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14 March 2008 by Robin Barnwell
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ASQ CSSBB

In January I looked through the ASQ body of knowledge (BoK) for Black Belt and said to myself, “I know most of this stuff now”. So put in my entry and passed the Mar’08 exam. I thought I would share the experience, as I believe a number of practitioners may have looked at the ASQ exam.

Get a good foundation
I reviewed the ASQ exam a couple of years ago and concluded I did not have the experience to guarantee a pass. So waited until I had delivered the projects, trained the Black Belts and invested my spare time in learning the tools. After all this I decided I had the right foundations in place. ASQ recommend three-years work experience and that seems about right.

Find what you don’t know
Reading through the BoK and doing the sample exam I identified clear areas of weakness. Coming from a Transactional background, there were manufacturing areas I had never covered in particular around Measurement Systems and Design of Experiments.

Invest the time in preparation
I went through every section of the BoK. Be ready for set-piece questions that require calculating from equations, things like confidence intervals and probability. If you are used to having Minitab do the work, practice doing the equations. I invested in the QCI Exam CD and although I found some of the questions infuriatingly ambiguous it does help.

On the day
The exam is open book and covers 150 questions over 4 hours so it’s a bit of a slog. I found my collection of books & materials were good enough and included Six Sigma, Lean, DFSS, Statistics and quick-reference books. I found I needed to refer to all of these during the exam.

Next Steps
I found the brief review of the industry greats, Deming, Juran, Ohno &Taguchi whet my appetite and am keen to learn more. Now I have covered the BoK I am ready to move on and am looking now at understanding the big-picture stuff like strategy planning, target operating model and other related areas

Good luck if you are planning to gain ASQ, let me know if any questions.

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General , Lean , Methodology
posted by Robin Barnwell  at  11:46 AM ET | comments [7]


BLOG COMMENT

posted by  Sue Kozlowski 17 March 2008 at 8:34 AM ET
Hi Robin, thanks for your post. I had the same concerns as you did initially, that I didn't have enough knowledge or experience to take the exam (even after several completed projects). Coming from healthcare, I didn't have a comfort level with the manufacturing-oriented questions, and very little experience with statistical analysis for data with a normal distribution.

I found the ASQ review course to be very helpful - although pricey, my employer paid for it as continuing education. The statistics review and information on topics like DOE and "Jo blocks" was extremely valuable.

Congratulations on passing your exam, and thanks for the good advice for others interested in taking it.
 


posted by  Robin Barnwell 17 March 2008 at 10:41 AM ET
Hi Sue,

Lucky "Jo blocks" didn't come up on the exam, I just about managed to work out the different types of gauges, let alone other names. I was happy with the stats side and am comfortable working with numbers.

I had to finance myself through the exam and am hoping it will benefit my career.

Regards
Robin

 


posted by  Yatin 24 March 2008 at 1:12 AM ET
Hi All, I am from India and working in BPO and preparing for ASQ Black Belt exam. but am doing my project outside my ofc. as in ofc. i don't have exposure to six sigma projects.I would like to know future opportunities in Six Sigma Field. in india/abroad. thanks. Yatin.
 


posted by  Robin Barnwell 25 March 2008 at 4:34 AM ET
Hi Yatin

Best to luck with the preparation. A word of caution, the ASQ look for practical projects as part of the entry criteria. Being a theoretical black belt may be a problem.

Lots of opportunities on the job-boards.

RB
 


posted by  Troy Worman  [ http://processgeek.com ] 28 March 2008 at 4:22 PM ET
Kudos and congrats!
 


posted by  Vandana 24 April 2008 at 2:28 AM ET
Hi Robin, i want to know what books and reference material you have used as i will be attempting ASQ in Oct.
 


posted by  Robin Barnwell 25 April 2008 at 12:52 PM ET
Hi Vandana

I worked through the ASQ body of knowledge and researched every section. I did a lot of internet research and worked through the relevant materials in my core reference books below:


  • Forrest Breyfogle - Implementing Six Sigma

  • Tom Luyster and Don Tapping - Value stream Management

  • Michael George - Lean Six Sigma Pocket Toolbook

  • Fleming and Nellis - Principles of Applied Statistics



Best of luck.
Robin
 

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