「華人戴明學院」是戴明哲學的學習共同體 ,致力於淵博型智識系統的研究、推廣和運用。 The purpose of this blog is to advance the ideas and ideals of W. Edwards Deming.

2015年10月29日 星期四

The Architect of Quality: Joseph M. Juran 1904-2008 品質創造大師朱蘭



The Architect of Quality: Joseph M. Juran, 1904-2008, McGraw-Hill
品質創造大師朱蘭 / 約瑟夫.朱蘭(Joseph M. Juran)原著 ; 李芳齡譯
臺北市 : 麥格羅希爾出版 ;, 2004[民93]


目錄

作者序
第一部 一位移民的故事:一九O四年~一九二四年
  • 第一章 歐洲根源:羅馬尼亞、猶太教、貧窮
  • 第二章 移民者的新世界:在明尼蘇達州遭遇相同的問題,相同的恐懼
  • 第三章 在明尼亞波利的早年歲月
  • 第四章 悲劇
  • 第五章 和父親共同生活:非法販酒、無業遊民、紅燈區
  • 第六章 冰庫廠,賣冒牌貨,破壞罷工
  • 第七章 我如何成為家族中第一個上大學者
    第二部 我在品質領域的早期工作經歷
  • 第八章 西方電氣公司
  • 第九章 和品質管理有關的第一份職務
  • 第十章 品質管理中加入統計學之應用
  • 第十一章 從經驗豐富的工程師到完全沒經驗的經理人
  • 第十二章 在卡彭的賭場贏了輪盤賭
  • 第十三章 裁員,法學院,經濟大蕭條
  • 第十四章 公司成就到達巔峰
  • 第十五章 資歷生涯的危機,紐約
  • 第十六章 我的寫作生涯的開端
  • 第十七章 二次大戰,華盛頓特區,租借署:在戰爭中應用統計方法
    第三部 在美國及全世界傳授品質管理
  • 第十八章 戰後:四十歲時展開新資歷生涯
  • 第十九章 學術生涯
  • 第二十章 吉列刮鬍刀和其他早期的顧問計畫:一九四五年~一九四九年
  • 第二十一章 自由業者:一九四九年~一九五九年
  • 第二十二章 我的首次日本之旅:對一個百廢待舉之國傳授品管之道
  • 第二十三章 品質管理聖經:品質控管手冊
  • 第二十四章 我的成熟期的顧問服務工作
  • 第二十五章 日本:一九六O年代至一九九O年代
  • 第二十六章 國際主義者:一九六O年代至一九九O年代
  • 第二十七章 朱蘭學院
  • 第二十八章 朱蘭基金會
  • 第二十九章 回顧品質運動
  • 第三十章 移民與機會
  •  

