Abstract:
n.
ABSTRACT
Quality is one of the strategic goals for any manufacturing companies to satisfy the
customers' needs. Moreover, managing quality supports differentiation, low cost and
response strategies to enjoy the competitive advantage. The modern global market
demands that products produced and services rendered meet certain quality standards.
However, many small and medium manufacturing organizations in Kenya fail to
satisfy the needs of the customers for not being attentive to quality improvement. As a
result many customers return the manufactured products for reworking or completely
reject them. The organizations in return incur losses due to these problems which keep
on recurring and therefore fail to compete well in the market. The occurrence of these
quality problems are as a result of lack of quality management improvement methods.
This study therefore analyzed quality failures and established quality improvement
methods that are needed in steel furniture manufacturing companies to solve the
identified quality problems. This will ensure that the manufactured steel furniture
attract customers and enjoy fair competition in the market.
The study adopted a case study methodology in shamco a steel furniture
manufacturing company in Nairobi Kenya. Both primary and secondary data were
used from the year 2014-2016. The primary data collected included the severity,
occurrence and detect ability of the defects identified by the customers. The methods
used to collect the primary data were interviews and brainstorming. 11 participants
were drawn from the four departments after conducting a survey based on their
responsibilities in the departments and their knowledge on quality matters. They were
clustered in six groups. In the data analysis Failure Mode and Effect Analysis
(FMEA) was applied to prioritize the defects through risk priority numbers (RPN).
Root cause analysis was carried out for each defect and cause and effect diagrams
(ishikawa diagrams) were used on the basis of machines, workers, materials and
process. Pareto analysis was used to distinguish major causes from trivial ones.
The study established that the most critical defects included breaking of welding
joints, scratches, unbalanced ground instability, chipping and faint paint just to name
a few. The study found that their really existed critical defects which affected quality.
The root causes of these defects were as a result of workers with a response of 35%,
process had a response of 30%, materials had a response of 24% and machines had a
response of 11 % of the participants. After establishing the defects and their root
causes, practical solutions to minimize or eliminate each of these causes were
established.
This research contributed to knowledge of practice by giving crucial practical
remedial methods of which some have been implemented with positive results. The
success of the improvement methods is highly dependent on the support from the top
management through resource allocation, involvement of the employees through
commitment suppliers and any other stakeholder in the manufacturing process
through dissemination of correct information.