Revised for 2014
Quality
Management
Systems
Guide
Guiding your organization to excellence in all the
dimensions important to your business and customers
Tim Landerville, President,
Isocert Solutions, LLC
New for 2014
Risk, Software,
and an
overview of
the proposed
changes to
ISO9001to be
released
September
2015
Table of Contents
1.
Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 2
2.
How Did It All Start? ......................................................................................................................... 3
Breaking down barriers between departments ............................................................................. 4
3.
Defining Quality Management .......................................................................................................... 4
4.
How Are ISO STANDARDS developed and revised? ...................................................................... 5
5.
The ISO Family ................................................................................................................................ 6
6.
Quality Management System Mission Statement ............................................................................. 7
7.
Implementing Your Quality Management System ............................................................................ 9
8.
Core Standards .............................................................................................................................. 10
9.
Risk Management In Your Organization ........................................................................................ 11
10.
Using software to Implement your Quality System ..................................................................... 12
11.
The Eight Principles Of Quality Management............................................................................. 13
Principle 1: Customer focus................................................................................................................ 14
Principle 2: Leadership ....................................................................................................................... 15
Principle 3: Involvement of people ...................................................................................................... 16
Principle 4: Process approach ............................................................................................................ 17
Principle 5: System Approach to Management ................................................................................... 18
Principle 6: Continual improvement .................................................................................................... 18
Principle 7: Factual approach to decision making .............................................................................. 19
Principle 8: Mutually beneficial supplier relationships ......................................................................... 20
12.
Continuous Improvement Plan ................................................................................................... 21
13.
The Audit .................................................................................................................................... 23
14.
The Certification ......................................................................................................................... 24
15.
The Future.................................................................................................................................. 24
ISO9001:2015 What is coming? ......................................................................................................... 25
16.
Summary .................................................................................................................................... 25
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Page 1
Quality Management Systems
Guide
1.
INTRODUCTION
Many challenges confront companies that are involved in the product/services delivery
industry. Periods of tremendous growth may be interrupted by economic downturn. Capital
assets are aging and costs to maintain and replace them are increasing. Changing workforce
demographics and the availability of resources are affecting the planning and execution of
certain projects.
These challenges call for a renewed focus on proactively
managing quality, and demand an increased awareness of the
impact an effective Quality Management System (QMS) can have
on the success of an organization.
Whether you are a young quality manager just starting out or a veteran quality management
professional it is important to learn and be aware of the basics of quality and the ISO System
(International Organization for Standardization).
Quality Management (QM) information from past research is extensive; however,
advancements in technologies, tools, and processes have changed how quality management
systems (QM systems) are currently being used.
Furthermore, quality management practices once thought to be valuable may have lost some
of their effectiveness. Therefore, an understanding of what constitutes a modern Quality
Management System (QMS) is not only required, it is essential.
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2.
HOW DID IT ALL START?
From the time the ISO series of quality management standards were released in 1987, there
have been concerns that certification of a Quality Management System did not necessarily
assure stakeholders that conforming products or services would be delivered to the customer
on time. To a large extent these concerns continue today. In 1995 QS-9000 was introduced
with the thought that things would get better. This was followed by other sector-specific
standards, TL 9000 for Telecommunications, AS9100 for Aerospace, and ISO/TS 16949
replaced QS-9000. All of these had the common goal of delivering high quality products or
services on time, thereby achieving customer satisfaction. What many organizations miss or
do not understand is how they can realize true value from their certification.
Walter A. Shewhart made a major step in the
evolution towards quality management by creating
a method for quality control for production, using
statistical methods, first proposed in 1924. This
became the foundation for his ongoing work on
statistical quality control.
W. Edwards Deming later applied
statistical process control methods in
the United States during World War
II, thereby successfully improving
quality in the manufacture of
munitions and other strategically
important products.
Quality leadership from a national perspective has changed over the past five to six decades.
After the Second World War, Japan decided to make quality improvement a national
imperative as part of rebuilding their economy, and sought the help
of Shewhart, Deming and Juran, amongst others.
W. Edwards Deming championed Shewhart's ideas in Japan from 1950 onwards. He is
probably best known for his management philosophy establishing quality, productivity, and
competitive position. He formulated 14 points of attention for managers, which are a high level
abstraction of many of his deep insights. They should be interpreted by learning and
understanding the deeper insights.
