Amtec Hiring Guides

How to Hire Quality Managers in Sacramento

Amtec Hiring Guides

How to Hire Quality Managers in Sacramento

Current Environment

The field of quality is the discipline and practice of product and service quality assurance and control. In the field of software development, it is the management, development, operation, and maintenance of IT systems and enterprise architectures with a high-quality standard. This definition basically says that quality is “meeting or exceeding customer expectations.

Quality management is the discipline that creates and implements strategies for quality assurance in product development and production as well as software development. Quality directors focus on optimizing product quality, as defined by Dr. W. Edwards Deming.

History

The field of quality assurance in the United States was in direct response to a quality revolution in Japan following World War II. Japanese manufacturers converted from producing military goods for internal use to producing civilian goods for trade.

At first, the reputation of exported Japanese products was not good, and their goods were shunned by international markets. This led Japanese organizations to explore new ways of thinking about quality, implementing a “total quality” approach by changing the focus from improving products to improving organizational processes.

Now, quality assurance is part of most companies that are building products, including digital products and services.

How will Recruiting quality managers Help Your Company?

How will Hiring quality managers Help Your Company?

The hiring of a quality manager can affect both your existing team and your bottom line. A great one will be drawn to details, help with delegation, and help with communication – internally and externally.

Hiring a quality manager will ensure projects are completed properly and on time, according to quality standards, and are staffed appropriately. With a keen eye for detail, people in this role will help to identify when things are not being completed correctly and/or running properly. They will be able to identify existing problems and spearhead efforts to provide solutions. 

A great quality manager hire can help your business increase your reputation as your products will be of the highest quality and will not fail. The manager can also cut down on costs as they can streamline manufacturing processes.

Before we get to exactly how to hire the best quality manager, let’s review some of the details.

quality manager Details

Responsibilities

Quality managers ensure that an organization’s standards for its product or service are consistent. They focus on four main components: quality planning, quality assurance, quality control, and quality improvement. People in this role are focused not only on product and service quality but also on the means to achieve it.

People in this career use quality assurance and control of processes as well as products to achieve consistency. What a customer wants and is willing to pay for it determines quality. It is a written or unwritten commitment to a known or unknown consumer in the market. Thus, quality can be defined as fitness for intended use or, in other words, how well the product performs its intended function.

Quality managers are also responsible for the following duties:  

  • Collaborate with the upper management team to set quality benchmarks
  • Create standards in accordance with industry standards and customer expectations
  • Identify quality control processes to ensure criteria are met at all times
  • Execute tests to check final product adherence to the company standards
  • Record findings and relay this information to the production team
  • Brainstorm ideas to increase productivity and performance of the production line while maintaining accuracy in quality
  • Make crucial decisions in favor of cost-efficiency without compromising on quality
  • Oversee production to ensure conformity in final product processing

Looking for another position? View other positions we place in Sacramento, California.

Education

Employers prefer that quality managers have at least a bachelor’s degree. While the degree may be in any field, many quality managers have a bachelor’s degree in business administration or industrial engineering. Sometimes, production workers with many years of experience take management and total quality management-related classes to move up. At large plants, where managers have more oversight responsibilities, employers may look for managers who have a Master of Business Administration (MBA) or a graduate degree in industrial management.

Top Schools – US News & World Report rankings

Georgia Institute of Technology, Purdue University – West Lafayette, University of Michigan – Ann Arbor

Top Schools

  • Georgia Institute of Technology

  • Purdue University

  • University of Michigan

Salary Range

quality managers in the U.S.

$65k
Low
$115k
Average
$176k
High
274k

Total quality managers Employed in the U.S.

77.6%

Men

22.4%

Women

quality manager Salary Comparison

National

Quality managers are employed in various manufacturing industries, some of which are expected to have declining employment due to greater productivity. However, because quality managers are responsible for coordinating work activities with the goal of increasing productivity, they will continue to be needed in this capacity. Industries projected to add jobs for these workers include motor vehicle parts manufacturing, machine shops, and pharmaceutical and medicine manufacturing.

California

The average annual salary for quality managers in California was 124k in 2019. The hourly wage averaged $59.67.

For more detailed compensation information for quality managers in Sacramento, download our free compensation/salary report below.

Working in Sacramento

Do quality managers consider Sacramento, the state’s capital,  a good city for living and working? Here are a few things to keep in mind when you are recruiting for jobs in the city.

The city is located almost dead center in the diverse geography of California. It’s considered a just-right sized city (not too big, not too small) with just 500,000 residents, making it big enough to offer city life but small enough to not have the overcrowding issues of California’s bigger cities.

As the state capital, there are many more government and public sector jobs, so for those with an eye on working in the government sector or an adjacent industry, Sacramento has more employment opportunities than other locations.

Here are the top reasons for living and working in Sacramento.

