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Managing Six Sigma : A Practical Guide to Understanding, Assessing, and Implementing the Strategy That Yields Bottom-Line Success

Managing Six Sigma : A Practical Guide to Understanding, Assessing, and Implementing the Strategy That Yields Bottom-Line Success

List Price: $60.00
Your Price: $51.87
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Breakthrough Thinking and Practical Applications
Review: Breyfogle and his co-authors explain that this book was written in response to numerous requests for a book which would "help management decide if they should implement Six Sigma" and then "guide them through the process." In Breyfogle's previously published Implementing Six Sigma, he introduced Smarter Six Sigma Solutions (or S4). Were I to provide a copy of that book to the CEOs with whom I work, few (if any) would read it. Perhaps a few would pass it along for someone else to read. After that, who knows? (Many of the CEOs I know confuse dumping with delegating.) It is not damning with faint praise to suggest that this is an excellent book but one which has a much narrower focus and provides much less content than does its predecessor. Also, it is MUCH more accessible than is Implementing Six Sigma.

"The purpose of this book is to build awareness of the wise application of Six Sigma tools and how they can be important to the 'big picture.'" The authors achieve that purpose. The material is carefully organized within four Parts: Why Six Sigma (How Six Sigma Compares to Other Quality Initiatives, Six Sigma Background and Fundamentals, and Six Sigma Needs Assessment); Six Sigma Metrics (Numbers and Information, Crafting insightful Metrics, and Performance Measurement); Six Sigma Business Strategy (deployment Alternatives, Creating a Successful Six Sigma Infrastructure, Training and Implementation, and finally, Project Selection, Sizing, and Other Techniques; and Applying Six Sigma (manufacturing Applications, Service/Transactional Applications, Development Applications, and finally, Need for Creativity, Invention, and Innovation). The Glossary and References sections follow and are first-rate.

Because I am a non-technician, I found the concepts and applications discussed in this book easier to grasp than those explained in its predecessor, Implementing Six Sigma. My guess (only a guess) is that the same would be true of senior-level executives who are also non-technicians. The authors quite carefully help their reader to understand how Six Sigma differs from other quality initiatives while correctly noting that Six Sigma should not replace other initiatives. Rather, it is and should be perceived as "a tactical methodology to determine the best approach to a given situation/process." In Chapter 1, they go on to observe that the success of Six Sigma "is linked to qa set of cross-functional metrics that lead to significant improvements in customer satisfaction and bottom-line benefits. Organizations do not necessarily need to use all of the measurements listed (often within typical Six Sigma programs). It is most important to choose the best set of services for a situation metrics that yield insight into a situation or process." I provide these brief excerpts to indicate the precision and clarity of the authors' writing style as well as to attract attention to several key points they emphasize.

One of the book's greatest value-added benefits is provided from a series of Tables. They range from "The Ten Myths of Six Sigma" (Table 1.1) and "Deming's Fourteen Points" (Table 1.2) through "The 21-Set Integration of the Tools" (Table 1.5) and "Six Sigma Needs Checklist" (Table 3.2) to "Personality Traits of Creative Individuals" identified by Sternberg and Lubart (Table 14.3). The authors end their book as follows: "As global competition increases and the rate of technological change accelerates, there will be tremendous social turmoil; as the uneducated and unprepared secede from the expanding economy. Those with the capability and desire to keep pace with radical change will find virtually limitless opportunity, growth, and prosperity." Frankly, I was surprised when reading these concluding remarks because, at so many points throughout the book's narrative, the authors seem almost wholly preoccupied with explaining strategies which leverage various technologies to maximize ROI. Then I reviewed what I had read and what I had learned, realizing that even a system as cohesive, comprehensive, and cost-effective as S4 is certain to fail without sufficient "human capital." That is, those to whom the authors refer. People who are advocates, indeed evangelists.

