Deck 13: Management of Quality

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Question
Quality of conformance refers to the degree to which goods and services conform to the intent of the designers as documented in the specifications.
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Question
Medical malpractice claims are an example of how poor quality can affect an organization through liability.
Question
Quality of design refers to the intention of the designers to include or exclude certain features in a product or service based on marketing and other information.
Question
The degree to which a product or service satisfies its intended purpose is determined by design, conformance to design, cost, and reputation of the producer.
Question
Because courtesy is subjective, it cannot be considered a factor in service quality.
Question
The dimensions of product and service quality are too abstract to be used as parameters for product or service design.
Question
The degree to which a product or service satisfies its intended purpose is determined by service after delivery, ease of use, design, and conformance to design.
Question
Reducing the variability in our product or service is an important key to quality.
Question
ISO 9000 standards stress continual improvement regardless of how good you currently are.
Question
The dimensions of quality are important for products but are not applicable in service organizations.
Question
Business organizations that achieve good quality benefit in a variety of ways, including a positive reputation for quality, increased customer loyalty, and lower production costs.
Question
An organization achieves quality by consistently meeting its competitors' standards.
Question
High performance and low prices are both considered to be dimensions of quality.
Question
Broadly defined, quality refers to the ability of a product or service to occasionally meet or exceed customer expectations.
Question
Regardless of superior quality, consumers will not pay premium prices.
Question
Poor quality has a positive effect on productivity because it usually takes longer to produce a good part.
Question
Convenience, reliability, and assurance are dimensions of service quality.
Question
User instructions and follow-up services after delivery are important elements of overall product or service quality.
Question
In market research, a group of consumers organized by marketing to express their opinions about a product or service is called a steering committee.
Question
The Baldrige award can only be won by manufacturing organizations.
Question
Crosby's concept of "quality is free" means that it is less expensive to do it right initially than to do it over.
Question
Serviceability, conformance, and reliability are dimensions of product quality.
Question
Cost of inspectors, testing, test equipment, and labs are examples of appraisal costs.
Question
If the majority of service customers are satisfied, it is likely that all service customers will be satisfied.
Question
The primary difference between internal failures and external failures is time and place of discovery of the failure.
Question
Quality at the source means returning all defects to the source-our vendors.
Question
The customer is the focal point and customer satisfaction is the driving force in quality management.
Question
Juran describes quality management as a trilogy that consists of quality planning, control of quality costs, and quality improvement.
Question
Continuous improvement focuses on achieving major breakthroughs in product or service quality.
Question
According to Deming, it is the systems that management puts into place that are primarily responsible for poor quality, not employees.
Question
Quality certification refers to a process of 100 percent inspection to catch all defective products before they leave the company; this allows every item to be certified defect free.
Question
Six Sigma programs have both management and technical components.
Question
Juran describes quality management as a trilogy that consists of quality planning, quality control, and quality improvement.
Question
When considering service quality, convenience often is a major factor.
Question
Customer expectations tend to change over time, affecting their perception of service quality.
Question
Modern quality management emphasizes finding and correcting mistakes before they reach the customer-catching the errors before they are shipped.
Question
So long as quality input resources are used to make a product, we can expect quality output from the process.
Question
Cost of inspectors, testing, test equipment, and labs are examples of prevention costs.
Question
Firms that wish to do business with the European Community can benefit from having a quality management system that meets ISO 9000 standards.
Question
Deming stresses that workers are primarily responsible for poor quality because very often they fail to follow instructions.
Question
Suppliers are not included in quality assurance and quality improvement efforts in TQM; they should worry about their own problems.
Question
ISO standards aid in transferring technology to developing countries.
Question
The expression "quality at the source" refers primarily to the practice of requiring each of our vendors to provide quality parts and materials.
Question
Total quality management attempts to involve everyone in an organization in the effort to achieve quality.
Question
When an organization comes to the realization that there are quality problems in products that are already in service, ethical approaches include:
(I) divulging the information to the public at large.
(II) recalling, if possible, affected products.
(III) handling complaints on an individual rather than a systemic basis.