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These 14 points include key concepts such as:
Breaking down barriers between departments
Management should learn their responsibilities and take on leadership
Supervision should be to help people and machines and gadgets to do a better job
Improve constantly and forever the system of production and service
Institute a vigorous program of education and self-improvement
Philip Crosby, the Guru of Quality Management, was a legend in the discipline of quality. A
noted quality professional, consultant, and author, he is widely recognized for promoting the
concept of "zero defects" and for defining quality as conformance to requirements.
Some of his concepts that set the stage for the current ISO family of standards include quality
as conformity to certain specifications set forth by management and not some vague concept
of "goodness." These specifications are not arbitrary either; they must be set according to
customer needs and wants.
Four Absolutes of Quality Management
1. Quality is defined as conformance to requirements, not as 'goodness' or 'elegance'.
2. The system for causing quality is prevention, not appraisal.
3. The performance standard must be Zero Defects, not "that's close enough".
4. The measurement of quality is the Price of Nonconformance, not indices.
3.
DEFINING QUALITY MANAGEMENT
A quality management system (QMS) can be defined as the organizational
structure, procedures, processes and resources needed to implement quality
management. - Wikipedia
In
other
words,
a quality
management system should be
viewed as a set of interrelated
or interacting components that
organizations use to direct and
control how quality policies and
procedures are implemented
and quality objectives are
achieved.
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Quality management is not just a activity for the Quality Management department, it is a
philosophy embraced by everyone in an organization, championed by Executive management
and steered by the Quality Management Department.
Quality management systems have come a long way. The earliest systems emphasized
predictable outcomes of an industrial product production line, using simple statistics and
random sampling.
However, by the 20th century, labor inputs were typically the most costly inputs in most
industrialized societies, so the focus shifted to team cooperation and the dynamic forces at
work, especially the early signaling of problems via a continuous improvement cycle.
And now, in the 21st century, QMS tends to converge with sustainability and transparency
initiatives, as both investor and customer satisfaction and perceived quality are increasingly
tied to these factors.
4. HOW ARE ISO STANDARDS
DEVELOPED AND REVISED?
ISO standards are developed according to the following principles:
1. Consensus: The views of all interests are taken into account: manufacturers, vendors
and users, consumer groups, testing laboratories, governments, engineering
professions and research organizations etc.
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2. Industry-wide: Global solutions to satisfy industries and customers worldwide.
3. Voluntary: International standardization is market-driven and therefore based on
voluntary involvement of all interests in the market-place.
Standards are revised periodically to remain relevant and current with advancements in
technology and global business conditions.
5.
THE ISO FAMILY
The International Organization for Standardization develops and publishes International
Standards and it defines a standard as follows:
“A standard is a document that provides requirements, specifications, guidelines or
characteristics that can be used consistently to ensure that materials, products, processes
and services are fit for their purpose.”
The focus of the ISO International Standards is to make sure that products and services are
safe, reliable and of good quality. In the business environment these standards are strategic
tools that help to reduce costs by minimizing waste and errors and increasing productivity. It
helps companies to access new markets, level the playing field for developing countries and
facilitate free and fair global trade.
Development of ISO Standards
An ISO standard is developed
by a panel of experts, within
a technical committee. Once
the need for a standard has
been
established,
these
experts meet to discuss and
negotiate a draft standard. As
soon as a draft has been
developed it is shared with
ISO’s members who are
asked to comment and vote
on it. If a consensus is
reached the draft becomes an
ISO standard, if not it goes
back
to
the
technical
committee for further edits.
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The key principles in developing a new standard are:
1. ISO standards respond to a need in the market
2. ISO standards are based on global expert opinion
3. ISO standards are developed through a multi-stakeholder process
4. ISO standards are based on a consensus
ISO has a number of management system standards, each focusing on different issues
affecting global business.
Some of the well-known ones are:
ISO 50001
– Energy Management
ISO 9001
– Quality Management
ISO 14000
– Environmental Management
ISO 22000
– Food Safety Management
6. QUALITY MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
MISSION STATEMENT
To determine the objectives and quality policy, the criteria of the ISO 9001 standards requires
companies to establish a QMS Quality Policy that will enable them to manage, control and
improve processes in their organization in order to assure that services and products meet the
requirements of the customer. For example:
Our Values:
We uphold the following values:
o
Confidentiality
o
Discretion
o
Trust
o
Good judgment
o
Honesty
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Our customers:
We provide our customers with the best service possible based
on the understanding that we need their long-term loyalty and
support to flourish.
Our relationships:
We create mutually beneficial long-term relationships with our
people, customers and suppliers.
