Example of QFD
Example of QFD
Introduction
What is QFD?
QFD is a system for designing a product or service based on customer demands that involves all
members of the producer or supplier organisation. In Japanese, deployment refers to an extension
or broadening of activities and hence Quality Function Deployment means the responsibilities for
producing a quality item must be assigned to all parts of a corporation. It is sometimes referred to as
the most advanced form of Total Quality Control, Japanese style. The system can be understood by
defining each of the terms in Quality Function Deployment within the context of QFD.
Quality - Meeting Customer Requirements
Function - What Must Be Done - Focusing the attention
Deployment - Who Will Do It, When
Scope of QFD
QFD theory started in 1972 at Mitsubishis Kobe Shipyard when they began using a matrix that put
customer demands on the vertical axis and the methods by which they would be met on the
horizontal axis. This was recognised almost immediately as a major breakthrough. Since that time the
Japanese have developed the system to encompass other areas of a secondary nature such as
improved communications between the design and manufacturing departments, considering the
function of the product, potential failure modes, possible new technologies and cost reduction.
Who Uses QFD?
Current Japanese users of QFD concepts include Nissan, Toyota, Komatsu, Nippondenso and
Honda. In the United States of America users include Ford, GM, Chrysler, DEC, TI, 3M, HP,
AT&T Bell Labs, NovAtel, Xerox, Exxon and Dow.
The Purpose of QFD
The purpose of QFD is three fold. Firstly, it allows us to get higher quality products to market faster
and at a lower cost. Secondly, we will achieve customer driven product design and, finally, it will
provide a tracking system for future design or process improvements.
The results we can expect by carrying out the QFD studies are many:
Better understanding of customer needs
Improved organisation on development projects
Improved introduction to production
Fewer design changes late in development
Fewer manufacturing start-up problems
Reputation for being serious about quality
Increased business
Documented product definition based on customer requirements
The System
QFD achieves these results by breaking down customer requirements into segments and identifing
means for achieving each segment. QFD also involves all parts of a company and facilitates
simultaneous product and process design. Finally, it integrates the use of other quality tools such as
Taguchi Methods. The QFD process is as follows:
Customer Requirements
Design Requirements
Component Characteristics
Operations Requirements
Working Procedures
Manufacturers
Breakfast Cereal
Aircraft Seat
Product Customer
Supermarket - Parent who buys Child who eats
Aircraft Manufacturer - Aircraft lease company - Airline - Passenger
If a company has a very complex customer chain it is possible to use a system for its identification
similar to that used for supplier chain analysis. The system for customer chain analysis involves
simply identifying who is the companys immediate customer and who is the end user. Thus, by
asking questions of each it is possible to fill in the customer chain between them.
Internal Customers
There is one type of customer which when considering QFD we must be very careful of, namely, the
internal customer. The reason for this comes from why customer requirements are so important. By
satisfying them we stay in business because people buy our products/services. As such it must always
be the external customers we satisfy as it is they who pay for our products/services. Therefore, if we
include internal customers requirements which then lead to a compromise on an external customer
requirement, we have not satisfied the external customer. The correct answer would be to satisfy the
external customer and then solve the associated internal problems. In other words, we become
customer driven.
Example
The designers at a small boatyard are designing fishing boats. The owner, the external customer, has
asked for an aluminium wheelhouse. Production, the internal customer, is saying they want anything
but aluminium in the vessel because they cannot work aluminium. The designers compromise and
specify a wooden wheelhouse. The result is that the external customer is not satisfied. What the
designers should have done was to specify the aluminium wheelhouse then considered the associated
internal problem. This will automatically happen in QFD if the external customers only are
considered as the internal problems will be highlighted and then dealt with at a later stage.
Postal Questionnaires are impersonal. The respondent is left to fill in a questionnaire alone. It is the
most structured of the questionnaire techniques, and its main advantage is its comparative low cost an interviewer is not required to put the questions directly to a respondent - hence, it is possible to
send the questionnaire to a large number of potential respondents. However, the respondent is under
no obligation or pressure to answer, so may simply throw away the questionnaire or leave it a long
time before replying. As a result, response rates are generally low and replies may take a long time to
come in. As a result, respondents may not represent a true cross section of the population.
Telephone Interviews
Respondents meet an interviewer face to face. As a result, the procedure can be more informal than
the other two techniques, with time to elaborate on the meaning of questions and the reasons that
the answers were given. This is, however, a very costly method in time and money. For nonquestionnaire techniques there are three basic categories:
Discussion techniques
Diary panels
Audit techniques
For QFD, because we are considering products at the design stage we are interested in only one of
these above categories. The category of interest is the discussion technique. Of this type there are
various different methods.