      二○○三年,人生的遲暮,我已經九十八歲了,我把其中七十年的歲月奉獻給「品質管理」這個主題。「品質」是產品(包括財貨與服務)的核心屬性,優良品質產品指的是能符合顧客之需要、在使用時不會出問題、對人類福祉不具威脅性的產品。「品質管理」包括設計與製造優良品質產品所涉及的決策與行動,這是個歷史悠久的主題,但直到近代才走上舞台中心,如今,它是經理人的優先要務之一,且愈來愈引起大眾的關切。
      大眾比較競爭性產品的品質,當購買的產品突然出問題或必須忍受電力、交通與通訊等基本服務的中斷時,消費者便會感到不滿;當聽到波帕爾(Bhopal)事件與車諾比(Chernobyl)事件之類的災難新聞,或是交通事故死亡導致燧石牌(Firestone)輪胎大量召回的新聞時,消費者便會心生害怕。[譯註:波帕爾事件指的是一九八四年,美商印度聯合碳化物有限公司(Union Carbide India Limited)位於印度中部波帕爾(Bhopal)的工廠發生劇毒物質外洩而導致三千位當地居民(沒有一位是工廠員工)死亡的悲劇。]
      不幸的是,導致這類不滿與憂懼的產品很受歡迎,它們是工業社會中的必需品,這些產品使我們比先祖活得更久、更健康,使我們不再需要忍受前人所忍受的辛勞與苦工。我們希望能擺脫不滿與憂懼,但也不願意回到早期辛苦、不便利的村莊生活,我們希望能在品質管理方面做得更好,以擺脫對產品的不滿與憂懼。
      在早期社會,係由代代相傳的原始方法來進行品質管理,其後,商業與技術的進步使品質的競爭加劇,傳統的品管方法變成過時,需要品質管理的革命。品質管理之革命在二十世紀加速,日本成為此領域的領先者,日本之崛起成為經濟強權,主要得歸功於它在品質管理上的驚人成就。
      在我貢獻於品質管理領域的歲月裡,我全心致力於品管革命,為經理人創造新助力─觀念、制度、與工具,透過我的書籍、論文、授課、訓練課程、錄影帶等,這些東西傳播至全世界各地。我曾經在四十多個國家向數以百計的機構提供諮詢顧問服務,我的論述被翻譯成二十種語言,它們至今依然在品管領域具有相當之影響力。這一路走來,我獲頒無數榮譽,其中有些極具尊榮,世人廣泛推崇我為世界性品質管理革命的總工程師之一。
      自一九九六年起,我不再積極參與此領域,轉而把優先要務放在長久以來積壓忽略的個人事務,並展開最後一項重要計畫─撰寫我的回憶錄。自很早以前,我就想回顧以了解自己的人生旅程─我的目標、我所遭遇的影響力量、以及我如何因應。
      我是一個移民,我的家人在一九一二年從奧匈帝國統治下的一個小鎮移民至美國明尼蘇達州的明尼亞波利市(Minneapolis),不論在歐洲或美國,我們都是從赤貧起家,但是,我們擁抱了充滿機會的家園所提供的機會,我一直想撰寫此故事─我自己的故事,敘述我們如何擁抱機會。
      在漫長而忙碌的歲月裡,我仍能記得許多事件,不過,這些事件並不能構築成一個具體的面貌,我必須把中間的空白填補、連結起來,因此,撰寫回憶錄的迫切性早就存在,但一直到一九九六年,這個計畫才成為我的優先要務。我決定親自做這件事,我要敘述的是個有趣的故事,我希望由我自己來撰寫,何況,撰寫自己的回憶錄是對忙碌的一生予以最後一個合理的加油打氣。於是,我決定和時間拔河,趕在我尚存人世之時,完成這最後一項計畫。
      在著手這項工作時,我心中抱持的懷疑,大概其他撰寫回憶錄者也同樣會有,最大的疑慮是在提及過去事件時,自己能否抱持客觀立場。我若是早幾十年撰寫回憶錄,我的客觀立場就值得懷疑,我的行為往往是我的問題的根源,我總是坦率直言我的前提假設,但是,我的一些人生信念(不是指那些和品質管理有關者)是乖離反常的。
      不過,歲月磨鈍了稜角。我的早年生活非常坎坷,歷經許多艱苦考驗與屈辱磨難,但最終是個圓滿結局,這使我對早年的艱苦命運釋懷,也使我能重新檢視自己的觀點,了解自己為何會和社會格格不入。
      和客觀立場的懷疑相關的是對觀點的懷疑,我曾經一度看不見森林,因為太多樹擋住了我的視線。我擁有工程學位,卻幾乎對人文科學一無所知,我天天為柴米油鹽醬醋茶而辛勤工作,幾乎可說沒有什麼長程目標。諸多限制對我的進取心形成束縛枷鎖,就像托克維爾(Tocqueville,譯註:Alexis de Tocqueville,十九世紀法國知名政治思想家)對美國憲法的評論─”什麼都有了,就是沒有方針”。不過,儘管有如此沒出息的背景,我卻對品質管理之科學作出了實質貢獻,這門科學如今對人類事務攸關重要,本書中的悠長回憶使我能回顧了解自己是如何作出此貢獻的。
      因此,本書追溯整個二十世紀的旅程,這是一段人類目的的探尋之旅,和一項對社會而言攸關重要的活動─品質管理─緊密關連。有興趣知道一位困惑、窮困的年輕人如何摸索出一條康莊大道者,請跟我來!
    約瑟夫.朱蘭(Joseph M. Juran)
    美國紐約州黑麥市(Rye, New York)




