The following obituary/tribute to W. Edwards Deming was written
by Jerry Bowles, editor of The Quality Executive, a monthly
newsletter on quality issues. It appeared in the January 1994
issue. Jerry Bowles is co-author of the book Beyond Quality and
the writer of FORTUNE magazine's annual quality supplement. For
a free sample issue of The Quality Executive, leave a message
with your name and address on the TQM BBS mail system or fax a
note to (212) 246-7916.
W. EDWARDS DEMING:
THE MAN AND THE LEGEND
In every field of endeavor there are people who are famous for
being unknown. W. Edwards Deming was the ultimate manifestation
of this peculiar art. From the moment of his "discovery" by
American management in an NBC television documentary in 1980
until his death last month on December 20, Deming never lost his
carefully cultivated image of an "outsider," the "prophet who was
ignored in his own country," an "antiestablishmentarian," who
liked nothing better than telling chief executives (and fellow
members of the quality establisment) what they were doing wrong.
In truth, he was the most famous quality guru in the world,
a man welcome in any boardroom or factory floor, deeply admired
by even those whose feathers he ruffled, which was pretty much
everybody.
He blamed management for most of America's ills but perhaps
his most revolutionary message to the managerial classes was his
fundamental belief in the competence of the average worker and
his or her willingness to work hard and work well, given an
environment in which the worker was permitted to think and
exercise control over quality. With "empowerment" now the rage
(if not necessarily the reality), that message has gained
widespread acceptance.
William Edwards Deming was born in Sioux City, Iowa, on
October 14, 1900. His father, a not-very-successful rural
attorney, was from Woodbury County, his mother from around Perry.
When he was 4, the family moved to a 300-acre farm near Polk City
owned by his grandfather. Two years later, the family moved to
Powell, Wyoming. Although his family was poor, Deming worked
hard ad received a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering
from the University of Wyoming and earned a master of science
degree in physics from the University of Colorado in 1924. He
taught physics at CU before and the Colorado School of Mines
before going to earn a Ph.D. in physics from Yale in 1927.
The early hardscrabble days left a deep impression on
Deming. Although he earned millions in fees in his later years,
he never lost his aversion to waste. He drove a 1969 Lincoln
Continential and took the bus or subway until he began needing a
wheelchair two or three years ago. He worked out of his modest
Washington, D.C., home in a basement office around the corner
from a washer and dryer. He had one full-time assistant, Cecilia
"Ceil" Kilian, who was with him for 39 years. When his health
permitted, he worked six days a week, usually 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
He used a felt tip pen to date the eggs in his refrigerator to
ensure the oldest were used first and no egg ever went bad.
In 1992, the University of Colorado announced the
establishment of a Deming chair. It was attributed to an
anonymous donor, but Richard Seebass, CU engineering dean, said
Deming endowed the $500,000 chair himself. "He didn't want to
be pestered for money," Seebass said.
Deming in Japan
Deming is generally credited with the post-war introduction of
quality concepts to Japan, although the reality is much more
complicated and there is considerable evidence that he learned as
much from Japanese thinkers like Kaoru Ishikawa and Taichi Ohno
as he taught them.
Indeed, one of the great myths of the modern quality
revolution is that it began with a series of eight lectures given
in Japan in 1950 by Deming. Deming had first gone to Japan in
1947 to help the U.S. Occupation prepare for the 1951 Japanese
census. While there, he met and socialized with a number of
members of the Japan Union of Scientists and Engineers (JUSE),
Japan's most important quality control organization, founded in
1946.
Deming biographers point in particular to a dinner at
Tokyo's Industry Club on July 13, 1950, in which he told the
presidents of 21 (in some interviews Deming says 45) leading
manufacturers that if they would only use statistical analysis to
build quality in their products, they could overcome their
reputation for shoddy quality within five years.
One might reasonably wonder why so many senior business
leaders turned up to hear an obscure Census Bureau statistician
deliver a lecture on an esoteric, effectively untranslatable
subject in a language that virtually none of them understood.
The answer is that both they, and Deming, had been invited
by Ichiro Ishikawa, a wealthy industrialist who, in addition to
being president of JUSE, had also served as the first president
of Japan's Keidanren, the Federation of Economic Organizations.
On the surface, FEO sounds like some sort of benign industry
trade group. In fact, it is an organization with the
power--sometimes exercised--to topple prime ministers and change
the course of the nation.
Set up in August 1946 under the aegis of the government and
the occupation, FEO is an all-inclusive, all-powerful
organization composed of more than 750 large corporations and 100
major national trade associations. It is the supreme
coordinating body of what Americans call "Japan, Inc.," and its
main purpose is "to maintain close contact with all sectors of
the business community for the purpose of adjusting and
harmonizing conflicting views and interests of the various
businesses and industries represented in its huge membership...It
is the front office of the business community and is in effect a
partner of the government."
