Saturday, November 13, 2010

Why Does ISO 9000 Emphasis On Document Control?


Why Does ISO 9000 Emphasis On Document Control?

Think of the Document Control Procedure as ‘evidence’ that an established process or procedure was adhered to in order to satisfy customer requirements. Both Registrars and Internal Auditors will always focus on the quality, continuity and flow of documentation; inconsistencies in this flow of information will indicate a problem and generate a non-conformance.

It is vital that your organization implements and maintains a robust document and record management system pursuant to Clause 4.2. of ISO 9001:2008.

Terms and definitions

To better understand the difference between a document and a record, the following terms and definitions are taken from ISO 9000:2005:

Term, Clause and Definition

Document, 3.7.2, Information and its supporting medium

Record, 3.7.6, A document stating results achieved or providing evidence of activities performed Control of Documents (4.2.3)

Implementing a quality management system might mean that you will be generating new documents and keeping some records that you might not be already keeping. Some of this documentation may seem burdensome until you become more familiar with the quality standard. In general though, the organization must:

- Approve documents before your distribute them
- Provide the correct version of documents at points of use
- Review and re-approve documents whenever you update them
- Specify the current revision status of your documents
- Monitor documents that come from external sources
- Prevent the accidental use of obsolete documents
- Preserve the usability of your quality documents

In order for any organization to demonstrate the effective implementation of its quality management system, it may be necessary to develop documents other than documented procedures. However, the only documents specifically required by ISO 9001:2008 are:

- Quality policy (4.2.1.a)
- Quality objectives (4.2.1.a)
- Quality manual (4.2.1.b)
- Control of Records (4.2.4)

A record is a document that provides traceability; it declares results or presents evidence that the activities undertaken met customer requirements. It is important to identify relevant quality records as you progress your documentation and ensure that records are defined within a procedure or by a system and that it exists and is controlled.

Types of Records required by ISO 9001:2008 Document Control Procedure

5.6.1 Management reviews
6.2.2 e) Education, training, skills and experience
7.1 d) Evidence that the realization processes and resulting product fulfil requirements
7.2.2 Results of the review of requirements related to the product and actions arising from the review
7.3.2 Design and development inputs relating to product requirements
7.3.4 Results of design and development reviews and any necessary actions
7.3.5 Results of design and development verification and any necessary actions
7.3.6 Results of design and development validation and any necessary actions
7.3.7 Results of the review of design and development changes and any actions
7.4.1 Results of supplier evaluations and any actions arising from the evaluations
7.5.2 d) As required by the organization to demonstrate the validation of processes where the resulting output cannot be verified by subsequent monitoring or measurement
7.5.3 The unique identification of the product, where traceability is a requirement
7.5.4 Customer property that is lost, damaged or otherwise unsuitable for use
7.6 a) Basis used for calibration or verification of measuring equipment where no international or national measurement standards exist
7.6 Validity of the previous measuring results when the measuring equipment is found not to conform to requirements
7.6 Results of calibration and verification of measuring equipment
8.2.2 Internal audit results and follow-up actions
8.2.4 Indication of the person(s) authorizing release of product.
8.3 Nature of the product nonconformities and any subsequent actions taken, including concessions obtained
8.5.2 e) Results of corrective action
8.5.3 d) Results of preventive action

Document Control Procedure Summary

Remember that you are in control of the documents and records and not vice versa. Only document and record what is necessary – the fewer documents and records you keep, the fewer things that will be audited, and the more time you will have to actually run your business.

ISO 9000 Standards Certification and Registration


ISO 9000 Standards Certification and Registration

The International Standards Organization is responsible for two major sets of requirements that relate to an overall quality management system to be used by businesses. The ISO 9000 family of standards is the primary set of requirements for most businesses.

Quality management by definition address that the organization does certain things to “fulfill the customer’s quality requirements and applicable regulatory requirements while aiming to enhance customer satisfaction, and achieve continual improvement of its performance in pursuit of these objectives”.
ISO 14000 address the environmental management to minimize harmful effects to the environment. Again, it is a quality management system designed to “achieve continual improvement of its environmental performance.

ISO certification 9000 is the most common. So, let’s take a look at what ISO certification entails and what it means. To become certified, a quality management system must be in place that meets the requirements of the ISO standard. This begins with the business recognizes the requirements and developing a quality system to meet their needs at the same time they meet the requirements.