    管理三部曲 / 朱蘭(J. M. Juran)著 ; 鍾漢淸譯
    臺北市 : 麥格羅希爾, 1997[民86]


    Mark EdmundJoseph M JuranQuality Progress. Milwaukee: Apr 2008. Vol. 41, Iss. 4; pg. 20, 6 pgs

    Abstract (Summary)


    Pioneer, teacher, consultant, guru -- each of these words describes Joseph M. Juran, the man who became a giant in the world of quality management and changed how companies do business. His lofty goal: to make things better. He wanted to improve everything he touched. Whatever he discovered along the way, he wanted to share. Over the course of Juran's remarkable 75-year career he never let his age dictate the projects he tackled. Juran's thirst for discovery was something he could never seem to quench. When he wasn't working, he stayed committed to earning a formal education. Adding the human element to quality will always be considered one of Juran's greatest accomplishments. Juran made a huge difference in the world by his promoting, teaching, writing books, and lecturing on quality for all walks of life, wrote Mickey Christensen, president of TQM Systems. Juran knew the movement could never -- and should never -- end. Perhaps this realization fueled his drive to maintain focus, remain active and never stop exploring.



    Full Text

    (3293 words)
    Copyright American Society for Quality Apr 2008

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    COUNTER CLOCKWISE, FROM TOP LEFT: Juran wrote hundreds of books and articles, and he served as a contributing editor for QP from 1968-79; Juran after a lecture at a 1985 conference in Portugal; Juran speaking at an ASQ event; Juran with just a handful of the estimated 20,000 people he taught in 34 countries during his career; Juran speaking at a reception at the University of Minnesota's Carlson School of Management in 1998; Juran at an ASQ Annual Quality Congress.


    PIONEER. TEACHER. CONSULTANT. GURU. Each of these words describes Joseph M. Juran, the man who became a giant in the world of quality management and changed how companies do business.
    His lofty goal: to make things better. He wanted to improve everything he touched. Whatever he discovered along the way, he wanted to share. For Juran, there was always an idea to develop and build on.
    "He always told me, 'Never be without a project/" Juran's son, Donald, said days after his 103-year-old father died Feb. 28. "And he never was."
    Over the course of Juran's remarkable 75-year careerduring which, at age 24, he headed a corporation's large inspection division, traveled millions of miles to share his message on quality, and founded a quality consulting organization at 75-he never let his age dictate the projects he tackled:
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    COUNTER CLOCKWISE, FROM TOP LEFT: Juran wrote hundreds of books and articles, and he served as a contributing editor for QP from 1968-79; Juran after a lecture at a 1985 conference in Portugal; Juran speaking at an ASQ event; Juran with just a handful of the estimated 20,000 people he taught in 34 countries during his career; Juran speaking at a reception at the university of Minnesota's Carlson School of Management in 1998; Juran at an ASQ Annual Quality Congress.


