CTQ in Phone Quality Inspections
CTQ (Critical to Quality) methodology for mobile phone inspection — identifying key quality attributes that determine whether a phone lot meets buyer's requirements.
CTQ (Critical to Quality) in phone inspection identifies the specific characteristics that must meet buyer specifications. For wholesale phones, key CTQs are: screen condition and grade, battery health percentage, housing cosmetic grade, IMEI clean and unlock status, functional test results (cellular, Wi-Fi, cameras, buttons, charging), and regional variant compliance. CTQs are agreed in the purchase order and measured during AQL pre-shipment inspection.
What CTQ Means in a Trade Context
CTQ — Critical to Quality — is a methodology originating in Six Sigma that identifies the specific attributes of a product that directly determine whether it meets a customer’s requirements. The principle is that not every characteristic of a product matters equally; only a subset of attributes drives acceptance or rejection. Defining those attributes precisely, and setting measurable thresholds for each, is the core of CTQ practice.
In wholesale phone sourcing, CTQ provides a structured way to translate a buyer’s requirements into an inspection brief that a third-party inspector can act on without ambiguity.
The CTQ Tree: From Requirement to Measurable Threshold
The CTQ tree is a three-level translation tool:
| Level | Question | Phone example |
|---|---|---|
| Voice of Customer (VoC) | What does the buyer need? | ”Phones must be resalable” |
| Quality Driver | What category makes that true? | Functional integrity, cosmetic grade, network status |
| Measurable CTQ | What is the specific, testable attribute? | Battery health ≥ 80%, IMEI clean on carrier databases, display grade A or B |
The VoC is captured from the purchase order, buyer conversation, or market standard. Each driver breaks down into one or more CTQs. Each CTQ must have a defined threshold — a pass/fail line — otherwise it cannot be inspected consistently.
Top CTQs for Phone Inspections
The following attributes represent the core CTQ set for used/refurbished phone lots:
| CTQ | Typical threshold | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| IMEI status | Not blocklisted on any carrier database in target market | Blocklisted units are unsalable in most markets |
| Battery health | ≥ 80% (iOS: Settings readout; Android: diagnostic app) | Below 80% reduces device lifespan and resale value materially |
| Display condition | Grade A (no cracks, no dead pixels, minimal scratches) or A/B per agreement | Display is the highest-value replaceable component and the first thing end buyers inspect |
| Chassis grade | Defined cosmetic grade (e.g., Grade A: no visible damage; Grade B: minor scratches only) | Sets expectation for end-buyer resale channel |
| Functional test pass | All core functions tested: call, data, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS | Non-functional units require repair cost that affects margin |
| Charging port | Charges and syncs without intermittent connection | High failure rate on used stock; repair cost is disproportionate to unit value on budget models |
| Camera (front and rear) | Auto-focus operational, no lens damage, video records | Camera failure is a common rejection trigger for retail-grade refurb |
| Biometrics | Face ID / fingerprint sensor functional | Increasing proportion of buyers require biometrics for resale; affects grading tier |
| iCloud / Google account lock | Device activation-unlocked, no FMiP / FRP lock | Locked devices are effectively bricks for most buyers |
Defining CTQ Thresholds in a Purchase Order
Thresholds must be written into the PO or the associated quality agreement before goods are produced or shipped. Verbal agreements are not enforceable at inspection. A practical CTQ clause in a PO reads:
Battery health: minimum 80% as reported by iOS Settings or approved diagnostic tool. Units below 80% are rejected and must be replaced or credited at agreed per-unit rate.
Each CTQ should specify: the attribute, the measurement method, the pass threshold, and the remedy for failure (replacement, credit, price adjustment). If the inspector uses a different diagnostic tool than agreed, results become disputable — specify the tool by name where possible.
Using CTQs in Third-Party Inspection Briefs
When commissioning an inspection through a third-party service (SGS, QIMA, Bureau Veritas, or a specialist phone inspection firm), the CTQ list becomes the inspection checklist. Inspectors work through the list on a sample of the lot — typically AQL Level II — and report pass/fail rates per CTQ.
A well-formed brief includes:
- The CTQ list with thresholds (as above)
- Sample size and AQL acceptance level per defect class
- Whether each CTQ failure is a critical, major, or minor defect (critical = automatic lot rejection; major = counted against AQL limit; minor = noted only)
- Required documentation: photos of failed units, IMEI list with database check results, battery health screenshots
Common CTQ Mistakes
Setting too many CTQs. An inspection brief with 20 CTQs becomes unmanageable; inspectors spend time on low-stakes attributes and miss critical failures. Restrict the CTQ list to attributes that, if failed, would cause the buyer to reject or reprice the lot. Cosmetic preferences that do not affect function belong in the grading specification, not the CTQ list.
No measurement method specified. “Good condition” is not a CTQ. “Grade B or better per the agreed cosmetic grading scale” is.
Threshold set after inspection. CTQ thresholds must be agreed before inspection begins. Attempting to adjust thresholds based on what the inspector found is a dispute trigger.
Ignoring market-specific blocklist databases. A phone clean on one country’s blocklist may be blocked in the target market. Specify which databases to check: GSMA IMEI DB, Swappa, eBay VPP, carrier-specific (e.g., T-Mobile, AT&T for US-bound stock).