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An Instrument for Measuring the Critical Factors of Quality Management

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors provide a synthesis of the quality literature by identifying eight critical factors (areas) of quality management in a business unit and develop operational measures of these factors using data collected from 162 general managers and quality managers of 89 divisions of 20 companies.
Abstract
Much has been written about how quality should be managed in an organization. The quality literature contains many case studies of successful companies and descriptions of quality concepts and quality improvement programs. To date, however, there has been no systematic attempt to organize and synthesize the various prescriptions offered, nor have measures of organizational quality management been proposed for areas such as top management leadership, training, employee involvement, and supplier management. While many organizations collect quality data such as defect rates, error rates, rework cost, and scrap cost, these are not measures of organization-wide quality management. This paper provides a synthesis of the quality literature by identifying eight critical factors (areas) of quality management in a business unit. Operational measures of these factors are developed using data collected from 162 general managers and quality managers of 89 divisions of 20 companies. The measures can be used individually or in concert to produce a profile of organization-wide quality practices. The measures are found to be both valid and reliable. Such measures could be used by decision makers in an organization to assess the status of quality management in order to direct improvements in the quality area. Researchers can use such measures to better understand quality management practice and to build theories and models that relate the critical factors of quality management to the organization's quality environment and quality performance.

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Citations
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Total quality management as competitive advantage: A review and empirical study

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Arcs of integration: an international study of supply chain strategies

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated supplier and customer integration strategies in a global sample of 322 manufacturers and found that the widest degree of arc of integration with both suppliers and customers had the strongest association with performance improvement.
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A framework for quality management research and an associated measurement instrument

TL;DR: An emergent theory of quality management is proposed and links it to the literature, and a set of reliable and valid scales was developed that may be used by other researchers for hypothesis testing and by practitioners for assessing quality management practices in their plants and for internal and external benchmarking.
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Development and Validation of TQM Implementation Constructs

TL;DR: Through a detailed analysis of the literature, this research identifies 12 constructs of integrated QM strategies and using a survey of 371 manufacturing firms, the constructs are empirically tested and validated.
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The relationship between total quality management practices and operational performance

TL;DR: This article examined the relationship between total quality management practices and operational performance of a large number of manufacturing companies in order to determine the relationships between these practices, individually and collectively, and firm performance, and found that the categories of leadership, management of people and customer focus were the strongest significant predictors of operational performance.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Managerial Response to Changing Environments: Perspectives on Problem Sensing from Social Cognition.

TL;DR: The authors characterizes managerial problem sensing, a necessary precondition for managerial activity directed toward organizational adaptation, as composed of noticing, interpreting, and incorporating stimuli, and reviews the constituent social cognition processes that make certain kinds of problem-sensing behavior, including errors, relatively likely to occur.
Journal ArticleDOI

Time-limit tests: Estimating their reliability and degree of speeding

TL;DR: It is proposed that the degree to which tests are speeded be investigated explicitly, and an indexτ is advanced to define this concept, and it is demonstrated that, for moderately speeded tests, the coefficient of equivalence can be determined approximately from single-trial data.
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