    * The elder statesman of total quality control consulted, lectured and wrote well into his 90s.
    * Up until his death, he was working to complete another textbook, this time collaborating with one of his grandsons, David Juran. David Juran, along with Joseph De Feo, the Juran Institute's chief executive, said they plan to finish the book.
    "His belief was that you always have a project to keep your mind going," De Feo said. "He always had something to do."
    Maintain focus. Keep active. Never stop exploring-all in the name of quality.
    "A typical trait of Dr. Juran (was) that whatever the age, he remained young because he never stopped listening," Tito Conti, president of the international Academy for Quality, wrote in a tribute to Juran.
    Conti went on to describe an encounter with Juran in the 1990s at a standards forum in Europe. Juran sat in the front row for Conti's presentation, hungry for data and details.
    "He did not want to engage his clear mind in the 'diagnostic journey' before getting a firsthand description of the facts and the environment in which they were emerging," Conti wrote.
    Early years
    Juran's thirst for discovery was something he could never seem to quench. Born Joseph Moses Juran on Dec. 24, 1904, in Romania, Juran immigrated to Minneapolis with his family eight years later to escape poverty and the threat of violence against Jews.
    Nothing came easily, and his family struggled to improve its situation. As a young boy, Juran and his siblings worked hard to add to the family's income. Laborer, newspaper boy, grocery clerk and bookkeeper are just a few of the many jobs Juran held to help his family survive.
    When he wasn't working, he stayed committed to earning a formal education. Again, it seemed his appetite for knowledge could not be satisfied. Teachers kept moving him ahead to challenge and motivate him. In 1920, he began his studies at the University of Minnesota, majoring in electrical engineering.
    But college proved a bit more challenging and, amazingly, maintaining a C average was sometimes a struggle. Juran had never really needed to study to make the grade, but now subjects required more effort. Of course, he continued to work jobs outside the classroom to make ends meet, which pulled time away from his studies.
    Juran graduated in 1924 and started his career in Cicero, IL, accepting a job as an engineer at the Hawthorne manufacturing plant of Western Electric, the former manufacturing arm of AT&T. It was there he began his career in quality.
    The journey begins
    At the time, Juran never realized that what he would be doing had anything to do with quality. A week into the job at Hawthorne, he was assigned (perhaps randomly) to the inspection branch of the plant. Two years later, he joined Western Electric's new inspection statistical department, one of the first in industrial history. Still in his early 20s, he was promoted to a managerial position, then to division chief.
    From there, Juran's career evolved to include earning a law degree (as a backup employment alternative during the Depression) and moving to Western Electric/AT&T's headquarters in New York to work in corporate engineering.
    Shortly after the attack on Pearl Harbor, he was granted a temporary leave of absence from Western Electric to work for the Lend Lease Administration, which procured and leased arms, equipment and supplies to World War II allies. Juran's job in Washington, DC, involved finding ways to improve purchasing and budgeting activities and breaking up paperwork logjams in the government program. The temporary leave from Western Electric eventually was extended from the original six-week absence to four years.
    A consultant like no other
    Juran left Washington, DC, in 1945 to start a new chapter in his career, teaching industrial engineering at New York University as a professor and department chair. Four years tater, he started his own freelance consultancy, devoting his time and energy to quality management, looking beyond just statistics to encompass the human side of quality.
    Quality to Juran was also about management, human beings and human interaction. "SQC (statistical quality control) applies only to technicians," explained Jungi Noguchi, a former executive director of the Japanese Union of Scientists and Engineers (JUSE). "Juran applied quality to everybody, from managers to clerical staff."
    Essentially, all problems had one root cause: resistance to change or, as Juran called it, cultural resistance.
    "Already a man of high professional standing and of major business and governmental experience, the very fact of Joseph Juran's placing his personal emphasis upon quality brought enormous attention and meaning to the subject of quality, which previously had been thought of as a technical factor in inspection," Armand V. Feigenbaum, president and CEO of General Systems Co., wrote in a remembrance of Juran.
    In 1951, the first edition of the Quality Control Handbook was published, establishing Juran's reputation as the authority on quality. During this decade, his standing in the business world reached new heights as he became a respected consultant, lecturer, author and leader in quality management.
    At that point in history, the business world included postwar Japan. In the early 1950s, JUSE had invited W. Edwards Deming to talk on statistical quality methods. A short time later, the group invited Juran to lecture on quality control.
    From that point, there was no stopping the quality movement. Combined, the Deming and Juran lectures and courses helped propel Japan toward becoming a quality and economic powerhouse in the late 20th century.
    After building a loyal following in Japan, the quality movement began spreading throughout the world.
    The more than half-century of the growth and evolution of quality into the importance of its global recognition and high effectiveness throughout the world owes a very great deal to the contribution of Joseph Juran," Feigenbaum wrote.
    Key contributions
    Adding the human element to quality will always be considered one of Juran's greatest accomplishments.
    "I contributed to a new science: managing for quality," Juran said during his last interview with QP four years ago. "At the time, I didn't realize I was contributing to it, but in retrospect, I believe that's what I'll be remembered for after I'm gone."
    Here's a modest sampling of other contributions the quality community will remember as Juran's greatest accomplishments:
    * The Pareto principle, or 80-20 rule, which Juran applied to quality, stating that 80% of problems come from 20% of causes, and that management should concentrate on the 20% (what he called the "vital few and the useful many").
    * The Juran trilogy, the philosophy that outlined three components of managing for quality: planning, control and improvement.
    * Juran's Quality Control Handbook, considered the standard quality reference.
    * Hundreds of papers, articles and speeches, as well as more than 30 books, some of which have been translated into at least 12 languages.
    "Dr. Juran made a huge difference in the world by his promoting, teaching, writing books, and lecturing on quality for all walks of life," wrote Mickey Christensen, president of TQM Systems. "He was truly one of the major players in the movement to go from planned obsolescence or early failure to one of quality first."
    Juran knew the movement could never-and should never-end. Perhaps this realization fueled his drive to maintain focus, remain active and never stop exploring.
    "My job of contributing to the welfare of my fellow man is the great unfinished business," he wrote in his 2003 memoir, Architect of Quality.
    "Dr. Juran has inspired all of us as quality professionals," wrote Mohamed Zairi, a professor at the University of Bradford in England and the Juran chair in total quality management from the Juran Foundation. "He has helped pave the way for an exciting future for our profession, and we owe it to him to continue his work by helping his 'unfinished (business)' to make an even bigger leap in the 21st century."