A) I and III
B) I and II
C) II and III
D) I, II, and III
E) Neither I, II, nor III
Question
The "Control" phase of DMAIC is intended to ensure that:

A) the proper subset of process inputs are monitored.
B) variability reduction is pursued.
C) data analysis is overseen.
D) inputs are closely monitored.
E) improvements are sustaineD.
Question
In addition to correcting substandard work, employees have an ethical obligation to __________ the quality problem as well.

A) prevent
B) offset
C) report
D) standardize
E) redesign
Question
ISO certification differs substantially from the Baldrige Award in that it:

A) focuses primarily on quality teams.
B) emphasizes self-appraisal.
C) is an ongoing process.
D) is customer-driven.
E) is national rather than international.
Question
The quality certification that deals primarily with conformance to customer requirements is ISO __________; ISO __________ is concerned primarily with the organization's effect on the environment.

A) 9000; 14000
B) 24700; 9000
C) 14000; 9000
D) 9000; 24700
E) 14000; 24700
Question
A control chart is a visual representation of the steps in a process.
Question
A quality circle is a management team focused on implementing major changes to improve quality.
Question
Three key philosophies in TQM are continuous improvement, involvement of everyone in the organization, and customer satisfaction.
Question
Your benchmark organization must be chosen from your industry in order for its methods to be applicable to your business.
Question
The purpose of benchmarking is to establish a standard against which the organization's performance can be judged and to identify a model for possible improvement.
Question
Companies that strive for zero defects in the products they deliver to their customers must perform 100 percent inspection of the final product.
Question
ISO certification is similar to the Baldrige Award in its emphasis on:

A) statistical tools.
B) self-appraisal.
C) teamwork.
D) outsourcing.
E) services.
Question
There is a positive link between quality and productivity.
Question
TQM expands the traditional view of quality beyond looking only at the quality of the final product or service to looking at the quality of every aspect of the process.
Question
Six sigma programs involve both __________ and __________ components.

A) probabilistic; deterministic
B) logistical; managerial
C) statistical; probabilistic
D) managerial; technical
E) local; global
Question
The PDSA cycle forms the conceptual basis for continuous improvement.
Question
Quality planning and administration, quality training, and quality control procedures are examples of:

A) internal failure costs.
B) external failure costs.
C) appraisal costs.
D) prevention costs.
E) replacement costs.
Question
The Deming Prize was established by the:

A) American Statistical Association.
B) Union of Japanese Scientists.
C) North American Free Trade Association.
D) American Quality Society.
E) World Trade Organization.
Question
Loss of business, increased liability, decreased productivity, and higher costs are all likely consequences of:

A) labor unions.
B) globalization.
C) poor quality.
D) robotics.
E) micro-factories.
Question
TQM stands for:

A) Taguchi Quality Methods.
B) Tactical Quality Measurements.
C) The Quality Matrix.
D) Total Quality Management.
E) Total Quantity Measurement.
Question
Warranty service, processing of complaints, and costs of litigation are examples of:

A) internal failure costs.
B) external failure costs.
C) appraisal costs.
D) prevention costs.
E) replacement costs.
Question
Deciding how much to invest in the prevention of defects can be analyzed using:

A) EVPI.
B) net present value.
C) weighted factor analysis.
D) return on quality.
E) break-even analysis.
Question
Fixing a problem will often cost money; to minimize these costs it is best to find and fix the problem:

A) just before shipping our product to the customer.
B) immediately after we complete the last operation.
C) during the design phasE.
D) just before we begin the first production operation.
E) Regardless of when you fix the problem, costs are about the same.
Question
Among the guiding principles of six sigma are:
(I) Reduction of variation is an important goal.
(II) Valid measurement is critical.
(III) Outputs determine inputs.
(IV) We should focus on those critical few influences on our quality.

A) I, II, and IV only
B) II and IV only
C) I and III only
D) I, II, III, and IV
E) III only
Question
Which is not a cost of quality?

A) prevention cost
B) external failure costs
C) extended service contract costs
D) internal failure costs
E) appraisal costs
Question
The Baldrige Award is based on evaluations in seven main areas. Which is not one of those?