Clinics
The clinic method is very useful for the purposes of QFD as it provides a variety of feedback
information. A clinic takes the form of grouping customers at a venue where they may see the
product in question, or a mock up, and its competition. The group will encompass all the types of
people referred to previously, those who bought your products and those who did not. The feedback
that these people give can thus be noted throughout the period of the clinic. Much use of clinics has
been made by the car manufacturers. They use clinics to expand on the information gathered from
postal surveys. Selected respondents are asked to bring their cars to a venue where the manufacturer
will also have examples of the competition. The customers can then discuss their likes and dislikes
and compare the competition.
Focus Groups
Focus Groups are small groups of about eight to twelve people. These groups should be a cross
section of the population selected at random who agree to come to a venue for a one or two hour
discussion. These discussions should be led by someone experienced at such things who is capable of
moving the discussion in the right direction so that all issues are covered.
There is one other method for acquiring customer information which is not covered in the above
field techniques. This final technique is one that the Japanese have shown that they are exceptionally
good at: it is called Listening.
Listening
Listening takes the form of engineers and managers simply listening at trade shows and outside retail
outlets. What they must listen for is simply the comments of customers, potential customers and past
customers about the particular product in which they are interested.
The example below shows the customer requirements as gathered from the customer chain for the
aircraft seat example:
Passenger
Easy/cheap to refit.
Easy to clean.
Easy to move around.
Fit more passengers in.
Cheap.
Light weight.
Durable.
Easy to fit in plane.
Safe in crash.
Meets regulatory requirements.
requirements. The buying public, however, often mentions secondary or tertiary requirements when
asked what it wants.
The Process of Organisation
Step 1:
All the customer requirements should be written on to pieces of card, or post it notes. Each piece
of card should contain only one of the requirements.
Step 2:
The cards should now be pinned to a board or spread out on a large table where all members of the
team can see them easily.
Step 3:
The team should now start to group cards together that have some relationship. It will be the
discussions during this step which lead to reaching a common understanding of customer wants. It is
quite possible that certain requirements appear to belong to more than one group. If this is the case,
at this stage, repeat cards should be written and put with all possible groups.
Step 4:
Once the cards have been grouped the team should write title cards which best describe the category
for the cards. The title cards should be as specific as possible. Occasionally there will be cards within
the group which could easily act as title cards for the group. If this is the case it should become a title
card. Once this has been done the cards have effectively been grouped into secondary (title) and
tertiary (group) requirements. At this stage the team should discuss any doubling up of cards from
the step and decide to which single group they should belong. At the end of the organizing process
there should be no repeated requirements. It is possible that confusion will arise as to whether a
requirement should be a secondary requirement or tertiary requirement. The team can alleviate this
problem by applying a simple test.
Test: The Why Question
Of the requirement the team is unclear about being secondary or tertiary; ask the question, Why
does the customer want this? An experienced team should be able to answer this question. If the
answer is simply the original requirement restated in a different format, then the requirement is
tertiary. If on the other hand, the answer is more detail about the requirement then the requirement
is secondary.
Step 5:
Once the secondary requirements have been found, the team should discuss each one in turn to
surface any possible tertiary requirements which could also be included.
Step 6:
Now steps 3, 4, and 5 should be repeated for the secondary requirements in order to get primary
requirements and possible missing secondary requirements. If new secondary requirements surface,
these will have to be discussed to obtain the underlying tertiary requirements. It may even be
necessary to go back to the customers to find their tertiary requirements for the identified area.
Step 7:
The primary, secondary and tertiary requirements can now be drawn in a tree diagram. This is shown
in the example below for an aircraft seat. There is one word of warning for the QFD team when they
are discussing additional requirements. The team should take care not to introduce engineering
terminology. The team should continually try to think like the customer at this stage.
On the diagram below, the following legend has been used with respect to the previously mentioned
customer chain:
P Passenger Requirement
A Airline Requirement
AM Aircraft Manufacturer Requirement
* QFD Team Developed Title
Once all the requirements have been gathered and organised, they can be entered on the QFD chart
on the left hand side as shown on the next page.
Establishing
Customer
Importance
Customer Competitive Comparisons
Ratings
&
Although these are two distinct areas with different objectives, they can be carried out together on
the same customer survey. Hence, they have been linked together in this section. After the customer
requirements have been gathered it is necessary to quantify two separate issues:
How important each of the characteristics is to the customer. It will definitely be the case that the
customer will attach more importance to certain requirements than others. It is important to QFD
that we are able to reflect these different importance ratings.
How the customer rates how well our company performs on each of his/her requirements against
the best of our competition.
