Quality costs
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The concept of quality costs is a means to quantify the total cost of quality-related efforts and deficiencies. It was first described by Armand V. Feigenbaum in a 1956 Harvard Business Review article.[1]
Prior to its introduction, the general perception was that higher quality requires higher costs, either by buying better materials or machines or by hiring more labor.[2] Furthermore, while cost accounting had evolved to categorize financial transactions into revenues, expenses, and changes in shareholder equity, it had not attempted to categorize costs relevant to quality. By classifying quality-related entries from a company's general ledger, management and quality practitioners can evaluate investments in quality based on cost improvement and profit enhancement.
Feigenbaum defined the following quality cost areas[3]:
Cost area | Description | Examples | |
---|---|---|---|
Costs of control | Prevention costs | Arise from efforts to keep defects from occurring at all |
|
Appraisal costs | Arise from detecting defects via inspection, test, audit |
|
|
Costs of failure of control | Internal failure costs | Arise from defects caught internally and dealt with by discarding or repairing the defective items | |
External failure costs | Arise from defects that actually reach customers |
|
The central theme of quality improvement is that larger investments in prevention drive even larger savings in quality-related failures and appraisal efforts. Feigenbaum's categorization allows the organization to verify this for itself.[4]. When confronted with mounting numbers of defects, organizations typically react by throwing more and more people into inspection roles. But inspection is never completely effective, so appraisal costs stay high as long as the failure costs stay high. The only way out of the predicament is to establish the "right" amount of prevention.
Once categorized, quality costs can serve as a means to measure, analyze, budget, and predict.[5]
Variants of the concept of quality costs include cost of poor quality and categorization based on account type, described by Joseph M. Juran: [6]
Cost area | Examples |
---|---|
Tangible costs—factory accounts |
|
Tangible costs—sales accounts |
|
Intangible costs |
|
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Feigenbaum, Armand V. (November-December 1956), “Total Quality Control”, Harvard Business Review 34 (6)
- ^ Feigenbaum, Armand V. (1991), Total Quality Control (3 ed.), New York, New York: McGraw-Hill, p. 109, ISBN 9780071126120, OCLC 71640975
- ^ Feigenbaum, Armand V. (1991), Total Quality Control (3 ed.), New York, New York: McGraw-Hill, p. 111, ISBN 9780071126120, OCLC 71640975
- ^ Feigenbaum, Armand V. (1991), Total Quality Control (3 ed.), New York, New York: McGraw-Hill, p. 113, ISBN 9780071126120, OCLC 71640975
- ^ Feigenbaum, Armand V. (1991), Total Quality Control (3 ed.), New York, New York: McGraw-Hill, p. 130–131, ISBN 9780071126120, OCLC 71640975
- ^ Juran, Joseph M. (1962), Quality Control Handbook (2 ed.), New York, New York: McGraw-Hill, p. 1-38 – 1-39, OCLC 64292499