed teams often take much of the respon-
sibility for hiring people for their team. Human resource professionals should
play a consultative role in such efforts, however, to make sure that selection is
done in a fair and legal manner.
Third, management must provide the team with the resources necessary
to be successful. These include a place and time to meet and the tools to get
the job done. Human resources are also important: management should avoid
moving people on and off teams frequently, as this can disrupt teamwork and
send a message that quality and teamwork are really not a high priority for
the organization.
Fourth, when teams make a proposal, management must respond swiftly
and constructively. It is not realistic to expect that every quality improve-
ment proposal made by a team will be implemented. For those proposals
that cannot be implemented, management owes the team a reasonable expla-
nation as to why it is not feasible and some guidance as to how the proposal
might be modified so that it would be acceptable. Few experiences are as
demoralizing to quality teams as making an elaborate, reasoned presenta-
tion, only to be met with deafening silence from management. This was one
of the problems that undermined quality circle programs. It is less of a prob-
lem for self-managed teams that generally have broad authority to imple-
ment their own solutions.
For those proposals that are accepted, some form of recognition for the
team is in order. At The Ritz-Carlton, team awards include bonus pools and
sharing in the gratuity system. Many companies have formal corporate
recognition programs, such as IBM’s Market Driven Quality Award for out-
standing individual and team achievements in quality improvement, or the
Xerox President’s Award and Team Excellence Award. Solectron rewards
groups by buying entire divisions lunch and bringing in ice cream for the
entire plant. Often the most effective forms of recognition are symbolic, such
as a citation or picture in the company newspaper.
Many organizations view team development as an important business
process and manage it accordingly. Figure 7.1 shows the approach used by
Boeing Airlift & Tanker Programs to develop raw teams into self-managed
teams, a result of an historic agreement between the company and union to
support employee participation.
TEAMWORK IN ACTION
This section provides two examples of quality teamwork: one a problem-
solving team in a general hospital (a winner of the RIT/USA Today Quality
Cup Competition—see box), and a high tech team at Analog Devices. As you
read these examples, reflect on whether the teams are effectively practicing
the team processes we have discussed.
Chapter 7: Quality Teamwork 253
Stage 4*
Stage 1* Stage 2* Stage 3*
Self-Direction/
Team Formation Team Building Empowerment
High Performance
*Stages may overlap under certain conditions. Team maturity and level of process improvement already in place may impact stage application.
Source: Courtesy of Boeing Airlift and Tanker Programs.
• education,
• government,
• health care,
• manufacturing industry,
• service industry, and
• small businesses with fewer than 500 employees.
Each year, up to three teams are honored in each of the six categories. The
winning team receives a hand-crafted pure silver Quality Cup, which sits atop
a white marble cylinder with a sterling silver disk at its base. Quality Cup win-
ners and finalists are recognized at a ceremony at USA Today Headquarters
near Washington, D.C., and also receive recognition in special pages of USA
Today. One of the past winners was a team from Allied Signal Aerospace.
They resolved a problem of unacceptable faults in a valve on the Airbus-300
aircraft. It was among the top 10 reasons for flight delays and cancellations.
Valve manufacturer Allied Signal had tried nine times since 1974 to correct
the problems when it decided to look at the entire system. The team spent
days in the hangars where American Airlines performs its most comprehen-
sive inspections, allowing the engineers to see what happens when a fault
light comes on. One discovery was that in a typical fix, the existing valve
would be replaced with a spare because it takes only minutes. But by track-
ing each $37,500 valve that had been removed, the team found that many of
them didn’t need to be replaced. Judge Chuck Blevins of Blevins Harding
Group noted “This shows that a group, given the right environment, can
become very creative and effective.” More information can be found at the
Web site, http://www.qualitycup.org.
expected to attend these meetings, which may be at times when the people
are not on shift. Someone on each team is also designated “site manager”:
the person who is to speak for the plant in case of some sort of emergency.
In addition to getting the new plant up and running well with a small
staff over a short time, the company found that in the long run, productivity
has been higher than expected because the self-directed work teams run the
plant very effectively and efficiently.
Some comments from team members show their perspectives on SDWTs:
1. Donald Peterson, former CEO of Ford, said “No matter what you are try-
ing to do, teams are the most effective way to get the job done.” Do you
agree? Why or why not?