ISO 9000 certification and ISO 9000 registration are two different entities, though they are often used interchangeably. To achieve ISO certification 9001 , an independent registrar is hired to audit the quality system for thoroughness and compliance to all the standards. When this is accomplished, the business is offered a certificate stating that the quality system conforms to standards within the particular standard.

ISO registration means that the certification has been recorded in its client register. Because most companies have been certified and in turn registered, the terms are offed interchanged in general use. While the term “certification” is the most widely used, “registration” used in North America. Both are completely acceptable, because the business has fulfilled the requirements set forth by ISO.

Risk Management In ISO 9000 Standard


Risk Management In ISO 9000 Standard

In each human endeavour there is an element of risk; personal, project or financial, or a combination of them all. The job of the responsible individual is to identify the risk and act accordingly. We all do these ‘risky’ things, almost daily, aware that we are taking a risk. Rather than staying away from the risk we become adept at identifying it and having a strategy for dealing with it if the risk materialises. This is what risk management is about, and is an ability that is important in virtually every endeavour.

The popular misconception that risk management is difficult or complicated stems from the bureaucratic methodology of some system-oriented organisations and managers. It is neither complicated or bureaucratic, and need not be. Risk management is basically a simple proposition with a complexity dictated by the nature of the situation to which it applies – usually a project, and the parties involved. In its basic form risk management involves:

1. Identifying risk – Looking for anything that threatens the successful completion of the project against the original requirement. Risks can be environmental, organisational, technical, legal, economic or commercial.

2. Counteracting risk – Taking action to remove or reduce the probability of a risk being realised. The response depends on the nature or seriousness of the risk.

3. Acting when the risk event occurs – Invoking whatever contingency measures were devised for the risk that has materialised.

And for this to happen needs:

4. Monitoring at all stages – This typically means documenting a risk assessment in a profile that identifies the risk, the probability of its occurrence, and the impact if it does materialise. Factors that score paramount are those that require the greatest attention and monitoring. A good risk manager will devise contingency plans that reduce either the probability or the impact of these occurrences, and so remove them from the scene.

Working within a formal structured management system similar to that defined by ISO 9000 requires the application of risk assessment practices to satisfy the requirements of the Standard. Auditors of such systems may not find specific references to risk management in these areas even though the identification of potential failure (8.5.3) is wholly concerned with a topic that is nothing less than risk management.

Well managed risk taking is an essential feature of any forward thinking enterprise, since risk is an element of any progression or advancement. It is the adoption of effective risk management in conjunction with the continuing need to drive forward from a comfortable position that leads to progress and advancement. Doing what we always do purely because the risks appear to be negligible or are well known is to be ‘risk averse’, and for progressive organisations cannot be acceptable. Neither is it acceptable to pursue new ideas without an understanding of their potential benefit, proper planning, a clear idea of the threats to these benefits being achieved , and a strategy for dealing with them should they materialise. We need to manage in a manner that is neither predictable or reckless. Risk assessment is an essential tool to support this strategy.

ISO 9000 Document Management Software System


ISO 9000 Document Management Software System

Today’s manufacturing companies that seek ISO 9001 compliance-(regardless of their motivation to do so) probably don’t find it that difficult to create intelligent documentation. After all, a few days with a good consultant or a quality manager can take care of document creation. The problem lies in the gap between what employees are doing and what employees are supposed to be doing (in terms of adhering to documentation) and the gap between the manner in which processes are being implemented and the manner in which they should be implemented ( in accordance with documentation). In other words, the problem lies in the way processes are strategized and applied and in the way employees commit to standards when compared against existing documentation. How can a company overcome these issues? The answers may be simpler than you think.

Automation is the Answer for ISO Control
If your underlying processes are poorly strategized then an automated document management software system won’t be of much use. However, once the processes have been effectively planned (and applied) a document management software system can speed process-to-process management by leaps and bounds. Companies that automate not only to comply with ISO standards but to generate more revenue by performing less administrative labor save weeks and even years worth of time just by automating their processes and documentation control with a document management software system.

Making Amends
The right document management software system and ISO document control would also allow companies to find deviations and nonconformance events faster and move those events to resolution phases in a small fraction of the time they were originally routed—if they were routed at all. Some ISO 9000 document management software systems may even be combined with a CAPA QMS solution. This is especially valuable when determining the root cause of major to minor deviations.

