KaizenQ
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Quality glossary

Control plan

Control plans translate design requirements into concrete inspection and monitoring steps on the production floor.

They outline the sampling methods, measurement systems, and statistical process control techniques used to keep variability within specification.

Building an effective control plan

A control plan lists each process step, the critical to quality characteristics, the measurement method, sampling frequency, and reaction plan if results drift out of tolerance.

Cross-functional collaboration between engineering, production, and quality ensures the plan covers potential failure modes identified during development.

Living document, not a binder

Control plans should evolve with product revisions, supplier feedback, and lessons learned from the field.

Updates from FMEA findings often trigger new checkpoints or tighter reaction limits.

Control plans inside KaizenQ

Within KaizenQ, each checkpoint in an inspection template stores the specification, sampling plan, and escalation workflow defined in the control plan.

Dashboards highlight trends so engineers can refresh the document when process capability shifts.

Key takeaways
  • Control plans translate design intent into shop-floor monitoring steps.
  • They must be revised when risks change or new data emerges.
  • Embedding control plan logic into KaizenQ keeps inspectors aligned with engineering.

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