Six Sigma Journey: Quality was never such
fun
Interested
to know more. Read on...
The journey
started like in May, 3 years ago when we had the 2nd batch of Six
Sigma training. The training highly instigated my engineering genes as we as
engineers have a natural inclination for Statistics. The next step was
selection of a project for process improvement. It was surprising to find that
so many of processes were not yet base lined (i.e. we do not know the
average time taken for the activities). So I selected 2 processes that were
a pain-point for Production Readiness (PR) Items and Cross-Release Merge Items.
What followed
after, was the DMAIC rigor of Six Sigma which led to Statistical Analysis,
Process Analysis, Brain storming and Solution implementation. DMAIC are 5 steps
of Six Sigma being Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve and Control.
Six Sigma Project #1: Production Readiness (PR) Items:
The handling
time of PR items was large at ~25 days and was not base lined at all. The delay
in handling Production Readiness Items added additional risk to the Release
deployment. He established the handling time bench-mark as Median at 23.806
days. The target now was to reduce this time by 10%.
The DMAIC
efforts crystallized together and the rigor worked as it should leading to
timeline gains. The outcome was the reduction in handling time of PR Items by
4.77 days i.e. 20.03 %( target was 10%). Also was defined the Control plan to
sustain and exceed this reduction in PR items time. Reduction in PR Items
turn-around time meant that we had better UAT testing of those items and lesser
risk to production.
Six Sigma Project #2: Cross-Release Merge Items:
The original % of Cross-Release Merge items outside 7 days target
of Turn-around time was 22.4% which poses potential risk to production and therefore
needs to be reduced. The goal is to reduce % of Cross-Release Merge items
outside 7 days TAT from 22.4% to 15% by April 2013.
The DMAIC efforts
led to Reduce in % of Cross-Release Merge items outside 7 days TAT from 22.4% to 9.3% (Exceeded target by 24%)
leading to Saving of 1.14 MM/year.
Reduce in Cross-Release Merge items due to Versync CR - Saving of 2.42
MM/year and Total Ongoing Savings for Account of 4.60 MM/year
I urge people to go for the Six Sigma project, as not
only is it a professionally enriching experience; it’s a lot of fun too J
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