A Document Management Software System and Employee Training
ISO standards do not require any type of automation but ISO standards lend themselves to automation in a way that’s quite remarkable. Take for instance the following document management requirements from the official ISO 9001 International Standard.

ISO 9001 Section 4.2.3
ISO standards make it clear that ISO 9001 “approved” companies must define (i.e., document) how they will approve documentation, how they will identify documentation changes, how they will update/reapprove revised documentation, how external documentation will be managed and how assurance will be provided that documentation will be available when it is required. 1 And that’s only a shadow of things to come! A document management software system designed for strict compliance can automate the approval of documentation, the identification of document changes, updates and reapproval notifications, external documentation management and high-level document security. Some solutions also integrate training and online exams as well.

How Much Could You Save?
Chances are high that automation will save you thousands, tens of thousands or even hundreds of thousands of dollars annually depending on the size of your company. Just foregoing a typical document routing process (a manual process) can save many employees fruitless trips back and forth from one office to another. Who wouldn’t want to avoid those time consuming searches through 3-ring binders and lost documentation due to employee absence or neglect?

Conclusion
Regulation and control are the future for manufacturing. Gone are the days of free experimentation and a blind eye toward material waste. Today is the day of premeditated design, quality assurance and web-based automation. If your company plans to be, or already is, compliant with ISO 9001 standards why not consider automating those ISO 9001 controls with a document management software system.

