Quality—A Big Canvas.- Quality Systems And System Standards.- Quality Of Measurements.- Managing Quality To-Day.- Improving Process Quality.- Total Quality Management.- Quality In Services—Initiatives For Improvement.- Measuring Customer Satisfaction.- Quality Circles And People-Related Issues.- Quality Of Life.- Quality In Education.- Quality In Research And Development.- Quality-It Interface.- Analysis Of Quality Costs.- Quality Management In Indian Industry.- Quality And Sustainability.
Shyama Prasad Mukherjee retired as the Centenary Professor of Statistics at the University of Calcutta, where he was involved in teaching, research and promotional work in the areas of statistics and operational research. He was the founder secretary of the Indian Association for Productivity, Quality and Reliability and is now its mentor. He received the Eminent Teacher Award from the Calcutta University, P.C. Mahalanobis Birth Centenary Award from the Indian Science Congress Association and Sukhatme Memorial Award for Senior Statisticians from the Government of India.
This book offers a comprehensive overview of quality and quality management. It also explores total quality management, covering its human, technological and analytical imperatives. It also examines quality systems and system standards, highlighting essential features and avoiding a reproduction of the ISO 9000 standard, as well as people-related issues in implementing a quality system. A holistic understanding of quality considerations, which now permeate every aspect of human life, should guide related policies, plans and practices. The book describes the all-pervasive characteristics of quality, putting together diverse definitions of "quality," outlining its different dimensions, and linking it with reliability and innovation. It goes on to assess the quality of measurements in terms of precision, accuracy and uncertainty and discusses managing quality with a focus on business performance. This is followed by a chapter on improving process quality, which is the summum bonum of quality management, and a chapter addressing the crucial problem of measuring customer satisfaction through appropriate models and tools. Further, it covers non-traditional subjects such as quality of life, quality of working life, quality assurance and improvement in education, with special reference to higher education, quality in research and development and characterizes the quality-related policies and practices in Indian industry. The last chapter provides a broad sketch of some recent advances in statistical methods for quality management. Along with the research community, the book’s content is also useful for practitioners and industry watchers.