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The Champion's Role In Successful Six Sigma Deployments
B For a Six Sigma deployment to produce the expected results, organizational roles and responsibilities must be clearly defined and aligned. If Executives and Champions are trained and Black Belts and Green Belts aren't, the probability of success decreases to virtually nothing. The reverse is true as well. None of these situations will produce the type of results that will occur when Six Sigma practitioners are placed in the correct support environment. The Six Sigma Support Structure Six Sigma Green Belts are critical to the process because they are the key to creating a culture shift. If the shift is attempted by training huge numbers of Black Belts, Black Belts will spend most of their time tripping over each other as they scramble to create the "number of projects" or "dollars saved" metrics imposed by management to motivate them. A popular theory is that in a change process, one-third is on the fence, one-third is holding back, and one-third is jumping at the new opportunity. These numbers will fluctuate based on the company culture. A conservative company culture will create more fence sitters and resistors. A dynamic company culture will increase the number of people jumping at the new opportunity. Before you can comprehend what the number actually is, you must understand the company culture. Green Belts, in the long run, are the ones who shift the culture. The relationship between Master Black Belts, Black Belts and Green Belts is well understood due to the intuitive nature of the titles. Getting just this much of the structure bolsters the success model. So what is the rest of the structure? In most organizations they are referred to as Champions. If you ask people what a Champion does, they will quickly reply, "they remove roadblocks." Superficially, that is true. Champions should remove roadblocks. Champions need to be in a position to defuse any issues that may arise between a Black Belt and another person in the organization, particularly if the issue is with someone with a higher formal position in the company. The Champion should be the buffer that keeps a Black Belt out of a head-to-head confrontation with Managers, Vice Presidents and Directors in the company, allowing Black Belts the freedom to focus on the problem, not engage in some inane territorial dispute. This is the most fundamental function of the Champion. The Extended Six Sigma Champion
1. Business and Operations Interface Many companies have invoked the Balanced Score Card to assure this alignment. It is a good tool to apply metrics to Champions. It can be used as a measurement tool to quantify the performance of Champions in this role. 2. Six Sigma Project Selection Again, alignment is the key. If the organization truly understands and practices alignment, project selection becomes less of a threat. Furthermore, if the alignment is augmented with process data it is an even easier task. The threatening question is defused to become a discussion of the alignment methods or the data that was used. The personal implications become a non-issue. 3. Pace Mediation One should also realize the risks associated with choosing an internal sponsor. The resulting plan will be a direct function of the sponsor's level of Six Sigma knowledge. Many organizations have taken to hiring an Internal Master Black Belt to lead the organizational charge. The risk here is the same as previously mentioned: if the total deployment experience is one deployment, they still have a limited scope. It is the basic calculation for a confidence interval using attribute data and a sample size of one - it is better than zero but probably not a significant difference. The optimum Six Sigma deployment plan is derived from a combination of an internal expert (Business, Six Sigma and Change) and the Six Sigma provider. Once a plan has been generated and sold at the C-Level it is difficult to modify. Internal people will rarely adjust the plan. Very few deployments are initiated with metrics that quantify the program's results and lead to a decision to accelerate or slow the program. Slowing a Six Sigma initiative too much may cause it to die - no sense of urgency will deprioritize any initiative regardless of which initiative it is. The real issue comes from a person or persons so committed to driving a plan that they see only completion as the success metric. Frequently these programs are quantified in terms of numbers of people trained. This will turn the focus from a results-driven program to a training program. When a plan is constructed it should have goals, specific targets that will increase customer success/satisfaction, competitive position, technology, etc. These should have metrics. Meeting or not meeting metrics should be analyzed, and adjustments should be made to the program. 4. Results Implementation When a project is completed it should have a calculated potential savings. The finance department of the organization, not the Six Sigma provider, should sign off on this number. The savings should not only have a financial measurement but should also be time bounded. That number represents a reduction in wasted resources for the organization. It is a metric that the Champion should be held accountable for. If a project identifies a $50,000 savings over the next 12 months and it produces only $25,000 because the Champion took six months to get involved in the implementation, then the metric should reflect the lack of involvement. If the plan was executed perfectly and the financial projection was inaccurate, a metric should be in place to reflect that inaccuracy. Just as with anything else, the metrics will drive the performance. If you want accurate projections and timely implementations, you had better place a metric on them. One of the biggest questions associated with Six Sigma project savings is "are they real." A decision to credit soft savings opens the door to exaggerations. The audit functions in place in companies today should be of a wide enough scope to assure the accuracy of these numbers whether they are from a Six Sigma deployment or any other program that uses cost savings as a metric. The audit function does not necessarily lie within the accounting or finance departments. The process of calculating savings may be well defined, documented and incorporated into some type of Quality System (Business System) audit. Some of the larger companies have internal auditors who have been given responsibility for the accuracy of these numbers as well. Summary Unless metrics are placed on all responsibilities of a Champion, the organization is placing the deployment at risk. Failure to execute these tasks at even a minimal level can and does propagate turnover of the people your organization spent valuable resources training. References About Mike Carnell Mr. Carnell spent twelve Quality Assurance years with Motorola's Government Electronics Group before working with Allied Signal Automotive's Six Sigma deployment. In 1996 Gary Reiner, CIO of General Electric, was placed in charge of the General Electric Six Sigma deployment and retained Mr. Carnell to assist in the training and deployment of Six Sigma. Mr. Carnell has worked at numerous companies including Compaq Computer, Borg Warner, and Hi-Tech Manufacturing. He has launched Six Sigma deployments at Siebe (Foxborough), GenCorp, Black and Decker, Navistar, Nokia, NEC, Libby Owens Ford, and Medtronics. More recently, deployments have been launched at Sumitomo Heavy Industries, RR Donnelly, Samsung, Hyundai, Acadia Polymers, Merck, Com Data and Heller Financial. About Scot Shank Reproduction Without Permission Is Strictly Prohibited Copyright Requests Publish an Article: Do you have a Six Sigma tip, learning or case study? Share it with the largest community of Six Sigma professionals, and be recognized by your peers. It's a great way to promote your expertise and/or build your resume. Read more about submitting an article. 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