February 4, 200917 yr Hi All,I work for an ITES in a BPO environment for one of the Tech processes.I plan to run a project on C-SAT. following are the challenges:1. I have historical data of 12 months.2. C-SAT is sent to customers on random basis, so its just 3-5% of thetotal volume that we support.3. My understanding is that this should be treated as "Discrete data".Please correct me if am wrong.4. Customer support process involves support from other outtask teamsas well.Thanks all, B PandayThe above discussion was started by B Panday on YAHOO GROUPS
February 4, 200917 yr Author Past responses to the above discussion is posted below. PASTED BELOW FROM YAHOO GROUPS Re: [benchmarksixsigma] Suggestions invited hey, Nice to see you work on C-SAT . Would just wana let you know my experience and understanding C-SAT is a very huge ( vast area ) for a green belt project as its not only one department involved so it is a BB project . The sample size you are talking about is very less 3 -4 % so a true RCA cannot be done on it . I would suggest you to pick up a factor that impacts the most on C-SAT and start a project on that . Others please share your thoughts. Regardsrohit bhardwaj Re: Suggestions invited Hi You can calculate the sigma level for C-Sat's in the following manner: Defects (D): # of dissats receivedUnit (U): # of total surveys replied to by the customer (Sats plusdissats)Opportunity for error: 1 (Either the survey will be a sat or a dissat)Total Opportunity: Opportunity x UnitDefects per opportunity(DPO): Defects / Total OpportunityDPMO: DPO x 1 millionSigma Level (z): Find corresponding sigma level from the z tables Let me know if you require any further explanation in regards torunning a six sigma project for CSI. RegardsShahzad Re: [benchmarksixsigma] Suggestions invited if 3-5% sample is gppd enough( more than 30 data points) but make sure that customers are selected on ramdom basisto avoid skewness in the data. you can treat this data as cotinuous and move forward. Thanks Manoj Singh Re: Suggestions invited You can determine the number of samples you need to do your analysis.In order to do this, you will need to determine the following: a) What is your overall Population Size (N). What level of confidence do you want in your analysis. Typically,this is 95%. This corresponds to Z = 1.96c) What is your margin of error in your analysis. For example, ifyour margin of error (ME) = 4% and your reported CSAT = 80%, then youare 95% sure that the true value of CSAT lies between 76% and 84%. Based on the above inputs, the number of samples you would need is: SS = [(Z^2*0.5*0.5) + ME^2]/[ME^2 + Z^2*0.5*0.5/N] If N is very large, then the last term in the bracket will be closeto zero. For the above example, the required sample size would be: SS = [(1.96^2*0.5*0.5) + 0.04^2]/[0.04^2] = 601. So, you would need at least 600 samples. As noted earlier, make surethat the samples are random and truly unbiased. Hope this helps, SJ.
March 30, 201313 yr Hi, This is further to Shahazad's reply. We can also consider each parameter in the survey. Unit - Each survey repliedOpportunity: 1 - Each parameter answered in each surveyDPU - No. of Defective units/Total no. of SurveysTotal Opportunities: No.of parameters in each survey * Total No.of SurveysDPO - No.of parameters scored less than agreed rating/Total opportunites This approach will give more specific area to concentrate for improvements. Hope this helps...
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