The high-profile improvement technologies -- Lean Thinking, Six
Sigma, TQM, Theory of Constraints -- are individually so powerful that advocates can
easily become defensive; "my technology is better than yours."
A sign of maturity in the movements is the recognition that each brings things
to the table that the others do not; and the combination is more powerful than
the independence. For example, managers trained in TOC know that the Theory of
Constraints is the ultimate "mixer" -- it pulls other technologies in to an
implementation, in a focused manner and with a high degree of leverage that
helps each to achieve better results than they could have individually. Everyone
wins.
The web site of Arizona State University's Office of University Continuous Improvement ... Welcome to the website of Continuous Improvement resources at Arizona State University ... ...
Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) Server. Department of Industrial Engineering, Clemson University. This service is provided in support of world-wide efforts in quality improvement and ...
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