Q is stand for Quality

Veljko Massimo Plavsic

All about the annoying quality matters in more interesting and interactive way through the podcast that you can hear anytime, everywhere and to learn and implement your knowledge...so enjoy

  1. Hoshin Kanri: Your Organization's Compass for True North

    11/14/2025

    Hoshin Kanri: Your Organization's Compass for True North

    Hoshin Kanri: Your Organization's Compass for True North 1. Introduction: Why Every Ship Needs a Compass In your organization, talented teams are working hard. But are they working together? Without a shared compass, even the most dedicated efforts can cancel each other out, leading to wasted energy and stalled progress. This is a common challenge in any complex enterprise. What if everyone had a shared compass pointing toward the same "True North"? This is the core purpose of Hoshin Kanri. In simple terms, Hoshin Kanri is a system designed to "align everyone in your organization, vertically and horizontally, toward common business objectives." It’s not just another strategic plan that sits on a shelf; it is a dynamic process that connects the highest-level vision to the daily actions of every single team member. This document serves as a beginner's guide to demystify Hoshin Kanri, explaining its purpose and core principles in a clear and understandable way. Let's explore what this powerful concept really is, beyond the corporate buzzword. 2. What is Hoshin Kanri, Really? Beyond the Buzzword To truly understand Hoshin Kanri, we must look past the charts and forms and see the collaborative, human system at its heart. 2.1. The Core Idea: A System for Shared Direction Hoshin Kanri is far more than a static plan; it is a continuous process of navigating toward a shared goal. The source material defines it perfectly as "dynamic wayfinding based on situational awareness." It is a method that ties an organization’s broad purpose and long-term strategy directly to the daily work performed by its teams. The ultimate goal is to create a target condition where every team member can say: • I understand our organization's vision. • I know the purpose of my own work. • I see how my individual contribution helps achieve that broader vision. While this perfect state may never be fully reached, the practice of Hoshin Kanri keeps an organization moving ever closer toward it.

    13 min
  2. The Auditor's Fork

    10/31/2025

    The Auditor's Fork

    The Auditor's Fork The client’s face was a grid of pixels on my monitor, another remote audit conducted through the sterile glow of a screen. Before me was a digital stack of self-audit forms, all perfectly completed. Remote audits make it easy to present a perfect digital facade. Too easy. But years in this chair teach you to distrust perfection. A healthy system has flaws. This had none, and that’s what bothered me. Everything was pristine, with just a few trivial issues flagged—enough to avoid looking completely 'taroccato', or faked. My skepticism wasn't about this client specifically; it was professional scar tissue from this new way of working. It drove me to dig deeper, and beneath the polished surface, I found it. It wasn't a catastrophic failure, but it was undeniable: a clear minor non-conformity. I screen-shared the evidence, presenting the facts calmly. The client manager didn’t argue. He didn’t have to. The pressure he applied was subtler, a smooth appeal to the business relationship. "For the sake of our partnership," he began, "and the continuity of the business, could we perhaps classify this as an opportunity for improvement?" The request hung in the virtual air between us. The Client's Path The Auditor's Duty Log an "Observation" or "Opportunity for Improvement." Uphold the principle of impartiality from ISO 19011. Keep the client happy and maintain the business. Report a factual non-conformity. View the audit as a business transaction. View the audit as a matter of professional ethics. There it was. The oldest fork in the auditor’s road: the client’s business continuity versus the integrity of the stamp. One path is smooth and profitable; the other is principled, thankless, and correct. It’s a choice that defines our profession. A part of you, the part that has a mortgage, wants to agree with them. It wants to find the gray area. That's when the cynical voices get loud. I suddenly remembered Lee Iacocca's famous line that "safety doesn't sell." In our world, the unspoken version is "professional ethics don't sell." It's a sad and cynical truth, but it hangs over every audit where the client pays the bills. Was I here to sell a certificate or to validate a system? The answer determines the value of my signature on the report. It determines everythin

    15 min
  3. The Credibility Crisis: Are Business Interests Compromising Quality Certifications?

    10/31/2025

    The Credibility Crisis: Are Business Interests Compromising Quality Certifications?

    The Credibility Crisis: Are Business Interests Compromising Quality Certifications? Quality certifications are widely perceived as immutable marks of excellence. They are the seals of approval that signal a company’s commitment to standards, processes, and customer satisfaction. Consumers and businesses alike rely on them as a promise of dependability in a complex marketplace. But what if that promise is being quietly undermined? A troubling conflict of interest is emerging from within the quality assurance industry itself, creating a potential crisis of credibility. Business pressures may be compromising the impartiality of the audit process, threatening to turn the entire system of certification into a mere formality rather than a true measure of quality. When Business Continuity Trumps Compliance A fundamental conflict of interest can exist for third-party Lead Auditors. While standards like ISO 19011 mandate impartiality, there's a cynical acknowledgment that certification has become, above all else, a business transaction. The need to retain a client and ensure business continuity can create immense pressure on auditors to soften their findings. Instead of issuing formal "minor or major non-conformities," an auditor might opt for gentler "observations" or "opportunities for improvement." This approach protects the business relationship by not antagonizing the client. The problem here is profound: the commercial interests of the certification body are prioritized over the rigorous enforcement of standards. This subtle shift doesn't just compromise a single audit; it corrodes the foundational assumption of third-party impartiality upon which the entire certification ecosystem is built. The Grim Parallel: "Professional Ethics Doesn't Sell"

    10 min
  4. AI can be lean?🤔🤔

    10/03/2025

    AI can be lean?🤔🤔

    AI-Powered Continuous Improvement: An Implementation Manual Introduction: Supercharging Lean with Artificial Intelligence This manual provides a practical framework for applying Artificial Intelligence to your continuous improvement processes. The goal is not to replace proven Lean principles with AI, but to supercharge them. Across the Lean community, respected voices are experimenting carefully. Experts like Jamie Flinchbaugh urge transparency, while Mark Graban demonstrates AI’s use as a knowledge assistant. The Lean Enterprise Institute is even piloting AI to improve coaching quality. Forward-thinking companies are already proving the model: Toyota has saved thousands of hours with its internal AI platform, while GE Appliances uses AI to improve flow, accuracy, and safety. This guide frames AI as a "thought partner"—a powerful tool that can clear complexity, remove friction, and analyze vast amounts of data, enabling your teams to focus on higher-value problem-solving and innovation. The winning approach is not a choice between "AI or lean"; it is a strategic integration that asks how we can apply AI to enable and apply Lean more effectively. This manual is structured to provide a clear path forward. We will begin with the foundational principles essential for success, move to strategic frameworks for leadership, and conclude with seven practical, hands-on applications that your continuous improvement teams can implement today. 1.0 Foundational Principles for Successful AI and Lean Integration Before deploying any AI tool, it is critical to establish the right mindset and cultural foundation. Technology is merely an enabler of a human-centric system of improvement. The following principles ensure that AI serves your team and its objectives, reinforcing a culture of deep thinking and engagement rather than undermining it.

    17 min

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All about the annoying quality matters in more interesting and interactive way through the podcast that you can hear anytime, everywhere and to learn and implement your knowledge...so enjoy