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I fully stand with the answers Mr. Fazlur Rahman<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<>
To measure quality of a product precisely, we may use the following criteria:
1. The product serves its intended purpose effectively.
2. The users of the product are fully satisfied and describe the product features with a smiling face
3. The product carries ISO or GMP certification
4. The product carries standard warranty conditions.
5. The product incorporates update technology and user friendly
Fully agree with Md. Fazlur Rahman answer
I agreed with the experts answer................................
Top on the line must be:
1. The product must be according to customers order description or specifications
2. The product must be according to the company’s product offer condition, this is communicated to clients or customers at time of sales & marketing campaigns
Whereas, when above are met, the standard is audited by auditing bodies, like ISO, QC Approved, Environmentally Friendly, SAFE, Certified Product Quality, FSC, Natural %, etc., etc.
And clients or customers are only buying your products if and only if your product has above standard seal or logo.
These are the criteria for measuring quality of any products.
Agree with Mr. Rahman..................
Thanks for the invite.
I agree with experts answers.
In my experience, most Engineering and Quality Assurance organizations use “Open defects” as the measure of quality. The rationale is that these are known defects in the product, and thus are defects customers could run into. The lower this measure, then the less likely customers are going to run into issue, hence the quality of the product is better.
I think that using the open defect count as your measure of product quality is flawed for several reasons:
I believe strongly that the correct way to measure product quality is to measure the rate at which customers are filing defects. This metric correctly represents how often your customers are experiencing defects in your product, and the measure is independent of internal influences such as bug fix rates etc.
Simply measuring incoming defect rates is not accurate, since we all know that defects have different severities, and a defect found by only one customer is more important than a defect that many customers are tripping over. So it is important to adjust the incoming defects by:
This gives a weighted incoming defect rate that can be measured as:
Quality(forPeriod) = SummationOfDefectsReportedDuringPeriod( SeverityWeightOfDefect * NumCustomersReportingDefect)
Typically, I like to track this metric weekly, but you need to find the cadence that works best for your business. I also calculate a 6 week rolling average to help flatten out the peaks/troughs in the weekly rate and to also provide a better indication of longer-term trends.
Below is an example of what the metric might look like in practice. Blue represents the weekly rate and red indicates the rolling average. By viewing the red line, you can see how quality initiatives put in place during the last year of the program significantly reduced the incoming defect rate.
Thanks for the invite ............................ proportion of sales and consumption
I agree with Md. Fazlur Rahman , thanks for the invitation