The Ice Cream Maker
An Inspiring Tale About Making Quality The Key Ingredient in Everything You Do
In The Ice Cream Maker, Chowdhury uses a simple story to illustrate how businesses can instill quality into our culture and into every product we design, build, and market. The protagonist of the story is Peter Delvecchio, the manager of a regional ice cream company, who is determined to sell its ice cream to a flourishing national grocery chain, Natural Foods. In conversations with the Natural Foods manager, Peter learns how the extraordinarily successful retailer achieves its renowned high standard of excellence, both in the services it provides its customers and in the foods it manufactures and sells. Quality, he discovers, must be the mission of every employee; by learning to listen, enrich, and optimize, he can encourage and sustain the highest levels of quality in everything the company does.
Like Fish! and Who Moved My Cheese? The Ice Cream Maker offers an essential and universal lesson about one of industry's foremost challenges in a thoroughly engaging style. For managers and executives, small business owners and entrepreneurs, The Ice Cream Maker is a compelling, eye-opening guide to the most effective ways to achieve excellence and become industry leaders on the global stage.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
October 4, 2005 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780385516853
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9780385516853
- File size: 830 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
October 3, 2005
Pete, hero of this rapturous business novella, manages an ice cream factory where "the low hum of mediocrity filled the air...like an offensive odor." Desperate to boost margins, Pete makes a sales call to the local Natural Foods grocery store, where he is amazed by "how clean and fresh, warm and welcoming the store was," by the cheerfulness of the employees, and by charismatic store manager Mike, who expounds legendary Natural Foods founder Glen Goodwill's philosophy of putting quality before profit. "Mike...I need help," Pete sobs, in the throes of a conversion experience, "tell me what I can do to make quality a part of our culture." He learns to empower his workers, listen to customers and obsessively measure every detail of production processes with an eye to continuous improvement. Soon lumpy texture and leaky cartons are a thing of the past, profits soar, Pete is promoted to company president and he even applies Mike's teachings to enhance the quality of his marriage and parenting. Chowdhury, author of The Power of Six Sigma, extends Total Quality Management from a managerial program into a journey toward spiritual redemption. He conveys its principles through a smattering of process-engineering argot ("we reduced tolerance of variables on our mix-ins to .1 grams and the depth of each tub to two millimeters"), golf and football parables, and cultic incantations like "you have tilled the soil, to prepare it for the seed of quality." Although less than convincing as a motivational tract, this book provides a readable, if sketchy, introduction to TQM precepts. -
Library Journal
October 15, 2005
This brief but timely volume provides much-needed advice and insight into improving quality in American business practices. Chowdhury (CEO, ASI Consulting Group; "The Power of Six Sigma") offers a parable in which the manager of an ice cream manufacturing company learns from a successful grocery retailer how success is achieved. Through a fascinating dialog between the two men, readers will learn about the -Listen, Enrich, and Optimize (LEO) - concept. Chowdhury, an internationally known management and quality consultant, drives home the important point of building and providing quality in every aspect of the organizational culture to establish and retain a position in the global market. He also reaffirms the idea that -the bottom line in quality is defined by the customer. - For a company to be successful, its products must meet customers' expectations, performing as promised, even exciting or delighting the customer. Small-business owners/managers and business students and faculty will all learn from this practical parable with the moral that in the long run -quality is cheaper -& -than good enough.' -" -Susan C. Awe, Univ. of New Mexico, Albuquerque"Copyright 2005 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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