    [Sidebar]
    JURAN IN HIS OWN WORDS
    Joseph M. Juran's take on different quality related subjects.
    On the cost of poor quality:
    "in the U.S.A., about a third of what we do consists of redoing work previously 'done.'"
    On the definition of quality:
    "Quality is fitness for use."
    On quality control:
    "For quality in the sense of freedom from deficiencies, the long-range goal is perfection."
    On innovation:
    "Improvement means the organized creation of beneficial change; the attainment of unprecedented levels of performance. A synonym is 'breakthrough.'"
    "To achieve improvement at a revolutionary pace requires that improvement be made mandatory-that it become a part of a regular job, written into the job description."
    On standards/standardization:
    "Without a standard, there is no logical basis for making a decision or taking action."
    On top management commitment:
    "Observing many companies in action, I am unable to point to a single instance in which stunning results were gotten without the active and personal leadership of the upper managers."
    On total quality management (TQM) implementation:
    "The recipe for action should consist of 90% substance and 10% exhortation."
    On TQM leaders and managers:
    "All managerial activity is directed at either breakthrough or control. Managers are busy doing both of these things, and nothing else." "Had Deming and I never gone there, the Japanese quality revolution would have taken place without us ... the unsung heroes of the Japanese quality revolution were the Japanese managers."
    Source. Hélio Gomes, Qualify Quotes. ASQ Quality Press, 1996.


    [Sidebar]
    Juran: Long Life, Lasting Contributions
    Dec. 24, 1904
    Born in Braila, Romania.
    1912
    Immigrated with family to Minneapolis. Got first job (of 16 held before age 20) selling Minneapolis Tribune at streetcar stop.
    1917
    Became naturalized U.S. citizen.
    1925
    Served as second lieutenant in the U.S. Army Signal Corps Reserve, Signal intelligence Division, performing cryptana lysis; later promoted to captain.
    1926
    Joined western Electee's new inspection statistical department, one of the first in industrial history. Married Sadie Shapiro. The couple eventually had four children and numerous grandchildren and greatgrandchildren.
    1928
    Promoted to first managerial job, chief of quality inspections (new Western Electric department of 40 inspectors who randomly checked work of product inspectors).
    1929
    Promoted at 24 years old to chief of Western Electric's inspection results division, overseeing five departments.
    1937
    Moved to New York to become corporate industrial engineer at Western Electric/ AT&T headquarters; also became active in professional organizations such as the Society for the Advancement for Management, American Management Assn. and American Society of Mechanical Engineers.
    1941
    Discovered work of Vilfredo Pareto (on the distribution of wealth among a few families) during benchmarking visit to General Motors' headquarters.
    Began work in the statistics division of the Lend Lease Administration; on loan to the World War Il effort originally for only six weeks, starting on Christmas Day (just after the attack on Pearl Harbor).


