Home | About | Contact | Articles | Blog | Books | Events Calendar | Glossary | History of Excellence | Newsletter | Virtual Tours | Lean Stocks | Jobs Board

Six Sigma

Lean Six Sigma is the application of lean techniques to increase organizational speed, while combining the tools and culture of Six Sigma to improve efficiencies and focus on customers’ issues. The principles of Lean Six Sigma are to initially work on causes of customer critical-to-quality issues and those that create the longest lead-time delays in any process. Eliminating those causes provides the greatest opportunity for improvement in cost, quality, capital, and lead-time.

Six Sigma at many organizations simply means a measure of quality that strives for near perfection. Six Sigma is a disciplined, data-driven approach and methodology for eliminating defects (driving towards six standard deviations between the mean and the nearest specification limit) in any process -- from manufacturing to transactional and from product to service.

The statistical representation of Six Sigma describes quantitatively how a process is performing. To achieve Six Sigma, a process must not produce more than 3.4 defects per million opportunities. A Six Sigma defect is defined as anything outside of customer specifications. A Six Sigma opportunity is then the total quantity of chances for a defect. Process sigma can easily be calculated using a Six Sigma calculator.

The fundamental objective of the Six Sigma methodology is the implementation of a measurement-based strategy that focuses on process improvement and variation reduction through the application of Six Sigma improvement projects. This is accomplished through the use of two Six Sigma sub-methodologies: DMAIC and DMADV. The Six Sigma DMAIC process (define, measure, analyze, improve, control) is an improvement system for existing processes falling below specification and looking for incremental improvement.

The Six Sigma DMADV process (define, measure, analyze, design, verify) is an improvement system used to develop new processes or products at Six Sigma quality levels. It can also be employed if a current process requires more than just incremental improvement. Both Six Sigma processes are executed by Six Sigma Green Belts and Six Sigma Black Belts, and are overseen by Six Sigma Master Black Belts.

book_leansixsigma.jpgLean Six Sigma: Combining Six Sigma Quality with Lean Speed

by Michael George

 

book_beyondleansixsigma.jpgBeyond Lean Six Sigma

by Robert

 

 

book_6sigmahandbook.jpgThe Six Sigma Handbook

by Thomas Pyzdek

 

book_6sigmafinancial.jpgSix Sigma Financial Tracking and Reporting

by Michael Bremer


 
icon_ppt.gif Six Sigma PowerPoint Presentation
icon_ppt.gif Quality PowerPoint Presentations
icon_tool.gif Quality Toolkit
icon_tool.gif Factory Toolbox
icon_tool.gif Applying Lean to Six Sigma
icon_tool.gif Six Sigma, Lean, and TOC
icon_tool.gif Common Six Sigma Questions
icon_tool.gif Evolving Excellence Blog
icon_tool.gif Events Calendar

Games and Simulations

Training simulations and games to demonstrate the power of lean.
 
Lean Manufacturing - Just in Time, Factory Flow - 5S
More Information