TIMELINE OF QUALITY

  • 1700 - Start Industrial Revolution

    1700 - Start Industrial Revolution
    Increases the production, but this lacks a quality control, it is classified the product between good or bad, and there is discarded or sold.
  • 1800 - Taylorismo Frederick

    1800 - Taylorismo Frederick
    Taylor creates a method in which the processes are optimized and production costs are reduced, increasing the skills of workers and is a better control of the production time.
  • 1908 - Fordismo

    1908 - Fordismo
    This method consisted in production chains, brought about the increase of production, the wages and the number of employees, reducing the cost and time of production.The philosophy of Henry Ford was: "simple, popular and above all CHEAP".
  • 1940 - Quality During the Second World War

    1940 - Quality During the Second World War
    The Second World War generated the need to quickly produce weapons of mass production, and low-cost, so that the techniques of statistical control had a great reception in the military industry of the United States and England, taking the name of standards Z-1 and British standards respectively.
  • 1941 - Joseph Juran

    1941 - Joseph Juran
    Discovered the work of Vilfredo Pareto. Juran expanded the application of the principle of Pareto to quality issues
  • 1943 - Kaoru Ishikawa

    1943 - Kaoru Ishikawa
    Development The first diagram to assist a group of engineers from a Japanese industry. The Causa-Efecto Diagram is used as a systematic tool to find, select and document the causes of variation of the quality in the production, and organize the relationship between them.
  • 1944 - Armand Vallin Feigenbaum

    1944 - Armand Vallin Feigenbaum
    Feigenbaum promoted the phrase Total Quality Control in the United States.
  • ISO 9000

    ISO 9000
    The main rule of the family is the ISO 9001:2008 - Quality Management Systems - Requirements.
  • 1950 - DEMING

    1950 - DEMING
    Deming Way to hundreds of engineers, managers and students in the statistical process control (SPC) and the concepts of quality.
  • 1956 - Método justo a tiempo (JIT)

    1956 - Método justo a tiempo (JIT)
    Translation of the English "Just in Time", it is a system of organization of production for the factories of Japanese origin, allows you to increase productivity; to produce the elements that are needed, in the quantities needed, at the time of need
  • 1960 - Control Total de Calidad

    1960 - Control Total de Calidad
    In the years 1960 and 1970, Armand V. Feigenbaum fixed the basic principles of total quality control, quality control exists in all areas of the business, from design to sales.
  • 1961 - Shigeo Shingo

    1961 - Shigeo Shingo
    In the years 1960 and 1970, Armand V. Feigenbaum fixed the basic principles of total quality control, quality control exists in all areas of the business, from design to sales.
  • 1980 - Philip Bayard

    1980 - Philip Bayard
    Four most important principles:
    • The definition of quality is according to the needs of the quality •system is prevention
    • a management standard is equivalent to zero errors
    • the measure of quality is the price of the disagreement
  • 1982 - Gen'ichi Taguchi

    1982 - Gen'ichi Taguchi
    The key elements of its philosophy of quality are:
    1. Taguchi loss function, used to measure the financial loss to the company resulting from the poor quality.
    2. The philosophy of quality control out of line, the design of products and processes based on design parameters that determine the proper functioning of the equipment
    3. Innovations in the statistical design of experiments, in particular the use of a series of external factors that are uncontrollable in life
  • 1985 Joseph M. Juran

    1985 Joseph M. Juran
    Development The Juran trilogy," a management approach that consists of three management processes: planning, quality control and quality improvement.
  • 1986 - Masaaki Imai

    1986 - Masaaki Imai
    Imai founded the Kaizen Institute, to help Western companies introduce kaizen concepts, systems and tools.
  • 1991 - CLAUS MOLLER

    1991 - CLAUS MOLLER
    He coined the concepts people first, the human side of the Quality, quality staff, internal customers, Employeeship, and a complaint is a gift.