Our shop is in desperate need of a new approach to QC. What is your shops approach to QC, do you have a dedicated QC person and what steps do you take to ensure quality throughout a job start to finish.
Quality Control ultimately ends up being the responsibility of the person doing the work . . . I don't care how much QC paperwork you introduce if the person actually doing the work either doesn't know what quality is or doesn't care then that is truly your issue. My personal feeling about all the ISO standards is that is just is a way to point the finger at the person that made the mistake . . . which might make them do a better job since it does show where the screw up happened . . . in my shop we know who screwed up and dont need a Quality Control program . . . its more like do it right or do it somewhere else.
fuzzy meaningless words like quality, better, efficient, faster, etc.
best, gordon p
Gentlemen,
I give you my cogitation on QC
Regards, Alois
A PDF
QC has more to do with whether the operator gives a $#!t be it estimating, order entry, prepress, press, post-press, shipping/receiving or delivery than it has to do with how many procedures or ISO certifications you have. We have a full-time QC person who's real role is to do fancy write-ups of the problem, who dun it, when it wer dun, and what we should due to keep it from happening again. We constantly have clients QC people from our clients coming through to verify that we are up to their specs (read: generally ridiculous and ludicrous demands). They generally walk around frowning the whole time throw around a bunch of FUD and catchy terms and then tell us we are doing something wrong (there is always SOMETHING wrong). They generally know absolutely nothing about the actual manufacturing process they are judging and just create more paperwork and procedures that do not prevent mistakes but only annoy the workforce. Sometimes I wish the post-office would start hiring again so these people could have their dream jobs.
Now that I got that off my chest...
If you want to resolve and get QC. I suggest you set standards, hold your operators to these standards and give them incentives to meet or exceed these standards (bonuses, free lunches, extra paid half-days off when its slow, etc.). Do this instead of writing people up for every mistake, having endless pointless meetings and creating such a level of paperwork that would make a soviet bureaucrat blush. You will have happy customers and a happy workforce. That said, you must track mistakes and if find the same mistakes repeating pursue write-ups and if necessary fire the offender(s) rather than make excuses. There are plenty of good people who want to do a good job looking for work out there.
Customers are always going to demand acronym soup, appease them and gain what you can from the experience but don't get caught up in the silly game!
Our shop is in desperate need of a new approach to QC. What is your shops approach to QC, do you have a dedicated QC person and what steps do you take to ensure quality throughout a job start to finish.
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