2. Petronius, a Roman satirist, noted back in 66 A.D.: “We trained hard—but
it seemed that every time we were beginning to form up into teams, we
would be reorganized. I was to learn later in life we tend to meet any new
situation by reorganizing, and a wonderful method it can be for creating the
illusion of progress while producing confusion, inefficiency, and demoral-
ization.” What implications does this quote have for modern managers?
3. How might a jazz quartet be viewed as a metaphor for a team in a busi-
ness situation?
4. What are the similarities and differences among the types of teams used
in TQ?
5. Discuss possible ideas for how managers might deal with individuals
who refuse to join teams for the following reasons: outside commitments,
fear or embarrassment, an overwhelming workload, mistrust of manage-
ment, fear of failure or losing one’s job, and an “I don’t care” attitude.
6. Think of a team that you are on, or have been on recently. How does it
stack up against the criteria for quality teamwork? What specific steps
Chapter 7: Quality Teamwork 259
CASES
part is removed from the mold. The plastic contains fiberglass, which becomes
a fine dust that adheres to the part. To eliminate the dust, the parts are put
through a washing operation. This process uses a conveyor system to carry
the parts through a water spray cleaning system. The problem with this
process is that the finish comes out looking spotty and with some fiberglass
particles still adhering to the parts themselves.
Our customers on the E-Frame breaker line had written Corrective Actions
against this procedure because of the poor appearance and the dust still
being present on the parts. They were experiencing problems with the fiber-
glass and were having to wear gloves to protect their hands.
Through data collection we realized that this operation takes 6,831 man-
hours a year at a labor cost of over $96,000. Yet after the washing process the
parts still were not clean and had a negative appearance that was not accept-
able. We took the top five part numbers and charted the clean versus the dirty
parts. We found that 97 percent of the parts did not meet customer standards
and that our customers were having to add a rework operation to keep the
E-Frame line going!
We set a goal to eliminate the washing operation by May 1997. In order
to have this happen we needed to find a better process to take its place. We
did a fishbone analysis to outline the causes of the problem, and followed up
with a root cause analysis to eliminate any causes that did not pertain. We
brainstormed for possible solutions, producing five possible alternatives to
the washing operation. They were:
• constant air flow,
• shop vacuum,
• deflashing parts,
• ionizer (mouse trap), and
• air hose at press.
We tested and evaluated each solution, working with both the operators in
the plastics department and our customers on the breaker line. As a result of
our evaluation, we found that an air hose at the press was the best solution. We
instructed the operators that after the parts were filed, they should be blown
free of all fiber particles. Because they were not being washed with water, this
would eliminate the spotty appearance of the parts. We set up direct commu-
nication with our customers to make sure that this process was eliminating the
problem permanently. Their feedback showed that they were satisfied with the
new process and that there was not a problem with either the fiberglass or the
appearance of the parts. We then took the findings and recommended that the
washing operation be eliminated and replaced by an air hose at the press. We
communicated to quality assurance that the job instructions should be updated
to include our new process so that supervisors and operators would be trained
on the new process at the end of their safety meetings. We then went to the
scheduler and had the washing process eliminated from the system. After this
was accomplished and there was still favorable feedback from the customers,
we pulled the plug on the washing operation altogether.
Chapter 7: Quality Teamwork 261
Our goal as a team was to eliminate the washing operation and we accom-
plished this goal. There were other benefits attached to the project:
• $98,000 cost reduction in labor and maintenance,
• additional 136 square feet of valuable floor space freed up,
• improved delivery to customer,
• improved teamwork between customer and supplier,
• open communication with customer,
• elimination of a rework operation,
• improved quality to the consumer, and
• improved safety and health of operators.
Discussion Question
1. Based on the Makin’ Waves team’s project summary, discuss why this
team was effective, using the concepts developed in this chapter.
out a clogged check valve. Later, the pH problem reappears; it is now so low
that it is out of specification. To make matters worse some burned cheese has
been detected. The evaporator must be shut down for cleaning, and the team
takes the maintenance team’s advice to perform a more extensive cleaning
that has to be done soon anyway.
The team wants to get the process back on line as soon as possible because
the evaporator shutdown costs the company money, and the out-of-spec
cheese is reflected in the team’s incentive payout. After a filter is replaced
and the cleaning completed, the process is ready to roll.