In 1950, refusing an invitation from Ishikawa was about as
sensible as refusing a request from Don Corleone. It is
unlikely, however, that Ishikawa wanted the business leaders
there to be introduced to the concept of statistical quality
control, for the simple reason that statistical methods had been
introduced four years earlier and were already being widely
promoted in Japanese industry.
A more likely reason for Ichiro Ishikawa's Deming dinner is
that he wanted Japan's new industrial leaders to hear, from this
tall, loud, terrifying gaijin--a slightly derogatory word used to
connote anyone who isn't Japanese--what has been Deming's central
message for the past 60 years: that they--management--were the
problem, and that nothing would get better until they took
personal responsibility for change.
And on that score Deming delivered. In a speech in Tokyo in
November 1985, Deming recalled the dinner: "I did not just talk
about quality. I explained to management their
responsibilities... Management of Japan went into action, knowing
something about their responsibilities and learning more about
their responsibilities."
But, according to Kaoru Ishikawa, Ichiro's son, who would
become Japan's leading quality guru, the Japanese quality
movement made limited progress in the years immediately following
Deming's 1950 visit. And, despite his father's pivotal role in
bringing Deming to Japan in the first place, the younger Ishikawa
maintained a deliberate distance from Deming throughout his life.
In the Japanese edition of a book on Deming, Ishikawa noted that
Deming had borrowed many of the ideas for his famous Fourteen
Points (the first ten or so of which were written in the
mid-1960s, not--as is often assumed earlier) from Japanese TQC
and J. M. Juran. This heretical passage does not appear in the
English translation.
In fact, when Deming made his dinner speech on statistical
process control before Tokyo's Industry Club in the summer of
1950, SPC was already being widely promoted in Japanese industry.
It had been introduced as part of the post-war reconstruction
effort.
Shortly after Japan's surrender, the Civil Communications
Section (CCS) was established by the Allied Command to help
rebuild the country's telecommunications infrastructure. General
MacArthur urgently wanted Japan to mass-produce radios so that
Occupation authorities could reach every Japanese village
quickly. The section's small Industrial Division was assigned
to work with Japanese manufacturers of communications equipment,
whose products at the time were highly unreliable.
Except for Homer Sarasohn, who had worked as a radio product
development engineer at the old Crosley Corp. (now part of
Textron), the group's key engineers--W. S. Magil, Frank
Polkinghorn, Charles Protzman--had all worked at Western Electric
or Bell Labs, the birthplace of American quality control. Indeed,
it is Magil--not Deming--who is the father of statistical quality
control in Japan, having advocated its use in lectures in 1945
and 1946 and successfully applied its techniques to vacuum tube
production at Nippon Electric Company in 1946.
From 1945 to 1949, the CCS engineers worked on a variety of
projects, including establishing the Electrical Testing
Laboratory to certify that quality standards were being met,
advising Japanese business leaders on production management, and
generally upgrading working environments. During 1949-50,
Sarasohn and Protzman organized a series of eight-week courses on
industrial management to which only top executives in the
communications industry were invited.
Among the students were Matsushita Electric's Masaharu
Matsushita; Mitsubishi Electric's Takeo Kato; Fujitsu's Hanzou
Omi; Sumitomo Electric's Bunzaemon Inoue; Akio Morita and Masaru
Ibuka, the founders of what is now Sony Corp. The courses were
so popular that they continued for another 24 years after the
Allied command was disbanded.
Kaoru Ishikawa (the son of Ichiro, who had invited Deming
to speak) was familiar with statistical methods through the
Western Electric engineers' work at NEC and NTT and had been
influential in helping JUSE launch a magazine called Statistical
Quality Control several months before Deming's visit.
Deming's Real Contribution
This slightly revisionist history is unlikely to make Deming
loyalists happy, but his greatest contribution to the quality
revolution may well stem from two spectacular, and seemingly
accidental, public relations coups.
First, there are the prizes that bear his name. Knowing
Japan's poverty, Deming refused any payment for his 1950 lectures
and JUSE used the proceeds from reprints to create the Deming
Application Prize, a prestigious award given annually since 1951
to companies with outstanding total quality programs, following a
rigorous audit of their operations, and the Deming Prize, an
award given to outstanding individuals. The awards--medals
bearing Deming's likeness--are given each year with great fanfare
and attendant publicity.
Despite that measure of fame, Deming might well have
remained relatively unknown in his own country had he not been
"discovered" in 1980 by Claire Crawford-Mason, a veteran news
reporter and TV producer, who was putting together a documentary
on the decline of American competitiveness for NBC called "If
Japan Can...Why Can't We?"
At the suggestion of a faculty member at American University
in Washington, she looked up Deming in his basement office in
American University Park. She was amazed to find a man who
seemed to know the answer to the program's provocative question
living and working about five miles from the White House. Best
of all, from the viewpoint of a TV producer in search of an
exclusive, virtually nobody outside the rather arcane world of
quality control had ever heard of him.