Our people:
We treat our people with dignity and respect and are committed
to help them reach their full potential through development and
training. We also encourage them to participate in decisions that
influence their daily working lives.
Innovation/creativity:
We encourage our people, customers and suppliers to solve
problems through innovation and creativity and to seize
opportunities.
Quality:
We strive for an environment where quality is of paramount
importance.
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7. IMPLEMENTING YOUR QUALITY
MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
1. Identify the goals your organization wants to achieve:
Be more efficient and profitable
Produce products and services that consistently meet customer requirements
Achieve customer satisfaction
Increase market share
Maintain market share
Improve communications and morale in the organization
Reduce costs and liabilities
Increase confidence in the production system
2. Identify what others expect of your organization:
Customers and end users
Employees
Suppliers
Shareholders
Society
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8.
CORE STANDARDS
There are five sections in the standard that specify activities that need to be considered when
your organization implements a Quality Management System. The combined key factors are:
1. Overall requirements for the Quality Management System and documentation
2. Leadership Management responsibility, focus, policy, planning and objectives
3. Resource management and allocation
4. Product realization and process management
5. Measurement, monitoring, analysis and improvement
Source : www.iso.org - the ISO 9000 process approach
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9. RISK MANAGEMENT IN YOUR
ORGANIZATION
Risk management has become more and more critical in today’s business environment. You
can no longer count on taking measures to correct a problem after it happens. In today’s
instant information technology world the damage to your company’s reputation as a supplier of
quality products or services can be damaged beyond repair before you can take corrective
action. What can you do to reduce this potential? Risk Management Planning!
The goal of risk management is to protect organizations from being vulnerable.
Risk Management process begins with identifying, assessing and prioritizing potential risks.
The next step in the process is to take action to minimize or eliminate the impact of negative
events.
Examples of common types of risk that management can control the impact of are:
Accidents in the workplace
Supply chain disruption
Natural disasters such as fire, tornadoes, floods and earthquakes
Legal Risks include fraud, theft, sexual harassment
Financial uncertainty, project failure, credit risks, data storage and security
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There are as many ways to eliminate or mitigate risk as there are risk factors. Here are 4 main
approaches:
Do nothing - accept consequences
Close down risky area of organization
Insure - Transfer risk to another party
Take action to prevent risk situation
Every company should implement a risk management plan, it is the responsible path to take in
maintaining a successful organization that protects its people, financial integrity and physical
assets.
10. USING SOFTWARE TO IMPLEMENT
YOUR QUALITY SYSTEM
What is the benefit of using an electronic system to implement and maintain your quality
management system? In the past a typical quality Management System was located in large
binders located throughout the organization. This method while it worked was a nightmare to
control. Controlled documents had to be manually recalled, revised, reprinted approval
signatures on every copy obtained and distributed to every location every time there was a
revision to a document. Then there are the forms for collecting data and recording information,
where are these located? This is quite a lot of paper to manage.
Today’s electronic environment allows for all Quality Management System Documents, forms,
logs and records to be located in one place accessible by all who need them with no risk of
obsolete documents being used in the workplace.
You can link documents to their associated forms and logs, significantly increasing efficiency,
enhancing productivity and effectiveness of your Quality Management System.
Isocert SE is an example of QMS software – follow this link for a free Sample.
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11. THE EIGHT PRINCIPLES OF QUALITY
MANAGEMENT
Since Quality Management is becoming increasingly important to the leadership and
management of all organizations it is necessary for us to identify Quality Management as a
distinctive discipline of management and lay down universally understood and accepted rules
for this discipline.
The ISO technical committee working on the ISO 9000 standards had published a document
detailing the quality management principles and application guidelines and defines a Quality
Management Principle as follows:
"A quality management principle is a
comprehensive and fundamental rule / belief,
for leading and operating an organization,
aimed at continually improving performance
over the long term by focusing on customers
while addressing the needs of all other stake
holders".
Quality Management Principles:
Principle 1 - Customer focus
Principle 2 - Leadership
Principle 3 - Involvement of people
Principle 4 - Process approach
Principle 5 - System approach to management
Principle 6 - Continual improvement
Principle 7 - Factual approach to decision making
Principle 8 - Mutually beneficial supplier relationships
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PRINCIPLE 1: CUSTOMER FOCUS
Organizations depend on their customers and therefore should understand current and future
customer needs, should meet customer requirements and strive to exceed customer
expectations.
The key steps in applying a Customer Focus are:
i.
Understand your customers’ needs and expectations for products, delivery, price,
dependability, etc.
ii.
