Yearly Archives: 2026

ASQ Raleigh SIG meeting

SIG Meeting — February 12, 2026

ASQ Raleigh had its second Special Interest Group meeting at Frontier RTP on February 12. A small group of six people attended the meeting, including one new attendee, who became a member last year.

The ASQ Raleigh Section leadership team has been making effort to reverse the declining membership trend seen over the past few years, not just at the local section level but globally. It’s very important for us to understand how ASQ and ASQ Raleigh Section create value for our members and communities. The good news is that we have seen a significant increase in the recent Section membership (up by about 8%).

Since several attendees were on the Section leadership team, we naturally wanted to learn about the reason for the new member joining ASQ. What we learned was that their company was a startup and getting their product ready for the market, and they found ASQ as a good source of knowledge related to manufacturing, quality, regulation, and compliance.

Another attendee was not a member but interested in ASQ certification and career development. Participants shared their career lessons, including the importance of having mentors and being proactive in creating our own career paths.

We also acknowledged the change in the relationship between employee and employer in the past few decades. For example, it’s common to see people switch jobs every few years now, whereas the previous generation tended to stay with the same employer for decades. Switching jobs seems to be a more effective path to advance one’s career because few employers or managers are actively helping employees advance.

Our next meeting will be on March 12, 2026 at the same time and location. Hope to see you there!

ASQ Raleigh 2026 Quality in the Triangle Conference: Call for Proposals

Quality in the Triangle (QIT) – Oct 6, 2026, McKimmon Center, Raleigh, NC

Theme: Leading with Quality


In a fast-moving world, how do you best meet the moment?

From leveraging cutting-edge technology to mastering effective communication and fostering cross-functional collaboration, professionals like you are using quality tools and insights to thrive in an ever-evolving landscape. At QIT, you can connect with quality leaders, dive into fresh ideas, and discover bold new ways to drive meaningful, measurable impact for your organization. Join us to learn how to lead with Quality!

The 2026 Quality in the Triangle conference will offer actionable strategies and deep insights into organizational excellence, new or disruptive technologies, leadership and change management, and quality fundamentals. Attendees will come away with vital tools and tactics to affect change, increase value, and drive their organizations toward quality goals. We are looking for innovative, exciting, and knowledgeable education sessions focused on quality topics and initiatives for the 2026 QIT.

Below are some example topic areas:

  • Incorporating new techniques/technologies into your processes/systems
  • New or unique applications of existing tools and techniques
  • Managing the impact of innovation and disruptive technologies
  • Advocating for quality and quality programs with leadership
  • Moving beyond audit/compliance to drive improvement
  • Personal/career development and leadership skills

Call for Proposals:

Do you have a quality story or project that you would like to share? The QIT committee is accepting proposals for 1-hour concurrent sessions that fit with the theme of this year’s conference. To submit, write a summary to introduce your proposed topic and its learning objectives, and develop a high-level outline of your proposed presentation. Send this writeup to Stephanie Parker at stephanie.csd@gmail.com by April 17th to be considered for this year’s conference.

SIG Meeting — January 8, 2026

The first ASQ Raleigh Section open discussion meeting of 2026 was well attended, with 14 participants, several of whom were newcomers! Following the lively discussion on AI in quality at our December meeting, Chris Andrassy volunteered to lead a session on integrating AI into nonconformance investigations and reporting. We discussed his implementation in which data is collected, guided by AI, followed by AI analysis, suggested likely root causes, and report generation.

ASQ Raleigh SIG meeting
Chris Andrassy shares his thoughts

There was extensive discussion about the interaction and roles of humans and AI. While AI can provide consistency, efficiency, and sometimes insights, it can also make mistakes and requires human oversight. Is there an issue with “oversight fatigue”, where human experts don’t notice AI errors? One suggestion was to use the interaction between the AI agent and the human, in which the AI agent asks the human probing questions.

It seemed as though a similar capability could be created for change control.

It was noted that, as with other quality areas, a process needs to be established with valid data before automating it with AI. To analyze the problem and identify potential root causes, AI needs a sufficient volume of accurate historical data.

Tim Whetten