Quality Through the Project Lifecycle
Quality Planning
- Stakeholder expectations – this section should document specifically what the customer expects in terms of project quality. Including whether they have specified any external quality standards and what their priorities are in terms of the areas affected by quality.
- Success criteria (as defined in the business case) in addition to the defined success criteria this section should also define acceptable tolerances for achievement of those objectives.
- Standards applicable (internal and external) – the project environment may require that the Quality Plan incorporates the requirements of external standards. These could range from the Company’s own quality standards to ISO 9000 or Health and Safety at Work Legislation.
- Roles and responsibilities concerned with quality – these may include quality assurance testing, supervision and management roles
- The process that will be followed – these will be documented in a systematic way and will govern the mechanisms for the product of the product specifications and testing procedures.
- How continuous improvement will be actioned – this may include making adjustments to processes where they are proven to be unsatisfactory.
- Project assurance techniques – This section will describe how assurance will be perfomed and who is responsible. It will define policies of quality reviews and audits of the management process .
- Quality control measures – will define control measures that will be used
- Interactions with other processes such as configuration management, change control and how these links will be established.
Quality Assurance
- Provide assurance that the project is proceeding according to agreed plans/processes.
- Measure effectiveness of agreed plans/processes
- Capture lessons learned
- Identify areas of non-compliance and opportunities for improvement
Quality Assurance involves pre-planned, regular reviews and independent audits to verify that work is being carried out consistently in accordance with defined procedures and to provide confidence to stakeholders the project will satisfy relevant quality requirements and standards.
Reviews
- Subject for review fit for purpose and can be signed off.
- Subject for review needs some correction but subject to completion of clearly stated actions it can be signed off. No further reviews required
- Subject for review is sub-standard and requires re-word and a repeated review.
Quality Control
- Histogram – plots frequency of variables.The height of the bar shows how often a particular result occurs and the number of bars indicates the range of results
- Scatter Chart – used where there are 2 variable and we want to see if there is a relationship between them, i.e. the strength of number of cubes against recorded outside temperatures may show relationship between strength and temperature.
- Control Chart – plots value for each of a number of outputs of the same process. It also sets tolerances for the values measured. This allows us to identify if the process is in or out of control. For example plotting the results for the test of each weld on the ship to ensure our welding process was within acceptable control limits
- Run Chart – plots the history of a single variable. For example if a key performance criterion for a project was the variance between actual and cost, this variable could be plotted over time to track its variation and identify trends.· Tools for understanding causes or prioritising areas for action:
- Pareto Chart – this is a type of histogram that orders the information in a particular way. This is sometime called the 80:20 rule; 80% of the observable faults are cause by 20% of the root causes. This enables us to direct problem solving where it will be most effective.
- Process Control Chart – a graphical representation of a process showing activities and decision points. A flow is used to show how different parts of a system interrelate. It can help the project team identify where quality problems may occur or redesign a process to correct problems.
- Cause and Effect – is simply a graphical technique to help develop an understanding of how certain causes may lead to a particular effect.This section may also define how the project should control change and perform configuration management
Continuous Improvement
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Quality management is a strategy all the companies should follow consistently that yields to continuous improvement. Very neat and simple blog that could easily convey the information.
It’s interesting that quality reviews measure the effectiveness of processes and identify non-compliance areas. My brother needs to have a quality control measure for his new construction site around some utility poles. He should find a service that can provide quality control for the entire site.
All the components of quality management tie together. The best place to start would be a quality management plan. You should be able to find a template for electrical installation.