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On differences in how operations and supply chain managers approach quality management
Authors:S Thomas Foster Jr  Jeffrey Ogden
Affiliation:1. Marriott School of Management, Department of Business Management , 689 Tanner Building, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT, USA tom_foster@byu.edu;3. Air Force Institute of Technology , AFIT/ENS 2950 Hobson Way, Wright Patterson AFB, OH, USA
Abstract:In this research, we administered surveys to operations and supply chain managers from different companies to better understand how they approached quality management. The underlying research question was whether the increased emphasis in supply chain management in the workplace had implications for how quality management is practiced and how quality-related values are emphasised. We found that those who identified themselves as supply chain managers utilised and emphasised quality tools and values to a greater extent than those who identified themselves as operations managers. The tools emphasised by supply chain managers included benchmarking, complaint resolution, design for the environment, ERP, supplier development, focus groups, and supply chain management. The primary theoretical implication of this study is that there exists an emerging field that we can term ‘supply chain quality’. This study provides a preliminary outline of the domain of this field.
Keywords:supply chain quality  quality management  production management  operations management  supply chain management
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