A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
V
Validation: The act of confirming a product or service meets the
requirements for which it was intended.
Validity: The ability of a feedback instrument to measure what
it was intended to measure; also, the degree to which inferences
derived from measurements are meaningful.
Value added: A term used to describe activities that transform
input into a customer (internal or external) usable output.
Value analysis: Analyzing the value stream to identify
value added and nonvalue added activities.
Value engineering: Analyzing the components and
process that create a product, with an emphasis on minimizing
costs while maintaining standards required by the customer.
Value stream: All activities, both value added and nonvalue
added, required to bring a product from raw material state into the
hands of the customer, bring a customer requirement from order to
delivery and bring a design from concept to launch. Also see
“information flow” and “hoshin planning.”
Value stream loops: Segments of a value stream with boundaries
broken into loops to divide future state implementation into
manageable pieces.
Value stream manager: Person responsible for creating a future
state map and leading door-to-door implementation of the future
state for a particular product family. Makes change happen across
departmental and functional boundaries.
Value stream mapping: A pencil and paper tool used in two
stages. First, follow a product’s production path from beginning to
end and draw a visual representation of every process in the material
and information flows. Second, draw a future state map of how
value should flow. The most important map is the future state map.
Values: The fundamental beliefs that drive organizational
behavior and decision making.
Variable data: Measurement information. Control charts based
on variable data include average (X-bar) chart, range (R) chart, and
sample standard deviation (s) chart (see individual listings).
Variation: A change in data, characteristic or function caused by
one of four factors: special causes, common causes, tampering or
structural variation (see individual entries).
Verification: The act of determining whether products and services
conform to specific requirements.
Virtual team: Remotely situated individuals affiliated with a
common organization, purpose or project, who conduct their joint
effort via electronic communication.
Vision: An overarching statement of the way an organization
wants to be; an ideal state of being at a future point.
Visual controls: Any devices that help operators quickly
and accurately gauge production status at a glance. Progress
indicators and problem indicators help assemblers see when production
is ahead, behind or on schedule. They allow everyone to
instantly see the group’s performance and increase the sense of
ownership in the area. Also see “andon board,” “kanban,” “production
board,” “painted floor” and “shadow board.”
Vital few, useful many: A term Joseph M. Juran used to
describe the Pareto principle, which he first defined in 1950. (The
principle was used much earlier in economics and inventory control
methods.) The principle suggests most effects come from relatively
few causes; that is, 80% of the effects come from 20% of the
possible causes. The 20% of the possible causes are referred to as
the “vital few;” the remaining causes are referred to as the “useful
many.” When Juran first defined this principle, he referred to the
remaining causes as the “trivial many,” but realizing that no problems
are trivial in quality assurance, he changed it to “useful
many.” Also see “eighty-twenty (80-20).”
Voice of the customer: The expressed requirements and expectations
of customers relative to products or services, as documented
and disseminated to the providing organization’s members.
Voluntary standard: A standard that imposes no inherent
obligation regarding its use. |