While the team works, they are literally surrounded with information. A
three-foot-long electronic sign updates them on various aspects of perform-
ance including conformance, production, and customer complaints. A bul-
letin board is crammed with information on raw material consumption, the
incentive system, and so on. Wrapped around the control room is a banner
that exhorts them to “Do it right the first time.”
Green team members communicate constantly. Beyond their daily job com-
munication, they have a monthly team meeting to discuss goals, problems,
schedules, and whatever else needs to be covered. There are also corrective
action team meetings, communicators’ meetings, and incentive meetings.
Members understand all of the meetings as the price of empowerment and
teamwork, but feel that the sacrifice is better than letting management make
all the decisions.
The team recently had its first experience with firing a member, which
was particularly hard because he was a friend and a teammate. They had
hired him because of his technical ability, despite past problems with atten-
dance. They did everything they could to keep him, but the attendance prob-
lems continued, and the team felt he was letting them down.
Ted, the newest member of the Green team, summarizes the team’s feel-
ing about self-management:
When I got here, I knew that this was just up my alley. I don’t need
a boss looking over my shoulder, because I know how to do the work.
It never made sense to me to see grown-ups standing around watch-
ing other grown-ups do their jobs. I could see it if you were 14 years
old. But I’m an adult, and Schreiber respects that.
Discussion Questions
1. Outline what a day at work would be like in a cheese plant that utilized
a more conventional organization—no teams, foremen, many job classifi-
cations. How would this differ from the day the Green team at Schreiber’s
Bush plant experienced? What are the advantages and disadvantages of
the two arrangements?
2. In the text it was argued that team members should be assigned to the
work that they do best. Yet in the Green team case, team members rotated
through all jobs regardless of their skills. Do you think this is a good
idea? Why or why not?
Chapter 7: Quality Teamwork 263
3. What would a manager’s job be like in this kind of plant? Would you
want to work as a manager there?
ENDNOTES
1. Jon R. Katzenback and Douglas K. Smith, “The Discipline of Teams,” Harvard Business Review,
March/April 1993, pp. 111–120.
2. Adapted from Leigh Ann Klaus, “Motorola Brings Fairy Tales to Life,” Quality Progress, June
1997, pp. 25–28.
3. J. M. Juran, Juran on Leadership for Quality: An Executive Handbook, New York: Free Press, 1989.
P. B. Crosby, Quality Is Free: The Art of Making Quality Certain, New York: McGraw-Hill, 1979.
4. James R. Healey, “U.S. Steel Learns from Experience,” USA Today, April 10, 1992.
5. Martha T. Moore, “Hourly Workers Apply Training in Problem Solving,” USA Today, April 10,
1992.
6. The information on quality circles in Japan is from B. G. Dale and J. Tidd, “Japanese Total
Quality Control: A Study of Best Practice,” Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers,
Vol. 205, No.4, pp. 221–232.
7. Helene F. Uhlfelder, “It’s All About Improving Performance,” Quality Progress, February 2000,
pp. 47–52.
8. Juran, Juran on Leadership for Quality.
9. Eileen M. van Aken and Brian M. Kleiner, “Determinants of Effectiveness for Cross-Functional
Organizational Design Teams,” Quality Management Journal, Vol. 4, No. 2, 1997, pp. 51–79.
10. Based on Jerry G. Bowles, “Leading the World-Class Company,” Fortune, September 21, 1992.
11. Richard S. Wellins , William C. Byham, and Jeanne M. Wilson. Empowered Teams: Creating Self-
Directed Work Groups That Improve Quality, Productivity, and Participation, p. 21. San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass, 1991.
264 Part III: Total Quality and Organizational Behavior
12. Wanda Savage-Moore, “Self-Directed Work Team Series: Part II of a Two-Series Interview
with Ritz Carlton,” The Quality Observer, March/April 1998.
13. Ron Williams, “Self-Directed Work Teams: A Competitive Advantage,” Quality Digest,
November 1995, pp. 50–52.
14. Peter Lazes and Marty Falkenberg, “Work Groups in America Today,” The Journal for Qual-
ity and Participation, Vol. 14, No. 3, June 1991, pp. 58–69.