A) relative profitability
B) strategic planning
C) human resource management
D) information and analysis
E) leadership
Question
A tool that is not used for quality management is a:

A) flowchart.
B) histogram.
C) Pareto analysis.
D) redesign.
E) check sheet.
Question
A tool that uses time-ordered values of a sample statistic to help detect the presence of correctable causes of variation in a process is a(n):

A) affinity diagram.
B) checklist.
C) control chart.
D) flowchart.
E) relationship diagram.
Question
Lost production time, scrap, and rework are examples of:

A) internal failure costs.
B) external failure costs.
C) appraisal costs.
D) prevention costs.
E) replacement costs.
Question
The quality tool that resembles a "fishbone" is:

A) brainstorming.
B) check sheets.
C) Pareto analysis.
D) cause-and-effect diagrams.
E) fail-safe methods.
Question
Which of the following is not an element of TQM?

A) continuous improvement
B) competitive benchmarking
C) employee empowerment
D) team approach
E) quality management as a specialized function within the firm
Question
The Baldrige Award aims to:
(I) publicize successful quality programs.
(II) recognize quality achievements of U.S. companies.
(III) stimulate efforts to improve quality.
(IV) distribute the grant money available for improved quality.

A) I and IV only
B) I and II only
C) II and III only
D) I, II, III, and IV
E) I, II, and III only
Question
Costs of inspectors, testing, test equipment, and labs are examples of:

A) internal failure costs.
B) external failure costs.
C) appraisal costs.
D) prevention costs.
E) replacement costs.
Question
A quality circle is:

A) responsible for quality.
B) total quality control.
C) an inspection stamp found on meat.
D) a group of employees who meet to discuss ways of improving products or processes.
E) a team of customers and their contacts within the company who meet to discuss ways of improving products or processes.
Question
The quality tool which helps focus on the most important problem areas based on the 80-20 rule is:

A) brainstorming.
B) check sheets.
C) Pareto analysis.
D) cause-and-effect diagrams.
E) fail-safe methods.
Question
ISO 9000 currently stresses _____ of a certified organization.

A) minimizing harmful environmental effects
B) product diversity
C) inclusion of reused components in the office equipment
D) a minimum of four supervisory levels
E) continual improvement
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Deck 13: Management of Quality
1
Quality of conformance refers to the degree to which goods and services conform to the intent of the designers as documented in the specifications.
True
2
Medical malpractice claims are an example of how poor quality can affect an organization through liability.
True
3
Quality of design refers to the intention of the designers to include or exclude certain features in a product or service based on marketing and other information.
True
4
The degree to which a product or service satisfies its intended purpose is determined by design, conformance to design, cost, and reputation of the producer.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
5
Because courtesy is subjective, it cannot be considered a factor in service quality.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
6
The dimensions of product and service quality are too abstract to be used as parameters for product or service design.
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Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
7
The degree to which a product or service satisfies its intended purpose is determined by service after delivery, ease of use, design, and conformance to design.
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k this deck
8
Reducing the variability in our product or service is an important key to quality.
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9
ISO 9000 standards stress continual improvement regardless of how good you currently are.
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10
The dimensions of quality are important for products but are not applicable in service organizations.
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k this deck
11
Business organizations that achieve good quality benefit in a variety of ways, including a positive reputation for quality, increased customer loyalty, and lower production costs.
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k this deck
12
An organization achieves quality by consistently meeting its competitors' standards.
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k this deck
13
High performance and low prices are both considered to be dimensions of quality.
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k this deck
14
Broadly defined, quality refers to the ability of a product or service to occasionally meet or exceed customer expectations.
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15
Regardless of superior quality, consumers will not pay premium prices.
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16
Poor quality has a positive effect on productivity because it usually takes longer to produce a good part.
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k this deck
17
Convenience, reliability, and assurance are dimensions of service quality.
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18
User instructions and follow-up services after delivery are important elements of overall product or service quality.
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19
In market research, a group of consumers organized by marketing to express their opinions about a product or service is called a steering committee.
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20
The Baldrige award can only be won by manufacturing organizations.
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21
Crosby's concept of "quality is free" means that it is less expensive to do it right initially than to do it over.
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22
Serviceability, conformance, and reliability are dimensions of product quality.
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23
Cost of inspectors, testing, test equipment, and labs are examples of appraisal costs.
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24
If the majority of service customers are satisfied, it is likely that all service customers will be satisfied.
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25
The primary difference between internal failures and external failures is time and place of discovery of the failure.
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26
Quality at the source means returning all defects to the source-our vendors.
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k this deck
27
The customer is the focal point and customer satisfaction is the driving force in quality management.
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k this deck
28
Juran describes quality management as a trilogy that consists of quality planning, control of quality costs, and quality improvement.
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k this deck
29
Continuous improvement focuses on achieving major breakthroughs in product or service quality.
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30
According to Deming, it is the systems that management puts into place that are primarily responsible for poor quality, not employees.
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k this deck
31
Quality certification refers to a process of 100 percent inspection to catch all defective products before they leave the company; this allows every item to be certified defect free.
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k this deck
32
Six Sigma programs have both management and technical components.
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33
Juran describes quality management as a trilogy that consists of quality planning, quality control, and quality improvement.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
When considering service quality, convenience often is a major factor.
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k this deck
35
Customer expectations tend to change over time, affecting their perception of service quality.
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k this deck
36
Modern quality management emphasizes finding and correcting mistakes before they reach the customer-catching the errors before they are shipped.
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k this deck
37
So long as quality input resources are used to make a product, we can expect quality output from the process.
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k this deck
38
Cost of inspectors, testing, test equipment, and labs are examples of prevention costs.
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39
Firms that wish to do business with the European Community can benefit from having a quality management system that meets ISO 9000 standards.
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k this deck
40
Deming stresses that workers are primarily responsible for poor quality because very often they fail to follow instructions.
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k this deck
41
Suppliers are not included in quality assurance and quality improvement efforts in TQM; they should worry about their own problems.
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k this deck
42
ISO standards aid in transferring technology to developing countries.
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k this deck
43
The expression "quality at the source" refers primarily to the practice of requiring each of our vendors to provide quality parts and materials.
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k this deck
44
Total quality management attempts to involve everyone in an organization in the effort to achieve quality.
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k this deck
45
When an organization comes to the realization that there are quality problems in products that are already in service, ethical approaches include:
(I) divulging the information to the public at large.
(II) recalling, if possible, affected products.
(III) handling complaints on an individual rather than a systemic basis.

