Publication | Closed Access
TQM—The Effect of Culture on Implementation
21
Citations
0
References
1995
Year
Total Quality ManagementCustomer SatisfactionCultureQuality AssuranceTqm—the EffectEngineeringBusiness CultureQuality MetricCross-cultural ManagementManagementBusinessTqm ImplementationQuality CharacteristicContinuous ImprovementOrganizational CultureCulture ChangeQuality ImprovementOrganizational Behavior
This article is an exploratory analysis of factors affecting the implementation of total quality management (TQM). Evaluating TQM implementation is hindered by a lack of agreement on a definition of TQM. Six attributes of TQM have been identified: organization culture, customer focus, team orientation, problem-solving emphasis, continuous improvement, and measurement. We hypothesize that an organization's culture is a limiting factor in TQM implementation. If a culture supports employee efforts and customer needs, then TQM implementation is more successful. If a culture constrains employees and is negative, then TQM implementation is less successful. To test this hypothesis, a large graduate class with students from a wide geographic area was assigned projects to evaluate TQM installations in their own organizations. The results of the evaluations tend to support the hypothesis.