driving worldwide
business excellence

Worldwide Locations

request infoconsulting quotetraining registrationsearch

|home|about us|consulting solutions|training & workshops|software|resource center

> Lean & Six Sigma Products

Omnex unveils Six Sigma initiatives in India

Chennai: Omnex Quality and Management Consultants, a wholly owned subsidiary of Omnex, Inc., has launched its Six Sigma consulting division here. The US company is an international consulting, training and software outfit, specializing in business and quality improvement methodologies.

So what is Six Sigma, and how is it different from other quality systems like ISO 9000 series, Deming, Malcolm Baldrige, Toyota Production System, and Lean Manufacturing? says principal consultant in performance excellence and Six Sigma Master Blackbelt for Omnex Engineering and Management, Inc. Gregory F Gruska: "It is a systematic and holistic approach to reduce defects and wastes by beefing up the bottom line and returns on investments."

The process involves use of statistical tools to observe process variables and manage the variances and characteristics with active involvement of the top management, as it is a company-wide activity. The other basic tenets are: focusing on projects that will provide immediate tangible returns and dedicating fulltime resources for project works.

"The Six Sigma process involves recognizing and defining the problem by the ‘champion’ - the management representative. Then the ‘black belt’ - consultant - takes over and will measure (identify the key process inputs and outputs and evaluate the ability to control them), analyse (arriving at the key inputs that influence the key process outputs), improve (find out the process changes that will bring about the most improvement) and control (establishment of mechanisms to lock in the improvements)," says Gruska.

"Six Sigma does not compete with other quality initiatives. It is one more approach towards increasing profitability," says Vice President of Omnex Asia Operations. "It is not a problem-solving tool, but a systematic technique to improve profitability."

Gruska says companies wanting to reduce its internal and external costs (scrap, warranty, rework, repair, retrofits, downtime, service calls, redesign, recalls, excess inspection and lost sales) should have Six Sigma initiatives.

"Six Sigma was developed by Bill Smith at Motorola where it was implemented in 1987. The next year, Motorola won the Malcolm Baldrige quality award (America’s Deming). Since then several companies have adopted the process," Gruska traces the history.

According to him, there is immense potential to cut costs and wastes to increase profits. A company is said to have achieved Six Sigma level (final stage) when the defective product level is just 3.4 parts per million (ppm) or, as Gruska puts it, 3.4 defects per million opportunities.

"Companies with the cost of poor quality ranging between 30 and 40 per cent of their sales are not competitive. The industry average is around 15 to 20 per cent and these companies are in the level of 4 Sigma with 6,210 ppm/defects per million of opportunities."

The next higher-level companies suffer poor quality cost ranging between 10 and 15 per cent of their sales, which translates into 233 ppm. "The world-class is the next stage, that is where the cost of poor quality is less than 10 per cent of the sales, and the production defect is 3.4 ppm. There is an opportunity to bridge the quality gap between 4 and 6 Sigma levels."

Referring to the price pressures faced by global auto companies, which in turn impacts the component suppliers, Gruska says the only way a company can protect or show growth in the bottomline is by cutting down its costs. The one cost that is within the reach of a company to cut is waste and defects.

The Six Sigma approach is applicable for all industries and not particularly to the auto sector alone, though Omnex’s Indian subsidiary is more associated with Indian auto players.


You need to make price reductions, create better quality, and deliver with shorter lead-times. Clearly you need a proven method for achieving this throughout your company on a rapid, systemic and continuous basis. Lean and Six Sigma can result in the kinds of changes you're looking for. more...


Omnex Webinar: Achieving Operations Excellence through Unified Lean/Six Sigma™ (Flash 9.0 Video link)Download Flash Player

Omnex Webinar “Healing Healthcare: with a Little Help from our Friends” (4.7 MB Webex file)Download Webex Player

Omnex Webinar – Strategic Lean Six Sigma: Receiving Results That Are Most Important to Your Business – February 15, 2006 (7MB Webex file)Download Webex Player

Omnex Webinar "Value Stream Mapping as the Gateway to Dramatic Savings" – September 15, 2005 (12 MB Webex file)Download Webex Player

  • Benco Manufacturing
  • Coca-Cola
  • Gail
  • LPS
  • Ricoh
    more...

  • Lean/Kaizen Event at Tier One Automotive OEM more...
  • Lean Manufacturing Case Study for Components Company more...
  • Case study for external failure analysis - How does Omnex do it? Find out in this case study more...

Lean & Lean/Six Sigma Endorsements


Sitemap | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use

© 2008 Omnex Inc, USA. All rights reserved
Questions or comments regarding this website: webmaster@omnex.com
Powered By Omnex Communications

This site is designed for Netscape 6x, Internet Explorer 5x, and Mozilla 1x