Quality Control Explained
Quality Control:
The process of inspecting products to ensure that they meet the required quality standards
The traditional way of managing quality
Involves checking and reviewing output
Mainly about ‘detecting’ defective output- rather than preventing it
Usually requires sampling
Spots and removes sub-standard output
It can be very costly
Quality control and Inspection:
When raw materials are received before entering production
Whilst products are going through the production process
When products are finished- takes place before products are despatched to customers
Business benefits of quality control:
Sub-standard output is spotted before it reaches the customer
Minimise disruption to production
Applies a consistent standard of quality
Some problems with quality inspection:
Costly
Often at the end of the production process- i.e potentially too late
Inconsistent inspections
Often not compatible with modern production systems
Done by inspectors rather than workers themselves
Quality Control:
The process of inspecting products to ensure that they meet the required quality standards
The traditional way of managing quality
Involves checking and reviewing output
Mainly about ‘detecting’ defective output- rather than preventing it
Usually requires sampling
Spots and removes sub-standard output
It can be very costly
Quality control and Inspection:
When raw materials are received before entering production
Whilst products are going through the production process
When products are finished- takes place before products are despatched to customers
Business benefits of quality control:
Sub-standard output is spotted before it reaches the customer
Minimise disruption to production
Applies a consistent standard of quality
Some problems with quality inspection:
Costly
Often at the end of the production process- i.e potentially too late
Inconsistent inspections
Often not compatible with modern production systems
Done by inspectors rather than workers themselves