The characteristics of quality Classification of products and services


If we group products and services (entities) by type, category, class and grade
we can use the subdivision to make comparisons on an equitable basis. But
when we compare entities we must be careful not to claim one is of better
quality than the other unless they are of the same grade. Entities of the same
type have at least one attribute in common. Entities of the same grade have
been designed for the same functional use and therefore comparisons are valid.
Comparisons on quality between entities of different grades, classes, categories
or types are invalid because they have been designed for a different use or
purpose.
Let us look at some examples to illustrate the point. Food is a type of entity.
Transport is another entity. Putting aside the fact that in the food industry the
terms class and grade are used to denote the condition of post-production
product, comparisons between types is like comparing fruit and trucks – there
are no common attributes. Comparisons between categories are like comparing
fruit and vegetables. Comparisons between classes are like comparing apples
and oranges. Comparisons between grades is like comparing eating apples and
cooking apples.
Now let us take another example. Transport is a type of entity. There are
different categories of transport such as airliners, ships, automobiles and trains;
they are all modes of transport but each has many different attributes.
Differences between categories of transport are therefore differences in modes of
transport. Within each category there are differences in class. For manufactured
products, differences between classes imply differences in purpose. Luxury cars,
large family cars, small family cars, vans, trucks, four-wheel drive vehicles etc.
fall within the same category of transport but each was designed for a different
purpose. Family cars are in a different class to luxury cars; they were not
designed for the same purpose. It is therefore inappropriate to compare a
Cadillac with a Chevrolet or a Rolls Royce Silver Shadow with a Ford Mondeo.
Entities designed for the same purpose but having different specifications are
of different grades. A Ford Mondeo GTX is a different grade to a Mondeo LX.
They were both designed for the same purpose but differ in their performance
and features.
Now let us take an example from the service industry: accommodation. There
are various categories, such as rented, leased and purchased. In the rented
category there are hotels, inns, guesthouses, apartments etc. It would be inappropriate
to compare hotels with guesthouses or apartments with inns. They are
each in a different class. Hotels are a class of accommodation within which are
grades such as 5 star, 4 star, 3 star etc., indicating the facilities offered.
You can legitimately compare the quality of entities if comparing entities of
the same grade. If a low-grade service meets the needs for which it was
designed, it is of the requisite quality. If a high-grade product or service fails to
meet the requirements for which it was designed, it is of poor quality,
regardless of it still meeting the requirements for the lower grade. There is a
market for such differences in products and services but should customer
expectations change then what was once acceptable for a particular grade may
no longer be acceptable and regrading may have to occur.
Where manufacturing processes are prone to uncontrollable variation it is
not uncommon to grade products as a method of selection. The product that is
free of imperfections would be the highest grade and would therefore
command the highest price. Any product with imperfections would be
downgraded and sold at a correspondingly lower price. Examples of such
practice arise in the fruit and vegetables trade and the ceramics, glass and
textile industries. In the electronic component industry, grading is a common
practice to select devices that operate between certain temperature ranges. In
ideal conditions all devices would meet the higher specification but due to
manufacturing variation only a few may actually reach full performance. The
remainder of the devices has a degraded performance but still offer all the
functions of the top-grade component at lower temperatures. To say that these
differences are not differences in quality would be misleading, because the
products were all designed to fulfil the higher specification. As there is a
market for such products it is expedient to exploit it. There is a range over
which product quality can vary and still create satisfied customers. Outside the
lower end of this range the product is considered to be of poor quality.
If we group products and services (entities) by type, category, class and grade
we can use the subdivision to make comparisons on an equitable basis. But
when we compare entities we must be careful not to claim one is of better
quality than the other unless they are of the same grade. Entities of the same
type have at least one attribute in common. Entities of the same grade have
been designed for the same functional use and therefore comparisons are valid.
Comparisons on quality between entities of different grades, classes, categories
or types are invalid because they have been designed for a different use or
purpose.
Let us look at some examples to illustrate the point. Food is a type of entity.
Transport is another entity. Putting aside the fact that in the food industry the
terms class and grade are used to denote the condition of post-production
product, comparisons between types is like comparing fruit and trucks – there
are no common attributes. Comparisons between categories are like comparing
fruit and vegetables. Comparisons between classes are like comparing apples
and oranges. Comparisons between grades is like comparing eating apples and
cooking apples.
Now let us take another example. Transport is a type of entity. There are
different categories of transport such as airliners, ships, automobiles and trains;
they are all modes of transport but each has many different attributes.
Differences between categories of transport are therefore differences in modes of
transport. Within each category there are differences in class. For manufactured
products, differences between classes imply differences in purpose. Luxury cars,
large family cars, small family cars, vans, trucks, four-wheel drive vehicles etc.
fall within the same category of transport but each was designed for a different
purpose. Family cars are in a different class to luxury cars; they were not
designed for the same purpose. It is therefore inappropriate to compare a
Cadillac with a Chevrolet or a Rolls Royce Silver Shadow with a Ford Mondeo.
Entities designed for the same purpose but having different specifications are
of different grades. A Ford Mondeo GTX is a different grade to a Mondeo LX.
They were both designed for the same purpose but differ in their performance
and features.
Now let us take an example from the service industry: accommodation. There
are various categories, such as rented, leased and purchased. In the rented
category there are hotels, inns, guesthouses, apartments etc. It would be inappropriate
to compare hotels with guesthouses or apartments with inns. They are
each in a different class. Hotels are a class of accommodation within which are
grades such as 5 star, 4 star, 3 star etc., indicating the facilities offered.
You can legitimately compare the quality of entities if comparing entities of
the same grade. If a low-grade service meets the needs for which it was
designed, it is of the requisite quality. If a high-grade product or service fails to
meet the requirements for which it was designed, it is of poor quality,
regardless of it still meeting the requirements for the lower grade. There is a
market for such differences in products and services but should customer
expectations change then what was once acceptable for a particular grade may
no longer be acceptable and regrading may have to occur.
Where manufacturing processes are prone to uncontrollable variation it is
not uncommon to grade products as a method of selection. The product that is
free of imperfections would be the highest grade and would therefore
command the highest price. Any product with imperfections would be
downgraded and sold at a correspondingly lower price. Examples of such
practice arise in the fruit and vegetables trade and the ceramics, glass and
textile industries. In the electronic component industry, grading is a common
practice to select devices that operate between certain temperature ranges. In
ideal conditions all devices would meet the higher specification but due to
manufacturing variation only a few may actually reach full performance. The
remainder of the devices has a degraded performance but still offer all the
functions of the top-grade component at lower temperatures. To say that these
differences are not differences in quality would be misleading, because the
products were all designed to fulfil the higher specification. As there is a
market for such products it is expedient to exploit it. There is a range over
which product quality can vary and still create satisfied customers. Outside the
lower end of this range the product is considered to be of poor quality.

Monday, October 11, 2010

ISO 9000 Softwares


ISO 9000 Softwares

1. ISO 9000 Software – ISO 9000 Document Control Software

The concept of document control is integral to ISO 9000. Specifically ISO 9001: 2000, requires the establishment of a document control system that stores and manages documents relating to implementing, maintaining, and continually improving a quality management system. Within the context of ISO 9000, a quality system must be documented and quality records must be maintained. Document control helps ensure effective operation and facilitates better decision-making, by providing a vehicle for employees, customers, and partners to access controlled documentation from any location at anytime.

