The best Six Sigma black belt handbook has been fully revised, updated, and expanded! This third edition has been updated to reflect the most recent ASQ Six Sigma Black Belt Body of Knowledge (BOK), released in 2015. Among the many additions are: more exercises, particularly to address the more difficult concepts; new tables and figures to clarify concepts; new content between the DMAIC parts of the book (that is, Parts IV-VII) to help smooth the transition between phases and to better relate the underlying concepts of the DMAIC methodology; and more content that ensures that the black belt is fully trained in concepts taught to the green belt. The primary audience for this work is the individual who plans to prepare to sit for the Six Sigma black belt certification examination. A secondary audience for the handbook is the quality and Six Sigma professional who would like a relevant Six Sigma reference book. The accompanying CD contains 180 supplementary problems covering each chapter and a 150-question simulated exam that has problems distributed among chapters per the scheme published in the BOK. New to this edition, the problems are now fully worked so that readers can more readily follow the problem-solving process.
The book is having some errors and everyone knows that but I believe that the book is a good reference for Six sigma black belts for most of the subject, you will need some extra references regarding statistics and Lean principals to master all the topics needed and as advice if you are going for the Exam of CSSBB study from the quality council of Indiana six sigma primer I read both books and passed the exam in 2015
The layout of the handbook is very organized; however, it was not enough in order to understand all the needed concepts for the Black Belt Level. Depending on your previous educational background and experience, you may need to study other books about statistics, quality management and project management. The other great resource that helped me was the preparation kit from the Quality Council of Indiana. You may still need to get quick information about certain areas such as Design for Environment, Test of Hypothesis and other difficult topics for which I found YouTube was very helpful. As you may know, there are different ways to get a Six Sigma certificate and there are different levels, i.e. yellow belt, green belt, black belt and master black belt. If you are doing this exam after getting a Green Belt certificate, you will feel that some parts are just repeated from the previous Certified Six Sigma Green Belt Handbook. As a final note, there might be some errors in the handbook so be careful and double check with other Six Sigma and statistics professionals whenever you have doubts about certain formulas and solved examples.
There were so many errors in the book between formulas and examples. For a subject matter that focuses on quality either the publisher or Mr. Kubiak and Benbow missed the mark. By the end, I did not trust any example and ended up purchasing Juran's Quality Handbook and Implementing Six Sigma by Breyfogle to corroborate the Certified Six Sigma Handbook.
I passed the test after using this book to prepare for the Black Belt exam, but I think this book could use a bit of improvement. It was a weird mix of topics that were easy and common sense like team building, project management 101, as well as more complex math/statistics topics. I liked the examples, but some were too high-level, like "just plug the numbers to Minitab software" instead of explaining the logic behind formulas, concepts or what the results mean in practice. The latter one was especially missing - it would have been good to tie these examples to real life meaning. Also, the order of certain topics was off - mid way through the book I found myself wondering about certain terms and definitions only to later find them closer to the end of the book. By the way, there were sections in the book that were given for reference only and were not to be tested for during the exam. In reality, I've had two questions where the info from these sections was used for an answer. Overall, this book will prep you, but I did expect more quality from the book that teaches you about it.
I really loved the Book especially the way they have explained all critical aspects of Six Sigma with some perfect and simple examples. I highly recommend it to anyone who is into Manufacturing.
Incredibly dry, but very complete textbook on the subject. A must-read for any Black Belt (to be), but it's recommended to read some lighter material as well to put things into perspective. This book is very 'math-focused', meaning it covers every single bit of the analytical theory, but is not exactly a practival handbook. For that I strongly recommend the Lean Six Sigma Toolbook.