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    [Sidebar]
    1942
    Appointed assistant administrator in charge of the reports and records division of Lend Lease, which asked Western Electric to extend Juran's leave of absence then and each year thereafter during remainder of war.
    1945-49
    Began management consulting on a per project basis with Wallace dark's consulting company, assisting clients such as Gillette, the Hamilton Watch Co. and a division of Borgwarner.
    1946
    Became founding member of the American Society for Quality Control (ASQC) and of the editorial board of Industrial Quality Control, the society's publication.
    1949-79
    Started his own freelance consultancy with about 40 clients, including international Latex Co., Bausch and Lomb Optical Co. and General Foods Corp.; over four decades, client list grew to include dozens of North American and international organizations, such as Armour & Co., Otis Elevator Co., Xerox Corp. and the U.S. Navy.
    1950-91
    Took 178 trips abroad to lecture, consult, teach courses and attend quality conferences in 34 countries, addressing more than 20,000 managers and specialists and logging more than 5 million air miles.
    1951
    Published first edition of Quality Control Handbook, based on knowledge gained from consulting work on managing for quality (became Juran's Quality Handbook by its fifth edition).
    1968-79
    Served as contributing editor to Quality Progress from its launch as ASQC's flagship publication; also published the first of many articles in QP, "Operator Errors-Time for a New Look," on what he called the "zero defects fad" of the 1960s.
    1979
    Incorporated the Juran Institute, at first to invest in transferring his store of quality knowledge into a set of 16 videotapes, which became part of a "Juran on Quality Improvement" package that also included 50 workbooks, two leaders' manuals and three books. The institute eventually expanded to offer consulting services, workshops, papers and additional books and tapes.
    1981
    Received Japanese emperor's award of the Order of the Sacred Treasure, second Class (highest award available to a nonJapanese), for the "development of quality control in Japan and the facilitation of the U.S. and Japanese friendship." Named honorary member of ASQC.
    1987
    Became chairman emeritus of the Juran Institute, stepping down from position of chairman and CEO.
    1988-91
    Served as founding member of the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award Board of Overseers.
    2003
    Published memoirs, Architect of Quality.
    Feb. 28, 2008
    Died of natural causes in Rye, NY, at the age of 103. Survived by wife of 81 years. Sadie, along with many children and granchildren.


    [Sidebar]
    "Heaven will get better."
    -Joaquim Donizetti Donda


    [Sidebar]
    CONNECTING WITH JURAN
    Joseph M. Juran touched everyone in the quality community with his theories and writings. But the ivory tower was never his home. He connected with so many people on a personal level.
    Shortly after his death, QP invited readers to share their thoughts on Juran. Here are some excerpts from those who had the good fortune of knowing or meeting the quality legend.
    Encouraging
    "He told me to remain focused and keep on chugging until I reach 100 years in age just like him. I smiled back at him. we both had a big smile looking at each other for several seconds.
    He then turned toward me and shook my hand one more time... His departing comment-'You cannot teach quality unless you live quality'-is still ringing in my head."
    -Madhav sinha
    "At a time when the field of quality was often contentious and our new Baldrige effort was still fragile, Dr. Juran was a steadying influence, bringing credibility and confidence to our work.
    His services and leadership within the first Board of Overseers were a key foundation for our early work, enhancing the award's stature in the U.S. and around the world."
    -Curt Reimann, first director of the Baldrige National Quality Program
    Gracious
    "The last time I saw him was in the White House when the first Baldrige Awards were given, and his first words to me were, 'You should be proud of what you accomplished to bring this award about.' Typical graciousness by a great man. The world and I will miss him."
    -Jack Grayson, founder, American Productivity and Quality Center
    Humorous
    Stu Hunter visited Juran late last year, arriving unexpectedly during lunchtime.
    "'If you had told me you were coming, we could have had lunch together. Now you'll have to watch me eat mine,'" Hunter recalls Juran saying.
    He was obviously working hard, his desk covered with papers. It was the first time I had seen Joe in several years and although he was slower afoot there was nothing, literally nothing, lacking in his mental agility, l departed amazed at the man's vitality.


