John Nolan
October 28, 2019
If your organization has a functional QMS (Quality Management System), whether certified against the ISO 9001:2015 standard or not, you probably have several KPIs (key performance indicators) that help you understand how you are performing with respect to quality. While these may be specific to your organization or the sector you operate in, do your KPIs truly reflect the financial cost to the organization – when poor quality may cost your company money – even beyond the parameters of the KPIs already measured?
The cost of quality can be said to be the definition of time and expenses accrued by an business outside of pre-defined process actions, which need to be undertaken to preserve, improve, or recover the quality of a product or service. The article How to write good quality objectives gave us the opportunity to review quality objectives in more detail. If you consider your own company, many objectives within your QMS will be very easy to define: a manufacturing company might measure “first pass yield” as a critical measure, while a call center might measure response time or customer satisfaction as one of its staple measures. While these may be valid for your business, they also might not tell the whole story.
Product A might fail twice in 100, giving a first pass yield of 98%, and the rework required to the failing part might take 30 seconds to rework and present for retest. Product B might fail once in 100, giving a first pass yield of 99%, but the reprogramming of an onboard component might take six minutes before presenting for retest. Product C might pass manufacturing tests giving a first pass yield of 100%, but field failures and root cause analysis might cost lots of engineering and quality time to fix, and a bill of $10k. According to our staple quality measures, Product B is performing best, product A second best, and Product C worst – but we can see with further investigation that the times and costs we have seen suggest that things might not be so straightforward.
To measure the true cost of quality within your business, you need to truly understand your product’s lifecycle, from design and development to end-of-life disposal. You will then have to take the time to understand what the budget to produce a product is, and what times and costs are assigned by your business to support these process steps.
When you understand this, you can begin to search for the costs associated with your product that are beyond this defined scope. Some examples might be:
Picture two scenarios: a mobile phone with an expected lifecycle of 4 years is found to have an average lifecycle of 3.5 years, meaning an increase in cost to arrange transport back and recycle. Similarly, a television set with an expected lifecycle of 4 years is found, on average, to last 3.7 years. Despite the television performing closer to forecast in terms of lifecycle, the sheer weight of product and cost of recycling would erode the profit on the television product range far more than the telephone. This erosion of profit due to a shorter-than-expected lifecycle can be classified as a true “cost of quality.”
Measuring the “cost of quality” for any business requires some very specific knowledge with respect to the processes, people, and products associated with your business. The ISO 10014 quality management standard can provide guidance here, with respect to both improving quality and controlling associated costs.
Establish “cost of quality” as a measurable KPI, find the root cause, and drive improvement accordingly, and you will be well on your way to establishing a competitive advantage in your sector. This is also directly linked to how your business views and takes action with respect to risk, as we saw in the previous article How to address risks and opportunities in ISO 9001. Lastly, understanding how to use root cause analysis to support corrective action in your QMS can be the method by which you ensure that reoccurrence is prevented in the future.
Finally, measuring the cost of quality can be a very effective way of driving improvement for your business and your customers. Do it effectively and resolve the root causes, and this will surely prove to be a competitive edge for your business.
To help determine the costs of initial ISO 9001 implementation, download this free white paper: How to budget an ISO 9001 implementation project.