Why Companies Are Embracing Six Sigma ?

What drives companies to implement Six Sigma? Contrary to what some believe, the goal of Six Sigma is not to achieve six sigma levels of quality. Six Sigma is about improving profitability, although improved quality and efficiency are immediate by-products of Six Sigma. Companies that implement Six Sigma do so with the goal of improving their margins. Prior to Six Sigma, improvements brought about by quality programs usually had no visible impact on a company's net income. Organizations that can't track the effect of quality improvements on profitability don't know what changes need to be made to improve their profit margins. To date, every company that has implemented Six Sigma under our guidance has seen profit margins grow 20 percent year after year for each sigma shift(up to 4.8 to 5 sigma). Companies ranging from AlliedSignal to Dupont Chemical have come to us because despite improvements they made in quality, their profit margins were stagnating, if not shrinking. These companies could no longer afford to reduce prices to increase market share, and market competition would not allow them to raise to improve profit margins. They found themselves boxed into a corner. When they offered products and services with new features at no extra charge to consumer, market share might increase but profit margins would shrink.

You can't change what you can't measure

The fact is, organizations need ways of measuring what they claim to value. Measurements, or "metrics" as we prefer to call them, carry relevance to every member, for every activity, of an organization. You can't change what you can't measure. The foundation of Six Sigma uses metrics to calculate the success of everything an organization does. Enthusiastic speeches, colorful posters, and corporate mandates will not produce quantum change-only measuring the things a company values can do this. Without measuring a company's processes-and its changes to these processes-it's impossible to know where you are or where you are going.
Six Sigma tells us :

  • We don't know what we don't know.
  • We can't what we don't know.
  • We won't know until we measure.
  • We don't measure what we don't value.
  • We don't value what we don't measure.

So, in a general way, Six Sigma is a process of asking questions that lead to tangible, quantifiable answer that ultimately produce profitable results. This book will share what Six Sigma is, how it is applied, and what it can do for your company, business, or organization. It will be your guide for transforming knowledge into a living vision. To date, every company that has followed our Six Sigma methodology has achieved breakthrough profitability.

50% individuals are able to mobilize massive changes in the way biz is done, dramatically increasing profitability.

Six Sigma is about asking tougher and tougher questions until we receive quantifiable answers that change behavior. Through Six Sigma, companies relentlessly question every process, every number, every step along the way to creating a final product. Managers, employees, and customers ask different kinds of questions of each other than they've asked before. As Six Sigma takes hold across an organization, it creates an internal infrastructure that includes executives, managers, engineers, and operations and service personnel. When 50 percent or more of an organization staff embrace Six Sigma, those individuals are able to mobilize massive changes in the way business is done, dramatically increasing profitability.
Questions, of course, are not meant to exist in a vacuum. The methodology behind Six Sigma is designed to pave the way to find the right answers for your company. In the classic children's story The Wizard of Oz, Dorothy's persistent questions about what she sees and where she is going lead her down the Yellow Brick Road and into the Land of Oz. Similarly, when an organization starts to question what it does and why it does it, it too can begin to lay a Yellow Brick Road that will lead to its own long-term goals.

How does Six Sigma works ?

How does Six Sigma work? The first step in the Breakthrough Strategy is to ask a new set of questions, questions that take you out of your comfort zone, that force you to query what you have taken for granted, and that ultimately provide you with new direction. Six Sigma forces businesses to let go of bad habits. Bureaucracy becomes delayed. Those employees closest to the actual work and to the customer become motivated to meet or exceed consumer requirements. By questioning the speed with which products are produced and services are rendered, people begin to think about new systems that can be put into place to produce a higher-quality product or service in a shorter amount of time. As those closest to the work discover more effective and profitable ways of working, they are able to inform senior management about what changes need to be made; and as a result, push those higher in the organization to reexamine the ways in which they do business.

A few reasons for the enthusiasm.

Here are just a few reasons for the enthusiasm so many analysis on Wall Street voice: General Electric's Jack Welch, a self-proclaimed cynic when it comes to quality programs, describes Six Sigma as "The most important initiative GE has ever undertaken." GE's operation income, a critical measure of business efficiency and profitability, hovered around the 10 percent level for decades. In 1995, Welch mandated that each GE operation, from credit card services to aircraft engine plants to NBC-TV, work toward achieving Six Sigma. GE averaged about 3.5 sigma when it introduced the program. With Six Sigma embedding itself deeper into the organization's processes, GE achieved the previously "Impossible" operating margin of 16.7 percent in 1998, up from 13.6 percent in 1995 when GE implemented Six Sigma. In dollar amounts, Six Sigma delivered more than $300 million to GE's 1997 operating income, and in 1998, the financial benefits of Six Sigma more than doubled, to over $600 million.