    [Sidebar]
    Rare events, wonderful rare events, do occur."
    -J. Stuart Hunter, professor emeritus, Princeton University
    Committed
    "Dr. Juran wrote that the purpose of the (Juran) institute is to improve the quality of society. He said, 'Whatever you do make sure it improves society. Don't just do it for the sake of profit.'
    A true leader is not just there to lead a company. They must have a purpose. I hope to continue to build upon the foundation of true leadership which Dr. Juran embodied."
    -Joseph A. De Feo, president and CEO, the Juran institute
    Towering presence
    In a letter written to Juran, Tom Pyzdek recalls listening to Juran at an ASQ conference.
    "I was surprised by how small you were, physically. On the dais, however, you were a giant as you told those of us assembled there that we had a big responsibility to help America recover her position as the world's quality leader. By the way, you looked great in your tux!"
    -Tom Pyzdek
    Uplifting
    "Dr. Juran changed many lives. He did so through his books, videos, recordings, papers and public addresses. He did so by simply striking up a conversation with a stranger at a conference. He changed lives by setting an extraordinary example. Through his deeds. His generosity. His wisdom. His unselfish focus on humanity. And his unrelenting goal to pay back a debt to society for the opportunities presented to him over the years. Everything he said or did represented the kind of human qualities we would all like to emulate."
    -Howland Blackiston, Juran's grandson-in-law and producer of the Juran documentary, "An immigrant's Gift"
    Upon hearing the news of Juran's passing, Joaquim Donizetti Donda, an ASQ member, simply wrote:
    "Heaven will get better."
    To view the full text of these tributes and more contributions, visit www.asq.org/ juran/com ments.html.


    Photograph
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    [Photograph]


    [Sidebar]
    THE JURAN MEDAL
    The Joseph M. Juran Medal is presented by ASQ to the individual who exhibits distin guished performance in a sustained role as an organizational leader: personally practicing the key principles of duality and demonstrating breakthrough management. The first medal was awarded in 2000. The 2007 winner of the juran Medal is Sister Mary Jean Ryan, president and CEO, SSM HcalHicaro, St. Louis.


    [Reference] » View reference page with links
    BIBLIOGRAPHY
    The Associated Press. March 2, 2008.
    Bunkley, Nick, "Joseph Juran, 103, Pioneer in Quality Control, Dies," The New York Times, March 3, 2008.
    "The Life and Contributions of Joseph M. Juran," Joseph M. Juran Center, Carlson School of Management, University of Minnesota. Adapted from the PBS documentary, "An Immigrant's Gift: The Life of Quality Pioneer Joseph M. Juran," produced by Howland Blackiston, 1996.
    Pnillips-Donaldson, Debbie, "100 Years of Juran," Quality Progress. May 2004.
    Port, otis, "Dueling Pioneers," Business Week, Oct. 25, 1991.


