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Faculty Books
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Return on
Quality
Roland T. Rust , Anthony J.
Zahorik and
Timothy L. Keiningham
1994, Irwin Publishing
To order:
You may be able to find this book at
http://www.bibliofind.com.
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Endorsers
"Return on Quality (ROQ) is long
overdue. This well-written book
provides a valuable service by
offering a solution for calculating
Return on Quality. Further, this
book is a wealth of sensible, not
often heard advice, such as how
focus groups should and should not
be used; what the often used phrase,
'delighting the customer', really
means; the problems with 'comment
cards' and with administering
customer satisfaction surveys
in-house. They also explain common
errors in measuring the cost of
quality and in using the results. Of
special value for people with strong
interests in marketing are the
chapters on designing and analyzing
customer satisfaction surveys which
combine current research with
practical tips. The authors explain
how the structure of a customer
satisfaction questionnaire must be
organized around the business
processes that touch customers. This
information alone makes the book
worthwhile for the many
organizations who seek the most from
their customer surveys." -
George Stalk, Jr., Senior Vice
President, The Boston Consulting
Group
"The competitive financial
environment of the 1990s demands
that quality improvement efforts be
financially accountable. This book
provides a framework for evaluating
quality improvement as a
quantifiable business investment.
This sober but sophisticated view of
quality is a requirement for the
high performance business in today's
business climate."
- Charles R. LaMantia, President
& CEO, Arthur D. Little, Inc.
"The importance of satisfying the
customer is ingrained in the
corporate culture of every
successful company. These authors
provide a solid basis for assessing
the financial impact."
- Minoru Furuta, President,
Fujikura International, Inc.
How many of us can actually
measure the return on quality? Is
there really a link between customer
satisfaction and market share? What
is the link and how can you
establish it in your business? To
establish the link in your business
you need to know exactly what your
customers require for what they are
willing to pay. A good customer
satisfaction measurement program
will give you the strategic
intelligence you need. But just what
do you have to do to get valid
customer satisfaction data? How do
you analyze the data to convert it
into useful , actionable
information? What re the proven ways
to tie the information into process
improvement programs and
reengineering efforts? How can you
integrate the information with
effective strategic plans? If you
can answer these questions, you know
the linkage between customer
satisfaction and marketplace
success. If you can answer these
questions, you can establish the
linkage for your business and
develop a strong, sustainable,
competitive advantage.
The measure of success of a
business is the value it creates for
its owners. But the way to achieve
success is to satisfy customers wit
quality products and services at a
price that represents the best value
in the market. Customers really have
all the votes. Because of this I
like to say business organizations
can only be successful if they (1)
find the customers' needs, and (2)
fulfill them better than any
competitor can. Studying customer
satisfaction and dissatisfaction
over the years, I have found that no
one person in any organization can
totally satisfy a customer. But an
one person can totally dissatisfy a
customer. Completely satisfying a
customer requires totally aligned
and focused people. Someone once
said that organizations exist to
achieve together what cannot be
accomplished alone.
For all the talk and bravado in
the literature and corporate
speeches today about customer
satisfaction, there is a void on
useful and practical ways to capture
customer needs, determine how well
you are satisfying those needs, and
build actionable plans and
measurements to help win in the
marketplace. Customer satisfaction
in most companies is more of a
slogan than a practical science and
art. This provides the information
and tools to fill that void. It
provides, I believe, the knowledge
leaders of small and large
businesses need to increase their
chances of success. It explains in
simple terms what works, what
doesn't work, and why. It tells the
reader not only what to do, but how
to do it. In some respects it is
profound. In other respects it is
common sense. Albert Einstein once
said, "The whole of science is
nothing more that the refinement of
everyday thinking." This book
provides the everyday thinking
business leaders need to win
customer votes in the marketplace.
-Raymond E. Kordupleski, Customer
Satisfaction Director, AT&T
Abstract
The 1980s marked the beginning of a
quality revolution for U.S.
corporations. Hundreds of books were
written espousing the importance of
quality management and providing stories
of firms that had achieved financial
success through quality improvement. The
U.S. government even began promoting the
importance of quality with its founding
of the Malcolm Baldridge National
Quality Award.
As a result, virtually every large
American corporation has initiated some
form of quality-improvement program.
Most of these programs, however, are not
achieving significant results. Even
worse, the failure of several acclaimed,
quality oriented firms has demonstrated
that quality is not a guarantee of
profits. This does not mean that quality
is not necessary to achieve long-term
profitability. In fact, there is
scientific evidence of a relationship
between quality and profits. Instead, it
suggests that businesses are not
effectively evaluating and implementing
their quality-improvement programs.
Currently, companies embark on
quality initiatives without any idea of
what the likely bottom-line impact will
be. As a result, they have no way to
determine which actions are most
important or to predict if their efforts
will actually benefit their firms. Thus,
they are literally taking a journey
without any map to guide them to their
destination. What is needed is a way for
firms to assess the likely profit impact
of various quality-improvement
alternatives.
Thanks to the work of many different
researchers, most of the causal links
between the company actions and the
customer reactions as they pertain to
quality improvement are well understood.
However, no one has pulled this
information together into a
comprehensive quality impact measurement
system. The purpose of this book is to
show managers how to tie this
information together so that they can
measure their Return on Quality (ROQ).
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