15. Adapted from “Benefits for the Back Office, Too,” Business Week, July 10, 1989, p. 59.
16. Jane E. Henry, and Meg Hartzler, “Virtual Teams: Today’s Reality, Today’s Challenge,” Qual-
ity Progress, May 1997, pp. 108–109.
17. P. Alexander, M. Biro, E . G. Garry, D. Seamon, T. Slaughter, and D. Valerio, “New Organi-
zational Structures and New Quality Systems,” in J. P. Kern, J. J. Riley, and L. N. Jones (eds.),
Human Resources Management, Milwaukee: ASQC Quality Press, 1987, pp. 203–268.
18. Peter R. Scholtes, et al., The Team Handbook: How to Use Teams to Improve Quality, Madison,
Wis.: Joiner Associates, Inc., 1988, pp. 6-10–6-22.
19. Michael Jaycox, “How to Get Nonbelievers to Participate in Teams,” Quality Progress, March
1996, pp. 45–49.
20. Van Aken and Kleiner, op. cit.
21. Wellins et al., Empowered Teams, p. 147.
22. Partially based on Wellins et al., Empowered Teams, and H. J. Harrington, The Improvement
Process: How America’s Leading Companies Improve Quality, New York: McGraw-Hill, 1987.
23. Willard C. Rappleye, Jr., “Diversity in the Workforce,” Across the Board, Vol. XXXVII, No. 10,
Nov/Dec 2000 (special advertising section).
24. This point is based on a model developed by I. Steiner in his book Group Process and Produc-
tivity, New York: Academic Press, 1972.
25. The problems of differential status in groups are discussed by Alvin Zander in Making
Groups Effective, San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1982.
26. Deborah G. Ancona and David F. Caldwell, “Bridging the Boundary: External Activity and
Performance,” Administrative Science Quarterly, Vol. 37, No. 4, December 1992, p. 634.
27. The classic statement of this problem is by Irving Janis in his book Groupthink. 2nd Ed.
Boston: Houghton-Mifflin, 1982.
28. Van Aken and Kleiner, op. cit.
29. Wellins et al., Empowered Teams. See also S. A. Snell and J. W. Dean, Jr., “Integrated Manu-
facturing and Human Resource Management: A Human Capital Perspective,” Academy of Man-
agement Journal, August 1992, pp. 467–504.
30. Douglas McGregor, “An Uneasy Look at Performance Appraisal,” Harvard Business Review,
September/October 1972; Herbert H. Meyer, Emanuel Kay, and John R. P. French, Jr., “Split
Roles in Performance Appraisal,” Harvard Business Review, January/February 1965; Harry
Levinson, “Appraisal of What Performance?” Harvard Business Review, January/February 1965;
A. M. Mohrman, Deming versus Performance Appraisal: Is There a Resolution? Los Angeles: Center
for Effective Organizations, University of Southern California, 1989.
31. John F. Milliman and Fred R. McFadden, “Toward Changing Performance Appraisal to
Address TQM Concerns: The 360-Degree Feedback Process,” Quality Management Journal, Vol.
4, No. 3, 1997, pp. 44–64.
32. Stanley M. Moss, “Appraise Your Performance Appraisal Process,” Quality Progress, Novem-
ber 1989, p. 60.
33. Based on Kevin Anderson, “X-Ray Processing Time Cut 81%,” USA Today, April 10, 1992.
34. RIT/USA Today Quality Cup Web site, www.qualitycup.org, and Doug Levy, “Manufacturing
Winners Teamed to Trouble-Shoot Valve Problem,” USA Today, May 1, 1998, p. 4B.
35. Adapted from Ira Moskowitz and Ken Bethea, “Self-Directed Work Teams at Analog
Devices,” Center for Quality of Management Journal, Vol. 9, No. 1, Summer 2000, pp. 17–24.
36. William M. Fox, “Sociotechnical System Principles and Guidelines: Past and Present,” The
Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, Vol. 3, No. 1, March 1995.
37. G . C. Homans, The Human Group, New York: Harcourt, Brace, and World, 1959, p. 2.
38. E. Trist and K. W. Bamforth, “Some Social and Psychological Consequences of the Long Wall
Method of Coal-Getting,” Human Relations, Vol. 4, No. 1, 1952, pp. 3–38.
Chapter 7: Quality Teamwork 265