Ensure a balanced approach among customers and other stake holders (owners,
partners, people, suppliers, local communities and society at large) needs and
expectations.
iii. Communicate these needs and expectations throughout the organization.
iv. Measure customer satisfaction and act on results.
v.
Manage customer relationships.
Key benefits:
Increased revenue and market share obtained through flexible and fast responses to
market opportunities.
Increased effectiveness in the use of the organization's resources to enhance customer
satisfaction.
Improved customer loyalty leading to repeat business.
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PRINCIPLE 2: LEADERSHIP
Leaders establish unity of purpose and direction of the organization. They should create and
maintain the internal environment in which people can become fully involved in achieving the
organization's objectives.
The key steps in applying the Leadership principle are:
i.
Be proactive and lead by example.
ii.
Understand and respond to changes in the external environment.
iii. Consider the needs of all stake holders including customers, owners, people,
suppliers, local communities and society at large.
iv. Establish a clear vision of the organization’s future.
v.
Establish shared values and ethical role models at all levels of the organization.
vi. Build trust and eliminate fear.
vii. Provide people with the required resources and freedom to act with responsibility and
accountability.
viii. Inspire, encourage and recognize people's contributions.
ix. Promote open and honest communication.
x.
Educate, train and coach people.
xi. Set challenging goals and targets, and
xii. Implement a strategy to achieve these goals and targets.
Key benefits:
People will understand and be
motivated towards the organization's
goals and objectives.
Activities are evaluated, aligned and
implemented in a unified way.
Miscommunication between levels of
an organization will be minimized.
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PRINCIPLE 3: INVOLVEMENT OF PEOPLE
People at all levels are the essence of an organization and their full involvement enables their
abilities to be used for the organization's benefit.
The key steps in applying the Involvement of People principle are:
i.
Accept ownership and responsibility to solve
problems.
ii.
Actively seek opportunities to make
improvements and enhance competencies,
knowledge and experience.
iii. Freely share knowledge & experience in
teams.
iv. Focus on the creation of value for customers.
v.
Be innovative in furthering the organization’s
objectives.
vi. Improve
the way of representing the
organization to customers, local communities
and society at large.
vii. Help people derive satisfaction from their
work.
viii. Make people enthusiastic and proud to be
part of the organization.
Key benefits:
Motivated, committed and involved people within the organization.
Innovation and creativity in furthering the organization's objectives.
People being accountable for their own performance.
People eager to participate in and contribute to continual improvement.
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PRINCIPLE 4: PROCESS APPROACH
A desired result is achieved more efficiently when activities and related resources are
managed as a process.
The key steps in applying the Process Approach are:
i.
Define the process to achieve the desired result.
ii.
Identify and measure the inputs and outputs of the process.
iii. Identify the interfaces of the process with the functions of the organization.
iv. Evaluate possible risks, consequences and impacts of processes on customers,
suppliers and other stake holders of the process.
v.
Establish clear responsibility, authority, and accountability for managing the process.
vi. Identify internal and external customers, suppliers and other stake holders of the
process, and
vii. When designing processes, consider process steps, activities, flows, control
measures, training needs, equipment, methods, information, materials and other
resources to achieve the desired result.
Key benefits:
Lower costs and shorter cycle times through effective use of resources.
Improved, consistent and predictable results.
Focused and prioritised improvement opportunities.
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PRINCIPLE 5: SYSTEM APPROACH TO MANAGEMENT
Identifying, understanding and managing a system of interrelated processes for a given
objective improve the organization’s effectiveness and efficiency. Using a systems approach
to management involves identifying all of an organization’s processes as well as their
interdependence and managing the processes as a complete system.
Key steps in applying the System Approach to Management are:
i.
Define the system by identifying or developing the processes that affect a given
objective.
ii.
Structure the system to achieve the objective in the most efficient way.
iii. Understand the interdependencies among the processes of the system.
iv. Continually improve the system through measurement and evaluation, and
v.
Estimate the resource requirements and establish resource constraints prior to action.
Key benefits:
Identifies all of the steps required to conduct business and meet the customer’s
requirements.
Identifies the sources of variation that can produce inefficiencies.
Provides an effective and efficient means of achieving the companies’ goals while
providing a better understanding to the employees of how to achieve common objectives.
PRINCIPLE 6: CONTINUAL IMPROVEMENT
Continual improvement of the organization's overall performance should be a permanent
objective of the organization.
Key steps in applying the Continual Improvement principle are:
i.