    [Author Affiliation]
    by Mark Edmund, associate editor



    References


    The Legacy of J.M. Juran
    Seiche Sanders. Quality Progress. Milwaukee: Apr 2008. Vol. 41, Iss. 4; pg. 6, 1 pgs




    Full Text

    (494 words)
    Copyright American Society for Quality Apr 2008

    [Headnote]
    The 'quality architect' touched many lives


    IN A SHORT SPACE, it's impossible to describe the broad and lasting contributions of a man whose career spanned more than seven decades and who brought the quality profession and the business world such tomes as Juraris Quality Control Handbook and Managerial Leadership.
    Juran lived to be 103-a long life by any standard. While in his 90s, he once remarked to ASQ's executive director, Paul Borawski, "IfI had known I was going to live this long, I would have taken better care of my body." That was Juran-always thinking in terms of improvement
    He lived life to its fullest; a prolific author of 13 books, he was working on a new textbook up until his death. He was also married to his wife, Sadie, for 81 years. She survives him, along with his children and grandchildren.
    QP pays homage to the "father of quality management" in this issue. You'll find a historical look at Juran's life and work, as well as photos and a timeline illustrating his greatest accomplishments. The tribute begins on p. 20.
    QP received dozens of letters, memories and tributes when people heard the news. Some excerpts from these letters appear within the tribute, and the full collection is posted at www.asq.org/juran/comments.html. Here's a taste of what the quality community had to say:
    * "Dr. Juran wrote that the purpose of the Institute is to improve the quality of society," said Joe De Feo, president and CEO of Juran Institute. "He said, 'Whatever you do, make sure it improves society. Don't just do it for the sake of profit.' A true leader is not just there to lead a company. They must have a purpose."
    * "Dr. Juran also changed many lives. He did so through his books, videos, recordings, papers and public addresses," wrote Rowland Blackiston, Juran's grandson-in-law. "He did so by simply striking up a conversation with a stranger at a conference."
    "He changed lives by setting an extraordinary example," Blackiston continued.
    "Through his deeds. His generosity. His wisdom. His unselfish focus on humanity."
    * "Quality in process, quality in control, quality in management. But, the most important is quality in life-the only way to reach a well lived 103 years," wrote Roger Chrispim.
    * And, from Joaquim Donizetti Donda: "Heaven will get better."
    As we say goodbye to Dr. Juran, it's fitting to close with a few of his own wordsthese from his 2004 autobiography, Architect of Quality:
    "So I have come to the end. I close this book with two messages. To those whose careers are in the field of managing for quality: thank your lucky stars, Your field will grow extensively during your lifetime, especially in three of our giant industries-health, education, and government There will be exciting opportunities for innovation and for service to society.
    "And, to my beloved family: when I am gone, let no one weep for me. I have lived a wonderful life."

    Joseph M. Juran 和 Peter Drucker

     Joseph M. Juran在紐約大學NYU工學院的行政工程/工業工程學系當系主任,1945-1950,到1951年改為兼任。
     據Juran之回憶錄,他利用探訪兒子的機會到 Peter Drucker的鄉下大學去拜訪他,並規勸他到大都會發展管理學。 Peter Drucker 於1950年到NYU企管學院GBA當管理學教授。

     Joseph M. Juran 在NYU期間,1946年起創產業界主管參加的"主管圓桌會議"12屆,每期10周,每周開會一次,學員15人。
    分3類:
    1. 品管、以品質改善、降低成本為主,Juran 任主持人。
    2. 工作簡化,生產力改善的核心工業工程技術,由大衛波特教授主持。
    3. 高階主管特別感興趣的議題,由 Joseph M. Juran 和 Peter Drucker共同主持。

    ----參考:
    The Architect of Quality: Joseph M. Juran, 1904-2008, McGraw-Hill
    品質創造大師朱蘭 / 約瑟夫.朱蘭(Joseph M. Juran)原著 ; 李芳齡譯
    臺北市 : 麥格羅希爾出版 ;, 2004[民93],第十九章 學術生涯,特別242-43頁


    值得注意的是,1964年出
    版的Managerial Breakthrough ,並沒有提到、引用Peter Drucker
    管理三部曲 / 朱蘭(J. M. Juran)著 ; 鍾漢淸譯
    臺北市 : 麥格羅希爾, 1997[民86]


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