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Lean Six Sigma methodology is grounded on the voice of the customer. The Define phase collects and assesses information concerning the customer perspective and uses it to focus the project activities.
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Quick reference
Voice of the Customer
Lean Six Sigma methodology is grounded on the voice of the customer. The Define Phase collects and assesses information concerning the customer perspective and uses it to focus the project activities.
When to use
Voice of the Customer is collected and analyzed during the Define phase.
Instructions
An important best practice in improvement methodologies is to have a customer focus. The Voice of the Customer (VOC) is used to collect the customer’s perspective on desired process performance.
There are two categories of customers, external and internal. External customers are individuals or organizations that are not part of the organization performing the process; but procure or use a portion of the process results. External customers can be indirectly involved with the process results – such as government agencies or regulatory bodies with oversight in the areas of the process output. Internal customers are individuals or departments that are part of the organization performing the process and use all or a portion of the results. Internal customers can include the individuals performing the process activities.
Customer needs can be collected with several different techniques. Many Lean Six Sigma teams will use a combination of techniques. Which technique to use will depend upon the unique business context and process characteristics.
- Surveys: Surveys are a designed set of questions that are sent out to existing customers.
- Interviews: Interviews are one-on-one meetings with existing customers.
- Focus Group: A group of existing customers are called together to discuss a specific topic.
- Suggestions: Client/Customer/Employee feedback to improve the process.
- Observations: Observe the process steps to provide feedback on the process.
The Taguchi Loss Function is a method to mathematically calculate the impact of missing the customer’s need. The equation assumes there is an ideal target value which I will call “m.” This equation also has a constant, called “k,” which is the value of the business loss when the attribute being measured is out of the allowable customer tolerance. The equation is then:
Loss = k (y – m)2
Where y is the actual value of the attribute being measured.
The result is a parabola that is centered on the “m” value. The Taguchi loss is zero when the attribute is precisely on target. When it starts to deviate the Taguchi loss increases until the attribute is at the specification tolerance limit when the loss value has reached the full business loss value.
Hints & tips
- The only way to be sure you have the Voice of the Customer is to communicate with them. Beware of someone in the organization acting as their spokesperson. Often the information is skewed by their biases.
- Use multiple information-gathering techniques. Different techniques will reach different customers and all of them are important.
- The Taguchi loss value is not an “auditable” business loss until it reaches the spec limit. However, the Taguchi loss represents costs such as inspection, rework, and other oversight costs that become necessary when the process performance has a wide variation.
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