In the part 1, I explained what process control plan is, and the benefits of a well developed Process Control Plan. In this part 2, I explained the three (3) levels of Control Plans, sources of information for the Plan and 11 simple steps to develop and implement the plan. This article serves as continuation of the Part 1 found here.
As a reminder, a Process Control Plan is a document that describes the steps such as measurements, inspections, quality checks or monitoring of process parameters needed at every phase of a process with the goal of assuring that the outputs from the process conforms to already determined requirements. The Plan provides operators or inspectors with the necessary information required to ensure that the process produce quality parts.
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Prior to completing the Control Plan, the team needs to determine the level appropriate for the process being controlled. There are three designations for a Control Plan level based upon what point the product is at in the New Product Development (NPD) process. These are:
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The information contained in the control plan can originate from several sources such as follows:
The Process Control Plan needless to say should be developed by a Cross Functional Team (CFT) with good understanding of how the process to be improved or controlled operates. This will help to identify more areas of improvement opportunities.
This is the first step of the development process. Ensure that everyone with relevant knowledge of the process is present to add values to the Plan. This should include a process engineer, R&D officer, QC personnel and someone in close contact with the customer(s).
Have a good idea of the process steps which might be clearly represented in a flowchart. This information goes into the left columns of the document.
At process FMEA can help a lot in pointing to high risks that need to be addressed. It is imperative for the team to have a good understanding of what the customer considers very important based on customer requirements.
Based on how critical a step is, and on the risks perceived, the team should decide what controls are appropriate for more efficient process. The team should be able to demonstrate to the management how to control risks in an efficient manner so as to be able to sustain the approach over time.
Checking a point on 100% of pieces requires more effort than “3 in 15 parts”, for example. An appropriate sampling method should be devised.
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Checking for the sake of checking should be discouraged. There have to be results. For instance, you might want to find out, are nonconforming parts really detected or are some conforming parts put aside? Asking these questions helps to determine the effectiveness of the measurement system applied.
Determine who will be primarily responsible for the application of the process control plan, and its adaptation over time as new risks, new issues, and new requirements appear.
Confirm who the team go to when a decision goes beyond them and needs to be made by a higher level of management.
The next stage is now to fill out the remaining columns of the draft. Train the personnel who would be responsible for implementing the Plan. Adapt the operators’ and inspectors’ work instructions. Observe, at least during a pilot run or a mass production batch how the Plan is being implemented.
Remember that the Process Control Plan is a living document and as such they should be constantly updated to accommodate new issues or customer requirements. Also, certain controls might be overly burdensome, poorly specified, lacking clear criteria etc. the review process will help to detect these. It is very important at this point to mention that every time the Plan needs to be revised, the corresponding work instructions and the changes should be communicated to the operators.
After the Plans are completed, there is need to gain buy-in with the operators, the management and all other people who will be directly or indirectly affected by the Plan. This can be done through communication.
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Adebayo is a thought leader in continuous process improvement and manufacturing excellence. He is a Certified Six Sigma Master Black Belt (CSSMBB), Digital Manufacturing Professional and ISO Management Systems Lead Auditor (ISO 9001, 45001 & ISO 22000) with strong experience leading various continuous improvement initiative in top manufacturing organizations.
You can reach him here.