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Business Process Reengineering & Quality Management Books

 

   
  Click on the book images below to get further details from Amazon.com
  UK book information: click here for book information from Amazon.co.uk
     
   

 

Out of the Crisis by W. Edwards Deming
   

 

Deming's Profound Changes by Kenneth T. Delavigne, Daniel J. Robertson
   

 

Four Days with Dr. Deming (Reengineering Process Improvement Series) 
by W.Edwards Deming (Foreword), William J. Latzko, David M. Saunders
   

 

Juran on Quality By Design: The New Steps for Planning Quality into Goods and Services: Planning, Setting and Reaching Quality Goals 
by J.M.Juran

For specific guidance on setting, quantifying and measuring quality goals, take a look at these articles (Quantifying Qualitative Requirements, Rich Requirements) by Tom Gilb.

 

 

 

Managerial Breakthrough: The Classic Book on Improving Management Performance  by J.M.Juran

 

   

 

Quality Is Free: The Art of Making Quality Certain by Philip B. Crosby

Philip Crosby was with the ITT corporation in its glory days. He describes the development and introduction of a 14-step Quality Improvement Program across the corporation. ITT is reportedly saved $720M one year using his approach.

In this book, Philip Crosby introduced a definition of Quality as 'conformance to requirements' and Quality Costs as the costs of non-conformance. At that time... and perhaps still, 'quality' tends to be thought of as somehow linked to luxury or as unnecessary and expensive 'goodness'; hence the book title. Crosby provided a down-to-earth, workable definition.

He also discusses Zero Defect programs ('right first time'), defect prevention, Quality Control versus Quality Assurance, and the role of management in successful quality improvement initiatives.

   

 

The Case Against ISO 9000: How to Create Real Quality in Your Organisation
by John Seddon
     
   

 

Reengineering the Corporation: A Manifesto for Business Revolution
by Michael Hammer, James Champy
   

 

The Unwritten Rules of the Game: Master Them, Shatter Them, and Break Through the Barriers to Organizational Change by Peter Scott-Morgan

Unfortunately, this is a poorly produced book and if you can forgive that, you may well find the ideas expressed well worth the struggle with the poor production.

Peter Scott-Morgan's thesis is that if you understand the rules or the interactions that operated within an organisation, you have enormously increased your ability to identify the levers you can pull to help get the organisational change outcomes you want. Equally important, you can identify the levers to stay well away from unless you want real trouble.

 

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