I noted over a period of years, a persistent reported problem in supplier defect data. One of the top 5 problems every month was related to incorrect part marking. The rejection may have been called ‘wrong part received’, ‘wrong part number sent’, ‘wrong PO number’, ‘paperwork does not match part’, or other. This rejection category was often the #1 supplier defect month-to-month, it was always in the top 5, and was typically the #1 defect code when data was totaled for the year. It did not matter what quality system was in place at the suppliers (ISO, QS, MIL, or other) if a supplier had the problem at all it was typically a repeat problem. Supplier Corrective actions had been ineffective at stopping the problem and I was at a loss as to what to do to significantly reduce the number of occurrences. The typical SCAR (Supplier Corrective Action Request) reply was that the supplier had instructions in place to check the part number and revision of the part, they attributed the problem to operator error, mixed paperwork, mixed factory order packets, etc. and took ‘action’ to prevent the problem. However, the problem persisted, it would typically dip for a time when a concerted effort was directed at the supplier, but it seemed to always come back. Finally, I took the time to do some benchmarking and examined data to find suppliers that did not have problems with shipping us the wrong part number. In some cases it may have been purely a result of ‘luck’ or dedicated personnel that was the cause of not shipping us wrong part number since I could find no significant difference in their systems as compared to others. I finally came across a supplier that had taken effective corrective action a couple of years before and had eliminated the problem. Both their data and mine showed that they had not had a problem with mis-marked parts for the two years since. It had become simply a non-issue for them. I had a chance to visit their facility and look closely at their method. They had been using the method so long that they were curious that I would find it interesting.