A Quick Glance

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    Management skills that helps in getting high performance

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    Be the valuable Yellow Belt

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    Risk assessment skills that helps identify risks

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    Yellow Belt principles and methodologies

Performance is the powerful strength of an organisation. There is a wasteful use of resources during the implementation of the project. There is a need of a management approach that eliminates waste from project environment. Six Sigma is a management approach used for reducing waste by eliminating process variations. To improve your organisation’s performance, gain Six Sigma skills.

Our Six Sigma Yellow Belt course is inspired from successful Six Sigma business environments. It provides a basic understanding of Six Sigma concepts. You can start by gaining the following skills that the successful business environment has:

  • It implements Six Sigma principles: The success of the business relies on the implementation of these principles during project execution. You should gain deep knowledge on them.
  • It eliminates eight kind of Waste: Six Sigma is the management approach that removes waste from project environment.

Who should take this course

This training is designed for the following candidates:

  • Project Managers
  • Those willing to remove waste from their project environment
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Prerequisites

Six Sigma Yellow Belt course has no prerequisites.

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What Will You Learn

The purpose of this course is to acquaint you:

  • With Six Sigma Concepts
  • To identify risks in project environment
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What's included

  Course Overview

Six Sigma is a data-driven method for eliminating defects from manufacturing to transactional processes. This Six Sigma Yellow Belt course is designed to provide knowledge about DMAIC. It is Define, Measure, Analyse, Improve, and Control. You will get knowledge about project planning and management of risks in project environments.

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  Course Content

An Introduction to Six Sigma

  • What is Six Sigma as a Management philosophy?
  • Six Sigma Steps, Rules, and its Metrics
  • Define Effective teamwork
  • Related Case Study

Define Phase

  • What are Problem Statements?
  • Define Voice of the Customer (VOC)
  • Define Kano
  • Identify Critical to Quality

Measure Phase

  • What are measurement challenges?
  • What is the baseline of Process Performance?
  • Define Process Mapping and Value Stream Mapping

Analyse Phase

  • What is Exploratory Data Analysis?
  • Define Value Analysis
  • What are various types of waste?
  • The 5 Why’s of Root Cause Analysis and the Ishikawa diagrams

Improve Phase

  • Evaluating Improvement Solutions
  • Define Ease & Effect Matrix
  • An Overview of Risk Management

Control Phase

  • Improvement Maintenance
  • Measuring Ongoing process
  • An Overview of Statistical Process Control (SPC)

Conclusions

  • What is an example of Yellow Belt improvement?
  • Case Study (Financial Services)
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Six Sigma

What is Six Sigma?

Six Sigma means a degree of quality that tries for near excellence. Six Sigma is a disciplined, data-driven tactic and practice for removing defects in any process – from manufacturing to transactional and from product to service.

The term Six Sigma created from terminology connected with arithmetical demonstrating of manufacturing processes. The maturity of a manufacturing process can be defined by a sigma rating specifying its harvest or the fraction of defect-free products it generates. A six sigma procedure includes 99.99966% of all likelihoods to yield some piece of a part are statistically likely to be free of flaws. Motorola set a goal of six sigma for all of its industrial processes, and this goal suited a by-word for the management and engineering performs used to attain it.

Methodologies:

DMAIC:

The DMAIC project procedure has five phases:

  • Define the system, the voice of the customer and their supplies, and the project goals, exactly.
  • Measure key features of the current process and gather pertinent data then compute the Process Competence.
  • Examine the data to examine and confirm cause-and-effect relationships. Regulate what the relationships are, and try to guarantee that all factors have been measured. Pursue out root reason of the defect under examination.
  • Improve or enhance the current process created upon data analysis using methods such as the design of trials, poka yoke or mistake proofing, and normal work to make a new, future state process. Set up pilot runs to finding process competence.
  • Control the future state process to confirm that any nonconformities from the target are modified before they result in flaws. Implement control systems such as arithmetical process control, manufacture boards, visual workplaces, and unceasingly monitor the process. This process is recurrent until the wanted quality level is gotten.

