Lutz Krämer: For us, the digital Element Q is a market requirement and as such our benchmark for realizing software. The three dimensions of the element, namely integration, connectivity and collaboration, emphasize that quality is not a task for individuals. It is created through teamwork and naturally considers requirements from a normative point of view. Quality is created when all parties involved put it into practice.
Michael Flunkert: By doing so, we contribute to finding suitable answers for many questions on the future of quality management together. Until now, standards may have been met with too much attention to the aspect of formal safeguarding. If we focus on not being vulnerable, we are limited and artificially capped. Questions on how to improve or take trail-blazing steps would then just get ignored. And that would directly influence internal and external cooperations and the resulting work results.
Lutz Krämer: It is important to further develop and strengthen connected cooperation and networking. The strong position within the supply chain that results from cooperative partnerships may then be the decisive competitive advantage for a company in dynamically changing markets.
Michael Flunkert: Quality never dies. It is now more alive than ever and has always been one of the German mid-sized sector’s strong points. In the context of agility, the possibilities of digitalization and cooperative partnerships within the supply chain, quality is more important than ever. Meaning there is only one question we all must ask ourselves: Am I committed to quality or am I just assigning it to an IT system?
Many thanks for talking to us!
Comments
No comments