Make continual improvement of products, processes and systems an objective for
every individual in the organization.
ii.
Apply the basic improvement concepts of incremental improvement and breakthrough
improvement.
iii. Use periodic assessments against established criteria of excellence to identify areas
for potential improvement.
iv. Continually improve the efficiency and effectiveness of all processes.
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v.
Promote prevention based activities.
vi. Provide every member of the organization with appropriate education and training, on
the methods and tools of continual improvement such as the Plan-Do-Check-Act cycle,
problem solving, process re-engineering, and process innovation.
vii. Establish measures and goals to guide and track improvements.
viii. Recognize improvements.
Key benefits:
Performance
advantage
through
improved
organizational capabilities.
Alignment of improvement
activities at all levels to an
organization's strategic intent.
Flexibility to react quickly to
opportunities.
PRINCIPLE 7: FACTUAL APPROACH TO DECISION MAKING
The Factual approach to decision making principle simply states that "Effective decisions are
based on the analysis of data and information."
The key steps in applying the Factual Approach to Decision Making are:
i.
Take measurements and collect data and information relevant to the objective.
ii.
Ensure that the data and information are sufficiently accurate, reliable and accessible.
iii. Analyze the data and information using valid methods.
iv. Understand the value of appropriate statistical techniques, and
v.
Make decisions and take action based on the results of logical analysis balanced with
experience and intuition.
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Key benefits:
Informed decisions.
An
increased
ability
to
demonstrate the effectiveness
of past decisions through
reference to factual records.
Increased ability to review,
challenge and change opinions
and decisions.
PRINCIPLE 8: MUTUALLY BENEFICIAL SUPPLIER
RELATIONSHIPS
An organization and its suppliers are interdependent and a mutually beneficial relationship
enhances the ability of both to create value.
Steps in the application of this principle are:
i.
Identify and select key suppliers.
ii.
Establish supplier relationships that balance short-term gains with long-term
considerations for the organization and society at large.
iii. Create clear and open communications.
iv. Initiate joint development and improvement of products and processes.
v.
Jointly establish a clear understanding of customers' needs.
vi. Share information and future plans, and
vii. Recognize supplier improvements and achievements.
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Key benefits:
Increased ability to create value for both parties.
Flexibility and speed of joint responses to changing market or customer needs and
expectations.
Optimisation of costs and resources.
12. CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT PLAN
CIPs, also known as continuous
quality improvement plans, are
programs designed to review specific
situations and identify strategies for
enhancing or improving all related
factors.
A continuous improvement process
can be employed to evaluate policies
and procedures in just about any
business setting.
The notion is to make something that
is already good even better, thus
benefiting the company in general.
W. Edwards Deming, saw it as part of the 'system' whereby feedback from the process and
customer were evaluated against organizational goals. The fact that it can be called a
management process does not mean that it needs to be executed by 'management'; but
rather merely that it makes decisions about the implementation of the delivery process and the
design of the delivery process itself.
The core principle of CIP is the (self) reflection of
processes. (Feedback)
The purpose of CIP is the identification, reduction, and
elimination of suboptimal processes. (Efficiency)
The emphasis of CIP is on incremental, continual steps
rather than giant leaps. (Evolution)
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The whole QMS is owner driven.
Ongoing control is of importance in the QMS
network
Process linkage and interaction is essential
Act
Plan
Check
Do
•How to improve
next time?
• Did things happen
according to plan?
•What to do?
•How to do it?
•Do what was
planned
ACT
– Implementation of improvement
PLAN
– Identification of sequence, interaction criteria
and methods
DO
– Implementation of the planning
CHECK – Monitoring, measurement and analysis
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13. THE AUDIT
A Quality Audit is the process of systematically examining the quality management system of
an organization and is usually carried out by an internal or external quality auditor or an audit
team.
Quality audits are typically performed at predefined time intervals and ensure that an
organization has clearly defined internal system monitoring procedures linked to effective
action - audits examine a Quality Management System for correct implementation and
adequacy. This can help determine if the organization complies with the defined quality
system processes and can involve procedural or results-based assessment criteria.
For the benefit of the organization, quality auditing should not only report non-conformances
and corrective actions, but also highlight areas of good practice. In this way other departments
may share information and amend their working practices as a result, also contributing to
continual improvement.
The Audit Process consists of four stages:
1. Preparation – assign auditors, agree on audit program, gather and review all
documentation and develop a checklist.
2. Performance – open meeting, conduct audit, audit team meeting and closing of the
meeting.