"If Japan Can...Why Can't We?" aired on June 24, 1980. The
final 15 minutes were devoted to Deming and his consulting work
at Nashua Corporation, a New Hampshire manufacturer of carbonless
paper.
Among other things, Deming told the interviewer: "I think
people here expect miracles. American management thinks that
they can just copy from Japan. But they don't know what to
copy."
The show was one of the most successful business
documentaries ever, and it turned Deming into a celebrity
literally overnight. The next day, his office was bombarded with
phone calls. This was 1980, remember, and a lot of American
companies were looking for something--anything--that might help
them stem the tide of red ink.
Deming's message was a wake-up call for American industry.
Across the nation, the best senior executives heard the alarm.
Among the early callers was Ford, which credits Deming's
philosophy with spearheading its amazing comeback in the 1980s.
Besides Ford, notable Deming disciples include Kmart, Hospital
Corp. of America, and Florida Power and Light, the utility that
in 1989 became the first U.S. entrant to win the Deming Prize
for Overseas Companies, an offshoot of the Japanese annual award.
While Deming clearly did not "discover" quality or
"introduce quality to Japan," he did as much as anyone to
introduce quality to America, at a time when it needed the
message. He was the spiritual force behind the quality
improvement revolution that swept through thousands of American
manufacturing and service companies in the 1980s.
Someone once asked Deming how he would like to be remembered
in his native land. "I probably won't even be remembered," he
replied, adding after a moment's pause: "Well, maybe ... as
someone who spent his life trying to keep America from committing
suicide."
In retrospect, it seems obvious that Deming understood that
he could get his message across best by remaining an outsider.
The last time I saw him was two years ago on the 10:30 a.m
shuttle from Washington to New York. It was the morning the
Baldrige Awards were being given out in Washington and, as usual,
Mr. Deming was going in a different direction.
--J.G.B.
Tributes to W. Edwards Deming
"Dr. W. Edwards Deming was instrumental in guiding Ford Motor
Co. to a sharp focus on quality, not only in its manufacturing
processes, but in all of its operations,"
--Ford Motor Company.
"Dr. Deming stressed customer satisfaction without corporate
bureaucracy. To him, total quality management is a continuing
As such, Dr. Deming's teachings will continue to challenge all
companies that strive for excellence. That is a fitting legacy."
-- Stephen Frank
President
Florida Power & Light
"Dr. Deming's writings, his work and his personal tutoring made a
difference to me and had a major impact on the turnaround of
Xerox Corp. He had a tremendous influence on the whole business
world."
--David Kearns
Retired chairman
Xerox Corp.
"Deming had a few insights of enduring value for senior
managers. . . . When quality is poor, blame the system, not the
people, and management is the system. This was a revolutionary
concept. People used to say, hey, bad workers. Deming said, no,
bad system."
--B. Joseph White
Dean
University of Michigan business school:
"He was persistent and dogmatic. . . . He was impatient with
people who didn't understand that the quality process is hard
work, period. People have got to carve out time. It's a thinking
game. Quality improvement is a thinking game."
--Roger Milliken,
CEO
Milliken & Co.
"He had an enormous impact in Japan and a belated impact in this
country. Ed suffered terribly from a feeling of being rejected in
his own country; he was an exceedingly patriotic American."
-- Peter Drucker
"It was the threat from Japanese industry (which was following
Deming's) principles that woke U.S. companies up to TQM, rather
than Deming himself directly. It was our reaction to that
phenomenon that has stimulated us."
-- Thomas Murrin
Dean
Duquesne's A.J. Palumbo School of
Business Administration:
"He was terribly important in being a kind of a dual prophet.
He was critically important in the resurgence of Japanese
industry post-World War II. He was a kind of an icon there. They
would credit him as much as any other single person with their
industrial renaissance." Then "he became a leader in America's
resurgence. . . . He was a major figure in two continents."
-- David Halberstam
author of The Reckoning
"Deming stood for eminent rationality. He looked at things
rationally, he analyzed them rationally, and he advocated
rational measures for changing them."
--Shoshana Zuboff
author of In the Age of the Smart Machine:
"He made a significant contribution to all the people of Japan.
He will be long remembered and appreciated for his contribution
to the remarkable development of postwar Japan."
-- Seiichi Kondo
Counselor for public affairs
Embassy of Japan
Box
One More Time:
Deming's "14 Points for Management:"
1. Create constancy of purpose.
2. Adopt the new philosophy.
3. Cease dependence on inspection to achieve quality.
4. Cease doing business on the basis of price tag alone.
5. Improve constantly and forever the system of production and
service.
6. Institute training on the job.
7. Institute leadership.
8. Drive out fear so that everyone may work effectively.
9. Break down barriers between departments.
10. Eliminate slogans, exhortations and targets.
11. Eliminate numerical quotas.
12. Allow pride in workmanship.
13. Institute a program of self-improvement.
14. Put everybody in the company to work to accomplish the
transformation.