Heaven knows, the authors of this book are highly analytical but they are also passionate about the difference they can help to make in organizations which need "a practical guide to understanding, assessing, and implementing the strategy that yields bottom-line success." I commend them for what they achieve in this book...also, and of greater importance, for what their book can help others to achieve.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the Best Six Sigma Deployment References!
Review: Having read a number of the latest and greatest Six Sigma books, I keep going back to this one whenever I have questions around the deployment of Six Sigma within our organization. Easy to follow and compact to boot!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Hot mama
Review: I don't know much about the book, but the author is a super hottie tele skiing babe!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: THE Six Sigma Text for Executives and Business Leaders
Review: I expected greatness from this book based on the other text, "Implementing Six Sigma" (by the same author). I am asked all of the time if there is a book that Executives and Business Leaders can read to understand what Six Sigma is all about and to help determine if it is right for their organizations. Until now, I had to give them a list of books that would come close if they read them all. This is THE one. This book clearly establishes it's objectives and nails them. This book is also useful to companies that have already deployed Six Sigma. The audience will soon wish they had read this book prior to launching their own program, but can establish a roadmap to getting back on track. The book also emphasizes the selection of deployment providers and addresses trying to create and deploy a "home grown" program.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: THE Six Sigma Text for Executives and Business Leaders
Review: I expected greatness from this book based on the other text, "Implementing Six Sigma" (by the same author). I am asked all of the time if there is a book that Executives and Business Leaders can read to understand what Six Sigma is all about and to help determine if it is right for their organizations. Until now, I had to give them a list of books that would come close if they read them all. This is THE one. This book clearly establishes it's objectives and nails them. This book is also useful to companies that have already deployed Six Sigma. The audience will soon wish they had read this book prior to launching their own program, but can establish a roadmap to getting back on track. The book also emphasizes the selection of deployment providers and addresses trying to create and deploy a "home grown" program.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Bringing together Quality and Strategic Management
Review: I thought this book did an excellent job of putting the Quality Initiatives many companies are attempting to implement in perspective with the total Business Strategies of a company.
The authors continually point out that it is important to understand what quality initiatives are meant to bring about, and they focus the intent of the intiatives on bringing better quality to the customer, and an improved bottom line to the company.
Thought the book did a great job in pointing out implementing Six Sigma wisely is a "good thing", but attempting it for the wrong reasons, and with the wrong focus, simply isn't.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Be VERY careful in buying this book.
Review: If you plan to "do" with 6 sigma, this book is probably not for you. Until now, I bought any John Wiley & Son, Publishers book on the premise that they always published quality....this book will make me more wary of what they intend the book to achieve (sales of more books or education of the reader). The books title leads one to expect it to be about managing 6 sigma and it may come closest to that objective, to use it's term, from 30,000 feet. Otherwise, it is mainly a marketing piece for a prior book by Breyfogle (Implementing Six Sigma). Dozens of times and sometimes two or 3 times on the same page the reader is treated to this: "EWMA techniques can be combined with engineering process control(EPC)to give insight into when a process should be adjusted. The mechanics of conducting an EWMA and EPC are described in Chapter 36 of Breyfogle (1999) Implementing Six Sigma."

The glossary and list of symbols are inadequate. The problem with the glossary is murkey unclear definitions.

Finally, the book is redundant with regards to listing repeatedly the "21 steps" it suggests to implement Six Sigma projects. Based on the table of contents, this should have been an excellent book. Evaluated on content, what a disappointment!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Be VERY careful in buying this book.
Review: If you plan to "do" with 6 sigma, this book is probably not for you. Until now, I bought any John Wiley & Son, Publishers book on the premise that they always published quality....this book will make me more wary of what they intend the book to achieve (sales of more books or education of the reader). The books title leads one to expect it to be about managing 6 sigma and it may come closest to that objective, to use it's term, from 30,000 feet. Otherwise, it is mainly a marketing piece for a prior book by Breyfogle (Implementing Six Sigma). Dozens of times and sometimes two or 3 times on the same page the reader is treated to this: "EWMA techniques can be combined with engineering process control(EPC)to give insight into when a process should be adjusted. The mechanics of conducting an EWMA and EPC are described in Chapter 36 of Breyfogle (1999) Implementing Six Sigma."

The glossary and list of symbols are inadequate. The problem with the glossary is murkey unclear definitions.

Finally, the book is redundant with regards to listing repeatedly the "21 steps" it suggests to implement Six Sigma projects. Based on the table of contents, this should have been an excellent book. Evaluated on content, what a disappointment!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Not satisfied
Review: This book is primarily a marketing book for the author's first book. In every chapter, critical items are refered back to the author's first work. If you've read that book, you'll find this one interesting in regard to deployment. If you haven't read the first book, you'll feel you have been cheated in this book. I know I do.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An overview and outline to the ultimate 6 sigma reference
Review: Yes, it is true as several others may notice, that Managing Six Sigma is a book that refers often to Breyfogle's much larger tome, Implementing 6 Sigma. This book touts itself as an executive guide to learning about 6 Sigma, compares itself to other quality initiatives like TQM and Demming, points out the differences and does so in executive speak. It does also make a statement that it will refer to the Implementing book so it makes no bones about that up front.

When you need more information, it points you to the section in the 1200+ page Implementing guide for the details. This book, however, gives you what you need to make an informed decision of whether 6 sigma may help you and your company out. I use it as a quick reference for the larger volume and quick hits. Besides, it fits in your briefcase and you can carry it on the plane instead of the Implementing book that is way too bulky to carry around with you. I highly recommend this book to anyone who has taken any 6 sigma courses as a refresher or for someone who wants to learn more.


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