For high-tech companies that adhere to ISO 14000 environmental management standards, document control procedures are equally necessary to help them continuously improve their environmental management system.

The ISO 9000 Document Control Software is developed & designed to control the ISO 9000 Quality Manual, Operating Procedure, Forms & Documents digitally. System will track the all ISO 9000 Documents by ISO Document No. through out the system.

The ISO 9000 Document Control Software Provides:-

Tracking of Documents- Provides secure tracking of all your ISO 9000 Quality Manual, Operating Procedure & Forms & Documents in any format either in Microsoft Word, Excel, PDF or etc.
Efficiency Document Control- It’s uniquely qualified to be the focal point of a quality management system because it can handle all types of documents regardless of the software used to create them. It provides a secure and centralized document control repository that makes search and retrieval easy during inspections and audits.
Revision Control- Tracking of Document revisions, approval & Release Date. Manually Tracking down any revision on the ISO 9000 document activity is difficult . The ISO 9000 Document Control Software will help to keep track the numbers of revision have been carried out, and also maintain the various revision copies of the documents.
Multiple File Location – System will be able to keep track the directories & folder where the original location is saved.
Centralize Of Document Control – Do not worry about the various department is getting the correct edition of the documents, because all documents have been managed by a centralize software. Document reviews are conveniently scheduled and documented.
Security:System provide User Right Control module which enable System Administrator to define the access right to authorized users and activity allowed.
2. ISO 9000 Software – ISO 9000 Audit Control Software

The ISO 9000 Audit Control Softwarewere designed to handle all aspects of an internal or external audit programme, from planning audits to the follow-up of corrective actions against deficiencies found.

The Control Software increases the accountability and efficiency of your internal/external audits by developing core processes with clearly defined audit plans, step-by-step procedures, and standardized auditor roles and responsibilities. It will help to put you to the right path toward developing a well-organized ISO9001:2000 internal /external audit system.

The ISO 9000 Audit Control Software Provides:-

Audit Schedule – maintains the audit schedule, checklist preparation and all audit info.
Track Non-Conformance – System will help to track all non-conformances found during the audit, including actions & verification.
Corrective Action Report (CAR) – Update of the corrective action.
Security: System provide User Right Control module which enable System Administrator to define the access right to authorized users and activity allowed.

Why is ISO 9001:2008 Certification Important?

Why is ISO 9001:2008 Certification Important?

First of all it provides a system for managers and organizations to achieve excellence and opens the door for American manufacturers and/or service organizations seeking a larger role in both international trade and with other American organizations. Many organizations require their suppliers to be certified or at a minimum to be working toward certification on ISO 9001:2008 to do business.

Consider the facts (source MORI/SGS-ICS) that with ISO 9001 certification:

  • 83% realized improved management control
  • 82% realized improved customer satisfaction
  • 62% said it improved the ability to win work
  • 61% stated a more motivated workforce
  • 60% realized improved productivity
  • 60% saw reduced waste
  • 52% stated it improved marketing
  • 50% had reduced costs
  • 49% realized increased market share

ISO 9000 AND THE CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY


ISO 9000 AND THE CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY

A formal quality management system has the potential to change attitudes, cultures, and work procedures at any construction firm in a way the organization has never experienced before. In most cases, in order to set up a
formal quality management system at a construction firm, there has to be direct demands from their customers, whose requirement for quality is essential for doing business. Most of the construction organizations will not enter into the cost and allocation of resources to implement a quality management system unless they will be compensated. There is a general movement towards making implementation of a quality management system a contractual requirement. Small to medium sized organizations can always argue that they ‘operate to a quality system’ although this is not formalized. However, since the existence of such ‘informal’ quality systems are
difficult to justify, the International Standards Organization, (ISO) has come up with ISO 9001 series of standards that are applicable to all organizations irrespective of size or nature of business.
ISO 9000 refers to a set of quality management standards. Standards present an opportunity for an organization to develop a quality management system that meets the requirements specified by ISO 9001:2000, which are
recognized internationally, making the organization competitive. ISO 9001 family of standards is undeniably the most prolific of all formal standards. This could be due to the worldwide applicability standardization and
flexibility with which the standards are associated, even though there are some experts that still question the standards’ applicability in the construction industry. It is important to note that ISO 9001:2000 has replaced ISO 9001:1994, ISO 9002:1994 and ISO 9003:1994, while the old ISO 9002 and ISO 9003 standards have been discontinued.

