Design for Six Sigma (DFSS) is the
application of Six Sigma principles to the
design of products and their manufacturing
and support processes. Whereas Six Sigma by
definition focuses on the production phase
of a product, DFSS focuses on research,
design, and development phases. DFSS
combines many of the tools that are used to
improve existing products or services and
integrates the voice of the customer and
simulation methods to predict new process
and product performance.
DFSS can be compared to DMAIC (Design,
Measure, Analyze, Improve, Control) and
often the acronym DMADV (Define, Measure,
Analyze, Design, Verify) is used to describe
the strategy of DFSS. The precise phases or
steps of a DFSS methodology are not
universally defined. Most organizations will
implement DFSS to suit their business,
industry, and culture. DFSS methodology,
instead of the DMAIC methodology, should be
used when:
* A product or process is not in
existence at your company and one needs to
be developed * The existing product or
process exists and has been optimized (using
either DMAIC or not) and still doesn't meet
the level of customer specification or six
sigma level DFSS is a way to implement the
Six Sigma methodology as early in the
product or service life cycle as possible.
It is a strategy toward extraordinary ROI by
designing to meet customer needs and process
capability. DFSS can produce the same order
of magnitude in financial benefits as DMAIC.
But it also greatly helps an organization
innovate, exceed customer expectations, and
become a market leader.
DFSS is the Six Sigma approach to product
design--namely, designing products that are
resistant to variation in the manufacturing
process. Using DFSS means designing quality
into the product from the start. You are
preventing wasteful variation before it
happens, thus being able to identify and
correct problems early when the solution
costs are less. A successful DFSS
implementation requires the same ingredients
as any other Six Sigma project: a
significant commitment and leadership from
the top, planning that identifies and
establishes measurable program goals and
timeline, and the training and involvement
of everyone.
Planning for DFSS requires collecting the
necessary information that will allow for
error free production of defect-free
products and processes that satisfy the
customer profitably. DFSS attempts to
predict how the designs under consideration
will behave and to correct for variation
prior to it occurring. That means
understanding the real needs of your
customers and translating those needs into
vital technical characteristics of the
product and ultimately into critical to
quality (CTQ) characteristics of the product
and process. You can then use design of
experiments (DOE) to develop a robust design
that optimizes efficiency and reduces
defects.
Valid and reliable metrics to monitor the
progress of the project are established
early in the project, during the Measure
phase if using DMADV. Key inputs are
prioritized to establish a short list to
study in more detail. With a prioritized
list of inputs in hand, the DFSS team will
determine the potential ways the process
could go wrong and take preemptive action to
mitigate or prevent those failures. Through
analysis, the DFSS team can determine the
causes of the problem that needs improvement
and how to eliminate the gap between
existing performance and the desired level
of performance. This involves discovering
why defects are generated by identifying the
key variables that are most likely to create
process variation. Failure Mode and Effect
Analysis (FMEA) and Anticipatory Failure
Determination (AFD) can be used for both the
design of the product and the design of the
process.
DFSS provides a structured way to
constructively use the information learned
from these analyses. Armed with real data
produced by the DFSS process, you can
develop competent manufacturing processes
and choose processes that are capable of
meeting the design requirements. Further
analysis can verify and validate that the
product design will meet the quality
targets. This can be accomplished through
peer reviews, design reviews, simulation and
analysis, qualification testing, or
production validation testing.
The benefits of DFSS are more difficult
to quantify and are more long-term. It can
take over six months after the launch of the
new product before you will begin to see the
true measure of the project improvements.
However, the eventual return on investment
can be profound. This is especially true
when the organization can use the DFSS
project as a template for fundamental
changes in the way it develops new products
and processes across the organization.
About The Author: Peter Peterka is the
principal
Six Sigma Consultant in practice areas
of DMAIC and DFSS. Peter has over 15 years
experience including implementation of
Six Sigma in Healthcare with a variety
of organizations. For additional information
please contact Peter Peterka at
Six Sigma
us. |