Definition quality
(p. 3)
Quality of a product/process/service refers to the degree to which the product/process/service is able to satisfy needs
stated needs
implied need
Quality is the degree to which a product/process/service is conforming to its requirements.
Descirbe the two dimensions of needs that need to be satisfied by the product/process/service (definition of quality)
stated needs = declared / explicit needs
ones are the (objective) technical specifications
e.g., products’ specifications)
implied needs = implicit / subjective needs
customer’s expectations
Whats necessary to achieve quality
(p. 4)
To identify/observe needs
To fulfill them using the appropriate resources/methods
Describe Indicators
Indicators => Essential tools for observing / representing / measuring the evolution of the system and its context
These tools are used to model a generic system/process and are needed for quality assessment.
Indicators can be helpful for monitoring the degree of fulfilment of quality requirements and/or improving existing quality
Indicators are used for any decision in which management needs to understand/represent part of reality.
Definition of Quality Management System (Quality Guidelines)
(p. 5)
Set of tools for driving and controlling an organization, considering all different Quality aspects
human resources
know-how and technology
working practices, methodologies and procedures
Name typical requirements (Quality Guidelines)
(p. 6)
production, cost, time
ROI
stakeholder’s exigencies or expectations
Name typical monitoring activities (Quality Guidelines)
performance evaluation of the whole firm aspects
processes, suppliers, employees, Customer Satisfaction
market analysis
shares, development opportunities
productivity and competitor’s analysis
decisions about product/service innovation
Indicators are used in which context? (Quality Guidelines)
Name Stevens Scale types
(p. 18)
Categorial
Nominal: labels
Ordinal:
Cardinal
Interval
Ratio
Absolute
Basic Relations among objects
gleich, ungleich
Permissable statistics
Describe the following Scale
Ordinal Scale
(p. 24)
Scale in which numbers are assigned to objects to indicate the relative extent to which the objects possess some characteristic.
It can be determined whether an object has more or less of a characteristic/attribute/feature than some other object, but not how much more or less.
e.g., T-shirt sizes: XS, S, M, L, XL and so on (but the right amount is not given i.e., by how many units the T-shirt size is bigger/smaller (>, <, greater or less).
e.g., If some objects (x1, x2, ...) are defined on an ordinal scale, then it is meaningful to say that x1>x2 (e.g., one object rated 4 is better than another one rated 3 on a five-level ordinal scale).
Any series of numbers can be assigned to categories, so that they preserve the ordered relationships between the objects (transitivity property of inequalities has to be satisfied too). Strictly (monotonically) increasing transformations of scale are permissible.
In addition to the counting operation allowable for nominal scale data, ordinal scales permit the use of statistics based on centiles, e.g., percentile, quartile, median.
Definition: MEANINGFULNESS OF A STATEMENT
(p. 39)
A statement/assertion using scales is called meaningful, if its truth (or falsity) is unchanged whenever any scale is replaced by another permissible scale
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