UNDERSTANDING PRODUCT QUALITY
If a product fulfils the customer’s expectations, the customer will
be pleased and consider that the product is of acceptable or even high
quality. If his or her expectations are not fulfilled, the customer will
consider that the product is of low quality. This means that the
quality of a product may be defined as “its ability to fulfill the
customer’s needs and expectations”.
Quality needs to be defined firstly in terms of parameters or
characteristics, which vary from product to product. For example, for a
mechanical or electronic product these are performance, reliability,
safety and appearance. For pharmaceutical products, parameters such as
physical and chemical characteristics, medicinal effect, toxicity, taste
and shelf life may be important. For a food product, they will include
taste, nutritional properties, texture, shelf life and so on.
To ensure product quality, the entire process of producing the
product must be established and streamlined. It includes fixing product
specifications, preparing product design, procuring suitable raw
materials, preparation for manufacture, manufacture, and post
manufacturing until it gets into the hands of the consumer.
In many instances, however, the correction of quality deficiencies is
also required at the end of the process since in spite of all the
efforts made, the required quality will sometimes not be attained and a
company may be faced with a pile of scrap and rework. Corrective and
preventative actions have to be taken to avoid unnecessary wastage and
rework.
A manufacturer who is determined to ensure product quality could also
maintain strict adherence to specifications and product
characteristics. Examples of these may be:
Dimensions, such as length, diameter, thickness or area;
Physical properties, such as weight, volume or strength;
Electrical properties, such as resistance, voltage or current;
Appearance, such as finish, colour or texture;
Functional qualities, such as output or kilometre per litre;
Effects on service, such as taste, feel or noise level.
Product quality is obviously the business of everyone within a
company, that is, the salesmen, designers, purchasing, stores and
methods staff, plant engineers, tool personnel, production planning and
production staff, operators, inspection and testing staff, packaging,
and even dispatch should have an interest in maintaining quality.
Indeed, if care is not taken, it ends up being nobody’s business.
Therefore, it is important to ensure that everyone is quality-conscious
and that they all work together on matters related to quality.
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