Results 141 to 150 of about 1,299,633 (191)
Psychometric Properties of the Mandarin Version of the Quality Improvement Self-Efficacy Inventory Among the Nurses: A Methodological Study. [PDF]
Zhang N +10 more
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Trends in Lower Limb Orthoplastic Surgery: A Bibliometric Analysis. [PDF]
Bompolas P +5 more
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Moving Toward Collecting High-Quality Umbilical Cord Blood: Application of Quality Control Circle. [PDF]
Peng J, Shi CY, Kuang FY, Ma TB, Yu XB.
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The TQM Magazine, 1994
A shot in time appraisal of the development of TQM within a relatively small manufacturing unit (100 people). Details the unit’s original position, what methodology was used and who took responsibility for the implementation. Details the benefit gained by the exercise and a perspective from a team of people striving for continual improvement.
R.R. Lakhe, R.P. Mohanty
+4 more sources
A shot in time appraisal of the development of TQM within a relatively small manufacturing unit (100 people). Details the unit’s original position, what methodology was used and who took responsibility for the implementation. Details the benefit gained by the exercise and a perspective from a team of people striving for continual improvement.
R.R. Lakhe, R.P. Mohanty
+4 more sources
Journal of Customer Service in Marketing & Management, 1996
Total Quality Management (TQM) was developed in the USA by W. E. Deming1 and J. M. Juran2 as a business philosophy to improve market performance. Their philosophy was welcomed and implemented in Japan in the 1980s. TQM was widely practised by Japanese businesses and is the foundation of the country’s economic dominance today.
Rolf Staal, Veit Buch
+5 more sources
Total Quality Management (TQM) was developed in the USA by W. E. Deming1 and J. M. Juran2 as a business philosophy to improve market performance. Their philosophy was welcomed and implemented in Japan in the 1980s. TQM was widely practised by Japanese businesses and is the foundation of the country’s economic dominance today.
Rolf Staal, Veit Buch
+5 more sources
European Journal of Operational Research, 1990
Total Quality Management (TQM) is a revolutionary concept in the management of quality. Foremost, it is a recognition that quality not only depends upon tangible investments in machines, processes or facilities, but also on intangibles such as the integration and management of these resources, the corporate and cultural environment, personnel ...
+4 more sources
Total Quality Management (TQM) is a revolutionary concept in the management of quality. Foremost, it is a recognition that quality not only depends upon tangible investments in machines, processes or facilities, but also on intangibles such as the integration and management of these resources, the corporate and cultural environment, personnel ...
+4 more sources