It is necessary to have both of the above pieces of information so that the team can use them in the
analysis of the QFD chart to focus in on the sources available to the company for competitive
advantage.
Any of the survey techniques mentioned in the customer requirement section can be used to gather
customer importance ratings and competitive comparisons. For many products, e.g. cars, it is
possible to obtain lists of owners from government registers for both a companys products and its
competitors. For those that lists cannot be found the process becomes much harder.
An example of the type of form used in the clinic is shown as below. The final possibility is in fact
listening. A wealth of competitive comparison information can be acquired by engineers and
managers listening and taking note of what customers say at exhibitions, trade shows and retail
outlets. Comments like I like the boot but it isnt as big as the Toyota we looked at yesterday if
noted, can prove invaluable.
Entering on the QFD chart
The above is shown entered on the QFD chart for the aircraft seat example on the two pages
following the clinic example
The identification of the customer complaints and their inclusion in the QFD chart allows the QFD
team to identify the nature of the customer complaint and the time frame over which it arises. For
example, take a car door. The customer may want a door which is easy to open and close. We as
manufacturers have designed the door such that this is the case. When we look at the complaint
history however, we find that there have been a great many complaints in this area. On investigation
the team finds that the hinge design becomes very stiff after certain conditions combined with a
certain amount of wear.
Establishing Priorities
This stage of the QFD study is in fact optional, but is the area which allows the company to make
major improvements quickly. In some cases where the information mentioned in the previous
sections has been entered on the chart it will point to an area of major customer dissatisfaction. That
is to say a customer requirement which is seen as being highly important by the customer we as a
company are the worst of our competitors. This may also be backed up by a very large customer
complaint history. If this is the case, the QFD team may decide to begin a study of the particular
issue concerned before continuing with the QFD study.
Customer priorities.
STEP 1 Brainstorming
Secondary Requirement
Comfortable Upright
Tertiary Requirements
Engineering Characteristics
These ideas must now be grouped under three headings, and as a check that all the Engineering
Characteristics are measurable, the units of measurement must be defined.
Human Requirements
Process Requirements
Engineering
Units of
Characteristics
Measurement
Train assembly staff to attach
Wipe excess adhesive off seat Seat gap width
mm
covers on the back and side
structure during assembly.
Seat gap depth
mm
offset only.
Grind off any lumps of set
Arm rest width
mm
adhesive after assembly.
Seat back thickness
mm
Seat back profile
mm (x, y, z)
Seat pan profile
mm (x, y, z)
Seat pan height
mm
Foam thickness
mm
Foam hardness
Vickers
Once the Engineering Characteristics are established, they must be entered along the top of the QFD
chart as shown below.
Engineering characteristics
In this case of the seat back thickness the technical comparison involved only a simple measurement.
The average thickness of the three seat backs was rounded up and taken as the normal value. The 1-5
value was then calculated by the following equation:
i.e. the ratio of (the normal value) divided by (the measured value), multiplied by (the mid value in
the 1-5 scale). In the above, the driving force is to minimise the thickness. In a situation where the
driving force is to maximise the value of the Engineering Characteristic, the ratio must be inverted.
In the case of the seat back profile, the technical position could not be evaluated by a simple
measurement. It is valid to include profile as an Engineering Characteristic since the profile can be
measured in terms of its coordinate geometry (x y z) and its curvature at any particular point. The
problem is that there are no established rules for judging the comfort of a seat back from the
coordinate measurements.
In this instance the three different profiles were subjectively evaluated by customers and their relative
comforts judged. Based on these judgments the values shown were selected by the team members.
This is a typical example where further work is required - in this case to determine the comfort
parameters of a seat back profile. This is an ideal situation in which to conduct a set of Taguchi
experiments.
Other Sources of Data
As stated earlier, the method of classification will vary from industry to industry. This is also true of
other sources of relevant information. One commonly used source is that of the service history of
the product. Data concerning the number of service repairs performed on any particular Engineering
Characteristic (or groups of characteristics) should be collected, as should the cost of the repairs. In
the case of computer software the data may take the form of the number of fixes released and the
areas they covered. Think laterally about such sources of data. The one criterion is that it should
relate to the performance of one or more Engineering Characteristics. If such data is collected, it
should be entered on to the chart below the Technical Competitive Comparison and above the
Technical and Regulatory Requirements, as shown
Establishing Links
This stage involves filling in the Relationships Matrix in the main body of the chart and the triangular
Conflicts Matrix at the top of the chart. The idea is to highlight relationships between Customer
Requirements and Engineering Characteristics, and conflict/supporting relationships amongst the
Engineering Characteristics. In addition to highlighting the relationships their relative strengths must
also be judged and a range of symbols is used to represent this.
