Quality Insights Blog
Practical guides, best practices, and industry expertise for manufacturing quality professionals.
Most manufacturers track defects. Far fewer track what those defects are actually costing them — not just in scrap, but in the rework labor, machine time, and inspection overhead that go with every unit that doesn't make it right the first time.
Statistical Process Control (SPC) is one of the most powerful tools in a quality engineer's arsenal — yet most manufacturers either underuse it or implement it in ways that generate data without generating insight.
Most manufacturers treat internal audits as a necessary evil — a box to check before the external auditor shows up. That mindset turns a powerful improvement tool into a compliance exercise that helps no one.
Overall Equipment Effectiveness (OEE) is the manufacturing industry's gold standard for measuring how well production equipment is actually being utilized. Understanding OEE exposes the hidden capacity that already exists in your facility.
Lean and quality management are sometimes treated as competing priorities — lean pushes for speed and waste elimination, while quality demands rigor and verification. In practice, they reinforce each other powerfully when implemented together.
Corrective and Preventive Action (CAPA) is arguably the most critical process in any quality management system. Done well, it's how organizations learn from problems and prevent their recurrence. Done poorly, it's an expensive bureaucratic exercise.
No matter how good your internal quality systems are, if your suppliers are sending you defective material, you have a problem you can't entirely control. A mature supplier quality program shifts that risk upstream where it belongs.
Document control is one of the most foundational elements of any ISO-certified quality management system — and one of the most commonly mismanaged. Version chaos, approval bottlenecks, and audit panics all trace back to inadequate document control.
If you supply components or assemblies to the automotive industry, you almost certainly need IATF 16949 certification. Understanding how it differs from ISO 9001 — and what additional requirements it imposes — is essential for any automotive supplier.