A) I and III
B) I and II
C) II and III
D) I, II, and III
E) Neither I, II, nor III
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Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
46
The "Control" phase of DMAIC is intended to ensure that:

A) the proper subset of process inputs are monitored.
B) variability reduction is pursued.
C) data analysis is overseen.
D) inputs are closely monitored.
E) improvements are sustaineD.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
In addition to correcting substandard work, employees have an ethical obligation to __________ the quality problem as well.

A) prevent
B) offset
C) report
D) standardize
E) redesign
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Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
ISO certification differs substantially from the Baldrige Award in that it:

A) focuses primarily on quality teams.
B) emphasizes self-appraisal.
C) is an ongoing process.
D) is customer-driven.
E) is national rather than international.
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Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
The quality certification that deals primarily with conformance to customer requirements is ISO __________; ISO __________ is concerned primarily with the organization's effect on the environment.

A) 9000; 14000
B) 24700; 9000
C) 14000; 9000
D) 9000; 24700
E) 14000; 24700
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50
A control chart is a visual representation of the steps in a process.
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k this deck
51
A quality circle is a management team focused on implementing major changes to improve quality.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
Three key philosophies in TQM are continuous improvement, involvement of everyone in the organization, and customer satisfaction.
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k this deck
53
Your benchmark organization must be chosen from your industry in order for its methods to be applicable to your business.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
The purpose of benchmarking is to establish a standard against which the organization's performance can be judged and to identify a model for possible improvement.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
Companies that strive for zero defects in the products they deliver to their customers must perform 100 percent inspection of the final product.
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Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
ISO certification is similar to the Baldrige Award in its emphasis on:

A) statistical tools.
B) self-appraisal.
C) teamwork.
D) outsourcing.
E) services.
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Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
There is a positive link between quality and productivity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
58
TQM expands the traditional view of quality beyond looking only at the quality of the final product or service to looking at the quality of every aspect of the process.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
59
Six sigma programs involve both __________ and __________ components.