DMADV:

  • Define design aims that are steady with customer stresses and the enterprise plan.
  • Measure and classify CTQs, measure product competencies, production processability, and measure risks.
  • Examine to develop and design substitutes
  • Design a better substitute, best right per examination in the previous step
  • Confirm the design, set up pilot runs, appliance the production process and hand it over to the process owner.

Implementation Roles:

Six Sigma classifies some key roles for its successful implementation.

  • Executive Leadership contains the CEO and other members of top management. They are accountable for setting up a vision for Six Sigma operation. They also authorise the other role containers with the freedom and resources to travel new ideas for advanced developments by exceeding departmental fences and overwhelming inherent confrontation to change.
  • Winners take accountability for Six Sigma operation across the organisation in a combined manner. The Executive Leadership lures them from the upper organisation.
  • Master Black Belts act as in-house trainers on Six Sigma. They offer 100% of their time to Six Sigma. They help Champions and guide Black Belts and Green Belts. Separately from arithmetical errands, they devote their time on confirming the reliable application of Six Sigma across various functions and sections.
  • Black Belts work under Master Black Belts to smear Six Sigma practice to precise projects. They offer 100% of their valued time to Six Sigma. They primarily emphasis on Six Sigma project execution and special leadership with special errands, whereas Champions and Master Black Belts focus on classifying projects/functions for Six Sigma.
  • Green Belts are the employees who take up Six Sigma execution along with their other job tasks, working under the direction of Black Belts.


Six Sigma Yellow Belt Enquiry

 

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Reach us at +44 1344 961530 or info@pentagonit.co.uk for more information.

About Coventry

Coventry is a metropolitan area in the West Midlands, England. Historically part of Warwickshire, Coventry is the 9th largest city in England and the 12th largest in the United Kingdom. It is the second largest city in the West Midlands region, after Birmingham, with a populace of 345,385 in 2015. Coventry is 95 much north-west of central London, 19 miles east-south-east of Birmingham, 24 miles south-west of Leicester and 11 miles north of Warwick. Coventry Cathedral was constructed after the annihilation of the 14th-century cathedral church of Saint Michael by the German Luftwaffe in the Coventry Blitz of 14 November 1940. Coventry motor companies have donated meaningfully to the British motor industry. The city has two universities, Coventry University in the City Centre and the University of Warwick on the southern outskirts.

Areas of Interest:

Cathedral:

St. Michael's Church is Coventry's best-known landmark and visitor place. The 14th-century church was hugely demolished by German bombing during the Second World War, part only the outer walls and spire. At 300 feet above, the spire of St. Michael's is appealed to be the third tallest church spire in England, after Salisbury and Norwich. Due to the architectural design, it lived the destruction of the rest of the cathedral. The new Coventry Cathedral was opened in 1962 next to the ruins of the old. It was reproduced by Sir Basil Spence. The cathedral covers the tapestry Christ in Glory by Graham Sutherland.

Cultural Institution:

The Herbert Art Gallery and Museum is one of the largest cultural organisations in Coventry. Another visitor attraction in the City Centre is the Coventry Transport Museum, which has the main group of British-made road vehicles in the world. The museum established a refurbishment in 2004 which comprised the creation of a new arrival as part of the city's Phoenix Initiative project. It was a finalist for the 2005 Gulbenkian Prize. About four miles from the City Centre and just outside Coventry in Baginton is the Lunt Fort, a reconstructed Roman fort on its original site. The Midland Air Museum is located just within the border of Coventry on land head-to-head to Coventry Airport and near Baginton.

Red Major Improvements endure renewing the City Centre. The Phoenix Initiative, which was deliberated by MJP Architects, stretched the final shortlist for the 2004 RIBA Stirling Prize and has now gained a total of 16 separate awards. It was available in the book ‘Phoenix: Architecture/Art/Regeneration' in 2004. Further major developments are potentially afoot, chiefly the Swanswell Project, which is envisioned to deepen Swanswell Pool and link it to Coventry Canal Basin, joined with the creation of an urban marina and a wide Parisian-style avenue. A possible second phase of the Phoenix Inventiveness is also in the offing, though both of these plans are still on the drawing-board. On 16 December 2007, IKEA's first city-centre store in the UK was opened, in Coventry.

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