Relationships Matrix
This matrix highlights the relationships between the Customer Requirements and the Engineering
Characteristics. It must also be remembered to include the Technical and Regulatory Requirements in
the correlation. The team members should seek consensus on these evaluations, basing them on
expert engineering experience, customer responses and data from statistical studies and controlled
experiments.
There will be varying degrees of the strength of the relationships and so a set of symbols is used to
identify the significance.
The symbols used are:
Looking at the first Customer Requirement, Arm rest folds right away, you see that this is strongly
related to width of arm rest, arm rest recess depth and arm rest recess width. In addition, the team
felt that there was a weak relationship to the height of back and a medium relationship with the back
thickness. Every intersection between a Customer Requirement and an Engineering Characteristic
should be carefully considered. However, it should be noted that in the example shown less than
20% of the available space has actually been used. This is not unusual. In any event, intersection
symbols should certainly occupy less than 50% of the available space.
Conflicts Matrix
This is the triangular matrix at the top of the chart. It is used to highlight relationships between the
Engineering Characteristics. As before, symbols are used to indicate the strength of the relationship
but in addition, they also indicate whether it is a positive supporting relationship or a negative
conflicting relationship. The symbols used are:
value. In the case of the seat back thickness, only the design department was affected by the
proposed reduction to 25 mm. However, it was felt that a major structural redesign would be
required to achieve the desired thickness and so it was rated with a value of 5.
The ratings are calculated by summing down each column the product of the customer importance
rating and the value assigned to the correlation symbol. As an example consider the first column in
the aircraft seat example, the Width of the armrest. The absolute importance rating of 114 is
calculated from:
(5 x 9) + (5 x 9) + (9 x 1) + (5 x 3) = 114
The relative value is simply the absolute value expressed as a percentage of the total.
Light Weight. Looking at the competitive comparison we see that we are rated the best but
Company C is in a fairly close second place. Of the Engineering Characteristics that affect the
weight, two are strongly related and three have a medium correlation. The degree of technical
difficulty is 4 for the two strong correlations and 2, 4, 4 for the others. There are no areas which can
be easily tackled to reduce weight, but this is seen as the most important aspect of the seat. We have
the lightest seat in the market and this position must be maintained. Looking at Doesnt give you
bum ache as the next customer requirement, we see that this has an importance of 8 and all the seats
are competitively ranked equal with a rating of 3. There is clearly an opportunity here to gain a
competitive advantage if the technical problems can be overcome. The strong relationships are with
pan profile, foam hardness and foam thickness. The foam can easily be changed (technical difficulty
= 2) but the pan profile has a difficulty of 4 associated with it. If the pan profile can be improved we
can take the lead. Further through the analysis we see that we are rated as the worst performer for
short person lumbar comfort. This has an importance rating of 7. The factor which strongly affects
this is the back profile, along with foam hardness and foam thickness of secondary importance. This
is clearly an area in which we must improve. The technical difficulty of changing the foam is only 2.
This maybe the route forward to tackle the problem in the short term. Longer term the back profile
must be modified to make it more comfortable. As stated earlier, the target values are the levels of
performance required for each engineering characteristic to fulfill customer expectations. They must
not be based on any level of capability. If during the analysis stage it becomes apparent that the
above has not been honoured, then the target value must be modified.
AREAS IN WHICH WE HOLD THE LEAD AND MUST MAINTAIN OUR POSITION
Next Steps
The first level QFD study has now been completed. The early stages were concerned with finding
out what your customers actually want in the product. We then moved on to developing engineering
characteristics that could be used to assure customer satisfaction. The next stages involved
correlating the two, highlighting conflicting characteristics and setting target values. During the
setting of target values it became clear that we did not know enough about some aspects of the
design i.e.. the seat back and pan profiles. This is one of the strengths of QFD. It highlights areas of
weakness which are important to customers. Once a problem is identified it can be tackled. This
point comes up again during the final stages. The analysis of the chart shows areas of importance
that must be addressed. QFD in itself does not solve engineering problems for you. It is a forum for
gathering and organising all the data relevant to a design. It focuses attention on what the customer
wants and forces you to set target values for engineering characteristics to assure customer
satisfaction. In this context QFD shows you what to do, not how to do it. A large amount of effort
must go into preparing a first level study. An equal commitment should be made to solving any
engineering problems highlighted. The best problem solving techniques should be employed; the use
of designed experiments is strongly recommended. There are two other benefits of QFD that may
not be so obvious. Firstly, it acts as a facilitator for a multi-discipline team approach to product
design. Secondly, it is an excellent documentation medium for recording options considered and
decisions made during product design.