From Serebra Learning Corporation
Six Sigma Reducing Variation to Improve Quality 
What, do you expect everything to be perfect? How would you respond if one of your employees said that to you? You might consider saying, "
Well, yes " In fact, striving for near perfect quality is reasonable and achievable. It's a matter of reducing variation through the use of
Six Sigma. "
Variation," or deviation from what the customer wants, may be inherent in the business world, yet by
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Six Sigma Listening to the Voice of the Customer 
Let the buyer beware. That old business maxim of caveat emptor once struck fear in the hearts of many wary consumers. Now there's a new reality:
Competition for consumer attention is intense across all industries and markets, so now it's the company itself which is being admonished to beware. That means businesses should be looking for the best way to gauge what its customers really need and want.
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Six Sigma DMAIC Analyzing the Data 
There's one thing that doctors, mechanics, and detectives sometimes share in common--getting to the source of something that's gone wrong in a system. Things go wrong in business systems too, and to get at the source of the problem, you have to dig down deep. This course is all about making sure
Six Sigma Green belts and team members dig deep enough, to where the solutions are simplest. In order
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Six Sigma DMAIC Analyzing the Process 
Imagine the perfect cup of coffee--it tastes and smells great, it's served at exactly the right temperature, and, best of all, it satisfies you every time. Because it's perfect, you find yourself returning again and again to the cafe that sells it. The perfect cup of coffee--or the perfect product or service--is what
Six Sigma is all about. To achieve Six Sigma, a product or service has to be 99.9
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