Pros

    • Sacramento is one of the best cities for employment. Indeed ranked Sacramento as the #5 city in the country for job seekers based on average salary, the unemployment rate, projected job growth, and the local cost of living.
    • Lower cost of living. Although it’s about 5% higher than the national average, it’s less costly than California’s coastal cities. The median sale price for homes reached $460,500,  an increase of 10.9% year-over-year, but much lower than other California metro areas.
    • Recreation: The American River Parkway has more than a dozen parks along the water, and within a couple of hours, you can get your city fix in San Francisco, enjoy Napa’s famous wineries or explore Califonia’s incredible Yosemite.
    • Amtec helps build high-performance teams in Sacramento through its recruitment and staffing services.
    • History buffs love Sacramento. The discovery of gold here in 1848 shaped the future of the American West.

On the other hand, there are a few frequently cited downsides of living and working in Sacramento.

Cons

    • The weather. It’s pretty hot in Sacramento, with temps often climbing over 100 degrees in the summer.
    • Crime is a con for the area, although the Sacramento Bee reported that the violent crime rate in the region fell to its lowest level in 35 years during 2019.
    • Traffic. Compared with other cities, traffic is not terrible, but some complain it’s getting worse.
    • Limited public transportation, which contributes to the burgeoning traffic problems.

Current Weather

Not your city? View other cities where we place quality managers.

Demand for quality managers in Sacramento

Demand for quality managers in Sacramento

Quality managers will likely face strong competition for open positions, but those who have several years of experience and a bachelor’s degree in industrial management or business administration should have the best prospects. While competition can be fierce, once hired, candidates can expect to be well compensated.

The BLS estimates that the growth of positions in this field will be slower than average, but will still produce a net gain in positions over the next 10 years.

The supply of candidates and demand for open positions have a direct correlation to a company's ability to hire. Download a free Supply and Demand report for quality managers in Sacramento, California below.

How to Hire the Best quality managers

Finding and hiring the best quality manager candidates can save you money right away and well into the future.

The costs of making a bad hire are well documented. The cost can run as much as 30% of the employee's first-year earnings according to the US Department of Labor. Bad hires can cost a whopping $240,000 in expenses related to hiring, compensation, and retention per The Undercover Recruiter. 74% of companies who admit they've hired the wrong person for a position lost an average of $14,900 for each bad hire according to CareerBuilder. These statistics support our long-held position that behavioral questions are the best way to get to know your candidates and past behavior is the best indicator of future performance.

Recruiting Best Practices

The information below comes from the best practices Amtec uses for finding the highest quality candidates.

Defining the Position

When defining the role you are creating, we recommend a position profile to fully evaluate the position you are hiring for. You must decide if the engineer can work remotely or must work in California. If working in Sacramento is essential, make sure you include that in your job posting so candidates can decide how many miles they can commute.

How to Source the Best Candidates

When you are looking to source the best quality candidates for your open positions, make sure you have done the legwork to hire an "A Player". You can do this by making sure your company's perspective is aligned with the current market, you have taken into account the job responsibilities, as well as what type of characteristics you are looking for to fit your company culture. Then proceed to write a job posting to attract high-quality candidates.

Characteristics of quality managers

Although the goal of this position is ensuring overall quality, the job cannot impact an organization’s quality alone. Teach others the importance of quality and how low and high quality affects the organization. Invite experts to speak to and teach selected personnel about quality. The newly educated personnel can go to their respective departments and educate others on its importance. Implement monthly best-practice workshops to keep the organization updated on policy and procedure changes, quality programs the company implements, and the company’s quality measures.

How to Screen Candidates

You wrote a job posting, posted the position online, and received a lot more resumes than you’d bargained for! Next comes the enormous task of sorting through those resumes to eliminate the ones that are clearly not a good fit. Now, you have a stack of resumes for candidates who have potential. So how do you go about screening the remaining candidates?

It starts on the phone! As a recruiter, the goal of your telephone screening is to learn more about your candidates. You can confirm that they have the educational qualifications and relevant experience, but you also need to determine if they would fit into your company's culture. To make this job easier, use a system to consistently evaluate results. This way you can equally and objectively compare candidates and evaluate their "soft skills", like communication and thinking process. Download Amtec's Professional Assessment Questionnaire below to help with screening candidates.

Free Professional Assessment Questionnaire

An individually customized questionnaire that helps assess a candidate's competence with written communication skills, thinking processes, and other relevant skills.

How to Interview Candidates

At Amtec, we believe in the power of behavoral interview questions to go beyond the experience and skills listed on the candidate's resume. Although you will want to confirm in the interview that the candidate does indeed have the experience listed on their resume, your assessment needs to go much deeper than that. An interview using behavioral questions can help you determine how well the candidate will fit with your company culture.

Download Amtec's best practices on conducting super effective interviews to find the best candidates and fill your open jobs.

Behavioral Interview Guide

Get the info you need to hire the best quality managers

Free Interview Guide