A) probabilistic; deterministic
B) logistical; managerial
C) statistical; probabilistic
D) managerial; technical
E) local; global
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
60
The PDSA cycle forms the conceptual basis for continuous improvement.
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Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
61
Quality planning and administration, quality training, and quality control procedures are examples of:

A) internal failure costs.
B) external failure costs.
C) appraisal costs.
D) prevention costs.
E) replacement costs.
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Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
62
The Deming Prize was established by the:

A) American Statistical Association.
B) Union of Japanese Scientists.
C) North American Free Trade Association.
D) American Quality Society.
E) World Trade Organization.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
63
Loss of business, increased liability, decreased productivity, and higher costs are all likely consequences of:

A) labor unions.
B) globalization.
C) poor quality.
D) robotics.
E) micro-factories.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
64
TQM stands for:

A) Taguchi Quality Methods.
B) Tactical Quality Measurements.
C) The Quality Matrix.
D) Total Quality Management.
E) Total Quantity Measurement.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
Warranty service, processing of complaints, and costs of litigation are examples of:

A) internal failure costs.
B) external failure costs.
C) appraisal costs.
D) prevention costs.
E) replacement costs.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
Deciding how much to invest in the prevention of defects can be analyzed using:

A) EVPI.
B) net present value.
C) weighted factor analysis.
D) return on quality.
E) break-even analysis.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
67
Fixing a problem will often cost money; to minimize these costs it is best to find and fix the problem:

A) just before shipping our product to the customer.
B) immediately after we complete the last operation.
C) during the design phasE.
D) just before we begin the first production operation.
E) Regardless of when you fix the problem, costs are about the same.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
Among the guiding principles of six sigma are:
(I) Reduction of variation is an important goal.
(II) Valid measurement is critical.
(III) Outputs determine inputs.
(IV) We should focus on those critical few influences on our quality.

A) I, II, and IV only
B) II and IV only
C) I and III only
D) I, II, III, and IV
E) III only
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
69
Which is not a cost of quality?

A) prevention cost
B) external failure costs
C) extended service contract costs
D) internal failure costs
E) appraisal costs
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Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
70
The Baldrige Award is based on evaluations in seven main areas. Which is not one of those?

A) relative profitability
B) strategic planning
C) human resource management
D) information and analysis
E) leadership
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
A tool that is not used for quality management is a:

A) flowchart.
B) histogram.
C) Pareto analysis.
D) redesign.
E) check sheet.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
72
A tool that uses time-ordered values of a sample statistic to help detect the presence of correctable causes of variation in a process is a(n):

A) affinity diagram.
B) checklist.
C) control chart.
D) flowchart.
E) relationship diagram.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
73
Lost production time, scrap, and rework are examples of:

A) internal failure costs.
B) external failure costs.
C) appraisal costs.
D) prevention costs.
E) replacement costs.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
74
The quality tool that resembles a "fishbone" is:

A) brainstorming.
B) check sheets.
C) Pareto analysis.
D) cause-and-effect diagrams.
E) fail-safe methods.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
75
Which of the following is not an element of TQM?

A) continuous improvement
B) competitive benchmarking
C) employee empowerment
D) team approach
E) quality management as a specialized function within the firm
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
76
The Baldrige Award aims to:
(I) publicize successful quality programs.
(II) recognize quality achievements of U.S. companies.
(III) stimulate efforts to improve quality.
(IV) distribute the grant money available for improved quality.

A) I and IV only
B) I and II only
C) II and III only
D) I, II, III, and IV
E) I, II, and III only
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77
Costs of inspectors, testing, test equipment, and labs are examples of:

A) internal failure costs.
B) external failure costs.
C) appraisal costs.
D) prevention costs.
E) replacement costs.
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78
A quality circle is:

A) responsible for quality.
B) total quality control.
C) an inspection stamp found on meat.
D) a group of employees who meet to discuss ways of improving products or processes.
E) a team of customers and their contacts within the company who meet to discuss ways of improving products or processes.
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79
The quality tool which helps focus on the most important problem areas based on the 80-20 rule is:

A) brainstorming.
B) check sheets.
C) Pareto analysis.
D) cause-and-effect diagrams.
E) fail-safe methods.
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80
ISO 9000 currently stresses _____ of a certified organization.

A) minimizing harmful environmental effects
B) product diversity
C) inclusion of reused components in the office equipment
D) a minimum of four supervisory levels
E) continual improvement
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.