Larry Bossidy, CEO of AlliedSignal Inc., brought the $14.5 billion industrial giant back from the verge of bankruptcy by implementing the Six Sigma Breakthrough Strategy. The company has now trained thousands of employees from every business unit and staff function in Six Sigma and the Breakthrough Strategy, with the goal of increasing productivity 6 percent each year in its industrial sectors. Broad-base Six Sigma initiatives allowed operating margin in the first quarter of 1999 to grow to a record 14.2 percent from 12 percent one year earlier. Since Bossidy implemented the program in 1994, the cumulative impact of Six Sigma has been a savings in excess of $2 billion in direct costs.

Former AlliedSignal executive Daniel P. Burnham, who became Raytheon's CEO in 1998, has made Six Sigma a cornerstone of the company, Burnham expects Raytheon to improve its cost of doing business by more than $1 billion annually by 2001.

Since taking over GE's industrial diamonds business in Worthington, Ohio, in 1994, William Woodburn has increased the operation's return on investment fourfold and cut the operation's costs half by employing the Six Sigma Breakthrough Strategy. He and his team have made their existing facilities so efficient that they have eliminated the need for new plants and equipment for at least another ten years. Woodburn and GE's industrial diamond business exemplify how Six Sigma can enable a company to cut costs, enhance productivity, and eliminate the need for new plant and equipment investments.

Polaroid Corporation's Joseph J. Kasabula, quality strategy manager for product development and worldwide manufacturing, believe that the most compelling reason companies embrace Six Sigma is its impact on the bottom line. While other programs may improve quality, Kasabula believes they do not focus on increasing a company's profits. With Six Sigma, companies focus on the processes that affect quality and profit margins on a project- by-project basis. Six Sigma is helping Polaroid to add 6 percent to its bottom line each year.

Asea Brown Boveri(ABB), which successfully applied the Six Sigma Breakthrough Strategy to its power transfer facility in Muncie, Indiana, has reduced measurement equipment error by 83 percent; piece count error from 8.3 percent to 1.3 percent; and no-load loss to within 2 percent. ABB also improved material handling, resulting in an annual estimated cost saving of $775,000 for a single process within a single plant.

We believe the Six Sigma Breakthrough Strategy should be of paramount interest to any forward-thinking executive, manager, and public administrator who wants to make his or her organization more competitive and profitable, and enhance its ability to drive change. Six Sigma principles apply to any business of any size. It applies to far more than just industrial processes-it applies to engineering, product design, and any commercial process, from processing mortgage applications, to credit card transactions, to customer service call centers. By attacking "Variation" during the design of products and services, it's possible for any organization to achieve unprecedented profitability.

Six Sigma produces superior financial results

Six Sigma produces superior financial results, using business strategies that not only revive companies but help them leapfrog ahead of their competition in terms of market share and profitability. By reaching for the seemingly impossible, companies achieve the impossible. But the biggest reason for the incredible buzz about Six Sigma throughout the business community has been its astonishing success at dramatically improving a company bottom-line profitability.As a result, Six Sigma has become the darling of Wall Street. Jennifer Murphy, an analyst with Morgan Stanley, Dean Witter, Discover & Co., spent three days at our ranch in Payson and at our Six Sigma Academy in Scottsdale, Arizona, a teaching facility we designed to educate and train executives in the principles of Six Sigma so that they can transform their companies into world - class organizations. Impatient with the negligible effect quality programs have had on the bottom-line, Murphy was astonished what she learned. "Six Sigma companies achieve - faster working capital turns; lower capital spending as capacity is freed up; more productive R&D spending; faster new product development; and greater customer satisfaction,¡s she wrote upon her return. She estimates that by the year 2000, GE gross annual benefit from Six Sigma could be as high as $6.6 billion, or 5.5 percent of sales.

You will encounter new ideas and principles

You will encounter new ideas and principles-some of which will run contrary to what managers have learned in school or professional practice. Six Sigma represents extraordinary sense, not ordinary or common sense; common sense rarely produces extraordinary results.It is our belief that once managers and their companies understand what Six Sigma is and how it works, they will begin to see that many well-accepted past management practices and quality-control methods are less than optimal, or are even wrong.Industries are desperate to find new ways to buoy profitability.That is why companies as diverse as AlliedSignal, General Electric, Sony, Honda, Maytag, Raytheon, Texas Instruments, Bombardier, Canon, Hitachi, Lockheed Martin, and Polaroid have adopted Six Sigma.Many of these companies are averse to management fads. But they have embraced Six Sigma because they believe the initiative will help them increase market share, decrease costs, and grow profit margins. As a result, they are beginning to tie quality directly to their bottom line.

What is Six Sigma ?


We believe that Six Sigma is the most powerful breakthrough management tool ever devised. What is Six Sigma? It is a business process that allows companies to drastically improve their bottom line by designing and monitoring everyday business activities in ways that minimize waste and resources while increasing customer satisfaction. Six Sigma guides companies into making fewer mistakes in everything they do -from filling out a purchase order to manufacturing airplane engines- eliminating lapses in quality at the earliest possible occurrence. Quality control programs have focused on detecting and correcting commercial, industrial, and design defects. Six sigma encompasses something broader : It provides specific methods to re-create the process so that defects and errors never arise in the first place.