Six Sigma Principles
Six Sigma is a process improvement methodology developed at Motorola in the 1980’s to reduce defects in its processes. Its goal was to achieve a level of performance equal to a defect rate of 3.4 defects per million opportunities – this is a virtually defect free environment i.e. Six Sigma performance.Similarly, Motorola Inc. Six Sigma methodology emerged in the 1980’s from Total Quality Management, a core element of industrial engineering. Credit for coining the term ‘Six Sigma’ goes to a Motorola engineer named Bill Smith, but the roots of Six Sigma as a measurement standard can be traced back to Carl Frederick Gauss (1777-1855) who introduced the concept of the normal curve. Six Sigma as a measurement standard in product variation can be traced back to the 1920’s when Walter Shewhart showed that three sigma from the mean is the point where a process requires correction.
Core elements of Six Sigma improvement program
Often summarised by the acronym DMAIC, there are 5 program phases:- DEFINE the problem and what the specific Six Sigma ‘project’ is seeking to achieve. This is often where alignment with the executive/process owners occurs.
- MEASURE key aspects of current performance for the process and gather any data required to help in the next phase, including detailed process mapping.
- ANALYSE the data, doing root cause analysis to determine what is causing process variation and any associated factors. Often strongly statistical.
- IMPROVE or optimize the current process, using outputs of the analysis. This involves testing the solutions and agreeing a new process.
- CONTROL the future performance of the process to prevent defects. This is often the development of tools for management and proceduralisation.