Malcolm
Baldrige National Quality Award
The Malcolm
Baldrige National Quality Award was created by Public Law 100-107,
signed into law on August 20,
1987. The Malcolm
Baldrige National Quality Award Program, responsive to the purposes
of Public Law 100-107, led to the creation of a new public-private
partnership. Principal support for the Malcolm Baldrige National
Quality Award comes from the Foundation for the Malcolm Baldrige
National Quality Award, established in 1988.
The Malcolm
Baldrige National Quality Award is named for Malcolm Baldrige, who
served as Secretary of Commerce from 1981 until his tragic death in
a rodeo accident in 1987. His managerial excellence contributed to
long-term improvement in efficiency and effectiveness of government.
The Findings and Purposes Section of Public Law 100-107 states
that:"
1. The
leadership of the United
States in product and process quality has been
challenged strongly (and sometimes successfully) by foreign
competition, and our Nation's productivity growth has improved less
than our competitors' over the last two decades.
2. American
business and industry are beginning to understand that poor quality
costs companies as much as 20 percent of sales revenues nationally
and that improved quality of goods and services goes hand in hand
with improved productivity, lower costs, and increased
profitability.
3. Strategic
planning for quality and quality improvement programs, through a
commitment to excellence in manufacturing and services, are becoming
more and more essential to the well-being of our Nation's economy
and our ability to compete effectively in the global
marketplace.
4. Improved
management understanding of the factory floor, worker involvement in
quality, and greater emphasis on statistical process control can
lead to dramatic improvements in the cost and quality of
manufactured products.
5. The concept
of quality improvement is directly applicable to small companies as
well as large, to service industries as well as manufacturing, and
to the public sector as well as private enterprise.
6. In order to
be successful, quality improvement programs must be management-led
and customer-oriented, and this may require fundamental changes in
the way companies and agencies do business.
7. several
major industrial nations have successfully coupled rigorous
private-sector quality audits with national awards giving special
recognition to those enterprises the audits identify as the very
best; and
8. A national
quality award program of this kind in the
United
States would help improve quality and productivity
by:
·
Helping to stimulate American companies to
improve quality and productivity for the pride of recognition while
obtaining a competitive edge through increased profits;
·
Recognizing the achievements of those
companies that improve the quality of their goods and services and
providing an example to others;
·
Establishing guidelines and criteria that can
be used by business, industrial, governmental, and other
organizations in evaluating their own quality improvement efforts;
and
·
Providing specific guidance for other
American organizations that wish to learn how to manage for high
quality by making available detailed information on how winning
organizations were able to change their cultures and achieve
eminence."
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