Articles database
 
 
Web AnyArticles.com
Browse by Category:
  Business >
  Subcategories
Advertising Advertising (599)
Branding Branding (355)
Careers Employment Careers Employment (1857)
Customer Service Customer Service (547)
Entrepreneurialism Entrepreneurialism (697)
Ethics Ethics (94)
Management Management (1732)
Marketing Marketing (2084)
Negotiation Negotiation (135)
Networking Networking (319)
PR PR (643)
Presentation Presentation (230)
Sales Sales (701)
Sales Management Sales Management (216)
Sales Teleselling Sales Teleselling (100)
Sales Training Sales Training (540)
Small Business Small Business (1329)
Strategic Planning Strategic Planning (368)
Team Building Team Building (240)
Top7 or 10 Tips Top7 or 10 Tips (258)


  Categories :
 
  Arts and Entertainment
  Automotive
  Business
  Communications
  Computers and Technology
  Finance
  Food and Drink
  Health and Fitness
  Home and Family
  Home Based Business
  Internet and Businesses Online
  Kids and Teens
  Legal
  News and Society
  Recreation and Sports
  Reference and Education
  Self Improvement
  Shopping and Product Reviews
  Travel and Leisure
  Womens Interests
  Writing and Speaking
  Random Category
  Funny stuff
  Fitness
  Cruising
Management article : How To Use W Edwards Deming
 

Business > Management > How To Use W Edwards Deming

0 Reviews [ add review ], Article rating : 0.00, 0 votes. Author : Peter Hunter

Human beings and the way they interact are extraordinarily Complex. Deming tried to define that complexity.

We have since learned the impossibility of defining natural events in a digital way.

When we ignore the complexity and allow people to get on with what they want to do by removing the barriers to their performance, their performance becomes extraordinary.

I have been trying to discover why there is so much resistance to what is essentially some very basic philosophy.

Demings early work on statistics and quality was built around an ability to analyse complex systems and the use of that analysis to predict complex outcomes.

Deming was a statistician and his work very soon leaves the basic philosophy and becomes bogged in the complex use of numbers to define complex systems.

The very complexity of his approach deters many students but there is a more fundamental problem with complex systems that was identified by the later work on chaos.

There seems to be two approaches to the world.

There is the modern Digital approach where every action and interaction is controlled at the microscopic level by single bites of information.

Below this level it is not possible to go because a single bite of information is not divisible.

But we know from chaos theory that below the level of that single bite of information there is a whole world of complexity that has huge and unpredictable outcomes.

The flaws occur when we begin to realise the limitations of the start point digital data.

When the weather centre at Bracknell decided to tighten up its long range forecasting ability with the purchase of their first computers the reaction of the computers was completely unexpected.

The computers told the forecasters that they should stop issuing long range forecasts because the probability of a correct forecast was no better than chance.

Natural events are far more complex than a digital approach can ever define.

We can take a digital picture that looks great but when we blow it up we start to discover its limitations.

By trying to try to define complex systems in this way we are building in errors that become evident in the variation we encounter and are magnified massively whenever one complex system

encounters another.

The second approach is the analogue approach.

In nature the interaction of complex systems occurs all of the time without any trouble at all because when a wave hits a beach what happens, just happens.

If we try to define what happens to the wave or the beach in a digital way we will probably end up concluding that nature is at fault.

The digital approach to managing process’s and operations will always have the same built in errors when it contains these complex natural components.

The component that causes most trouble is the human operator whose actions and interactions may be the most complex on the planet.

When treated in this digital way the complexities cannot be resolved.

The human being has to be treated in natural way that instead of trying to define the complexity of the condition simply creates the environment that allows the conditions to interact and come to a natural conclusion.

In this way we avoid the impossibility of trying to define a complex system and instead concentrate on the result when the two systems combine.

Try to define sex.

What is it, what starts the thought processes that lead to it, what are the physical changes that must preceed it, how do we feel during and do we have to smoke afterwards, what about the partner, what appealing characteristics, body type, skin tone hair colour etc.

There are an enormous number of questions before we can define the act in a digital/analytical way and an even bigger number of answers to those questions.

The complexity of the analysis puts us off the act.

If we appreciate the possibility of the act then we just have to create the right environment for the act to take place and ignore the complexities because it is what people want to do.

In the same way, if we assume that people want to be able to do a good job we simply have to create the environment that allows them to do a good job.

As Deming said, “Remove the barriers that stop people from being as good as they can be”.

You will be amazed at what happens.

Peter A Hunter
Author of "Breaking the Mould"
http://www.breakingthemould.co.uk



0 Reviews [ add review ], Article rating : 0.00, 0 votes. Author : Peter Hunter
Rate this story : and read/post review(s)


Article reviews



Post your review
[ Note : no HTML/URLs - will removed automatically ]
Your name
Your comments


More articles from Business > Management

Add article | Manage Articles | Top Rated articles | Most Reviewed articles | Contact us | Links