3. Reporting – within fourteen days of the completion of an audit, an audit report should be
completed and issued to the auditee.
4. Follow-up – non-conformances identified must be rectified.
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14. THE CERTIFICATION
Certification is the process whereby an independent and accredited organization
certifies that a third party complies with specific requirements. Wikipedia describes it as
follows:
“ISO does not certify organizations itself. Numerous certification bodies exist, which audit
organizations and, upon success, issue ISO 9001 compliance certificates. Although commonly
referred to as "ISO 9000" certification, the actual standard to which an organization's quality
management system can be certified is ISO 9001:2008. Many countries have
formed accreditation bodies to authorize ("accredit") the certification bodies. Both the
accreditation bodies and the certification bodies charge fees for their services. The various
accreditation bodies have mutual agreements with each other to ensure that certificates
issued by one of the Accredited Certification Bodies (CB) are accepted worldwide.
Certification bodies themselves operate under another quality standard, ISO/IEC 17021,] while
accreditation bodies operate under ISO/IEC 17011.”
The three main Certification Schemes are:1. System Certification
2. Product/Service Certification
3. Consignment Inspection
15. THE FUTURE
In order for the ISO family of standards to maintain its efficiency, the ISO standards are
reviewed at regular intervals to benefit from new developments in the quality management
arena and also from user and supplier feedback.
ISO/TC 176 monitors the use of the standards to determine how they can be improved to
meet user needs and expectations when the next revisions are due. They comprise of experts
from businesses and other organizations around the world. All ISO standards are reviewed
regularly for relevancy; changes are made when there is an established need to improve the
standard.
Based on input from the user community, ISO/TC 176 continues to evaluate and adopt new
concepts in the field of quality management for incorporation into ISO standards. This can
include specialised segment initiatives and supporting documents within the ISO family of
standards. Most ISO technical committees recognize the structure of ISO 9001 when new
management systems standards are developed for other or specific purposes.
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ISO9001:2015 WHAT IS COMING?
While the revision to the ISO Quality Standard is still out for comment and will not be
published until 2015 it is possible to see from the committee draft the direction the standard is
going.
The exclusions clause has been omitted due to the fact the committee is expressing
the requirements differently than in past revisions making the exclusions clause
redundant.
ISO 9001 is seeking to become more generic and applicable to companies providing
any type of product and greater acceptance in the area of service providers’ service.
To accomplish this the use of “goods and services” is replacing “product”
ISO 9001 specifies requirements “essential to the adoption of the process approach”
now required in clause 4.4
ISO 9001 is changing its high level structure to bring all Management System
standards into harmony, where in the past the basic structure of each standard differed
from the next causing confusion and difficulties for organizations and assessors alike.
o
The draft standard is reorganized currently listing 10 sections replacing the
current version with 8.
o
Section 4 now “Context of the Organization” replaces “General Requirements”.
o
Section 5 now called “Leadership” replaces “Management Responsibilities”.
o
Management Review and Internal Audit are now placed in section 9
Performance Evaluation.
Preventive Action is no longer in the standard but Risk Management has been added
to section 6 - Planning.
“Documented Information” replaces the requirement for documented procedures and
records, this appears to address this modern electronic age way of delivering and
recording information.
A “Revised QMS Guide” will be made available as soon as the new ISO Standards are made
available in 2015.
16. SUMMARY
ISO’s pledge to sustaining the ISO 9001 momentum through reviews, improvement and
streamlining of the standards guarantees that an organization’s confidence and involvement in
ISO 9001 today will continue to provide effective management solutions well into the future.
©2013 Isocert Solutions, LLC | 3525 Sleepy Hollow Dr, Santa Rosa, CA 95404 | 707-570-5669
www.isocertsolutions.com
Page 25
Author: Tim Landerville, CEO Isocert Solutions LLC
Isocert Solutions was founded in 1990 in Sonoma County California by partner Tim
Landerville, Certified Lead Auditor, and has grown steadily since its inception. It maintains its
corporate office in Santa Rosa, California and others throughout the United States.
The company specializes in Enterprise-class software that is made for scalability, high
performance, quality management and robustness. Their software provides businesses with
logic support functionality, enabling enterprises to improve product quality, services and
productivity while providing efficiency gains. For more information please
see: http://isocertsolutions.com/ or call (707) 570-5669 to discuss how to become ISO 9001
certified.
©2013 Isocert Solutions, LLC | 3525 Sleepy Hollow Dr, Santa Rosa, CA 95404 | 707-570-5669
www.isocertsolutions.com
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