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Engineering LibreTexts

8.2: Quality Management Guide

  • Page ID
    124724
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    In project management, quality is the degree to which deliverables fulfill requirements and meet stakeholder expectations. It focuses on both the product (fit for purpose) and the process (consistency and efficiency). Quality should not be confused with grade, a high-grade product may not meet quality requirements, and vice versa.

    Quality in project management represents the degree to which deliverables fulfill specified requirements and meet or exceed stakeholder expectations. It encompasses both product quality, the features, functions, and characteristics of what is delivered, and process quality, the consistency and effectiveness of how work is performed. Quality is not about perfection or exceeding specifications; it is about conforming to requirements and being fit for purpose.

    A critical distinction exists between quality and grade. Quality refers to conformance to requirements; grade refers to the category or rank given to entities with the same functional use but different technical characteristics. A high-grade product (luxury features, premium materials) may have poor quality if it fails to meet specifications. A low-grade product (basic features, standard materials) may have excellent quality if it perfectly satisfies its intended purpose. A budget airline seat is low-grade but can be high-quality if it safely transports passengers as promised.

    Quality has multiple dimensions. Functional quality measures how well deliverables perform their intended functions. Reliability assesses consistency of performance over time. Usability considers ease of use and user experience. Conformance evaluates adherence to specifications. Durability measures operational life expectancy. Different stakeholders may prioritize different dimensions, making quality requirements inherently complex.

    Quality vs. Grade Example

    Consider two software applications. Application A has advanced features (high grade) but crashes frequently and has security vulnerabilities (low quality). Application B has basic features (low grade) but runs reliably and meets all security standards (high quality). Low quality is always a problem. Low grade may be acceptable if it meets requirements.

    The fundamental principle of modern quality management is that quality must be built in, not inspected in. Inspection finds defects after they exist; prevention stops defects from occurring. While both are necessary, organizations achieve better outcomes by investing in prevention and process improvement rather than relying solely on end-stage inspection to catch problems.


    8.2: Quality Management Guide is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.