A formal quality management system has the potential to change attitudes, cultures, and work procedures at any construction firm in a way the organization has never experienced before. In most cases, in order to set up aformal quality management system at a construction firm, there has to be direct demands from their customers,whose requirement for quality is essential for doing business. Most of the construction organizations will not enterinto the cost and allocation of resources to implement a quality management system unless they will becompensated. There is a general movement towards making implementation of a quality management system acontractual requirement. Small to medium sized organizations can always argue that they ‘operate to a qualitysystem’ although this is not formalized.

However, since the existence of such ‘informal’ quality systems aredifficult to justify, the International Standards Organization, (ISO) has come up with ISO 9001 series of standardsthat are applicable to all organizations irrespective of size or nature of business. ISO 9000 refers to a set of quality management standards. Standards present an opportunity for an organization todevelop a quality management system that meets the requirements specified by ISO 9001:2000, which arerecognized internationally, making the organization competitive. ISO 9001 family of standards is undeniably themost prolific of all formal standards. This could be due to the worldwide applicability standardization andflexibility with which the standards are associated, even though there are some experts that still question thestandards’ applicability in the construction industry. It is important to note that ISO 9001:2000 has replaced ISO9001:1994, ISO 9002:1994 and ISO 9003:1994, while the old ISO 9002 and ISO 9003 standards have been discontinued.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Quality Assurance

Quality assurance, according to the Standard, is a way of managing that prevents non-conformance and thus “assures quality”. This is what makes ISO 9000 different from other standards: it is a management standard, not a product standard. It goes beyond product standardisation: it is standardising not what is made but how it is made. To use standards to dictate and control how organisations work was to extend the role of standards to new territory. To take such a step we might have firstly established that any such requirements worked — that they resulted in ways of working which improved performance. Yet the plausibility of this Standard, and the fact that those who had an interest in maintaining it were (and still are) leading opinion, prevented such enquiries. In simple terms the Standard asks managers to say what they do, do what they say and prove it to a third party. ISO 9000 (1994) paragraph 1: “The requirements specified are aimed primarily at achieving customer satisfaction by preventing non-conformity at all stages from design through servicing.” To put it another way, the Standard asserts that preventing non-conformance achieves customer satisfaction. But does it? Of course it matters to customers that a product works. But there is no guarantee that the Standard will ensure even that. Furthermore, customers take a total view of an organisation — how easy it is to do business with — in respect of all things of importance to each and every customer. ISO 9000 requires managers to “establish and maintain a documented quality system as a means of ensuring that product conforms to specified requirements”. Loosely translated this is “say what you do”. Management is supposed to “define and document its policy for quality . . . including its commitment to quality”. What management would not declare its commitment to quality? But would they know what it means? Would they argue (as they should) that quality management is a different and better way to do business, or would they believe that ISO 9000 will take care of quality? The Standard encourages managers to think of “quality” and “business as usual” as separate and distinct. It helps managers avoid the revelation that quality means a wholly different view of management. Instead, the organisation “shall appoint a management representative who, irrespective of other responsibilities, shall have defined authority and responsibility” [for ISO 9000]. At a practical level this means only one executive might decide he or she had better learn a thing or two about quality. However, would being responsible for ISO 9000 lead to learning about quality or simply enforcing the ISO 9000 regime in an organisation? Key to the regime is auditing. The Standard requires organisations to conduct internal quality audits to “verify whether quality activities comply with planned arrangements”. This can be loosely translated as “do you do as you say?” and the purpose of the audit is to see that you do. It was not until the 1994 review that the words were changed to “quality activities and related results”. It was a Standard which was rooted in the philosophy of inspection: fifteen years after its initial promulgation the promoters sought to extend the focus to results. But results or improvements assessed by what means? Inspection. By the time the Standard was adopted world-wide, quality thinking had moved a long way from the philosophy of inspection. It is now understood, at least by a few, that quality is achieved through managing the organisation as a system and using measures which enable managers to improve flow and reduce variation (which we explore in chapters 5 and 7). The defenders argue that there is nothing stopping a company having ISO 9000 and implementing methods for managing flow and reducing variation, but where are such companies? Few of the companies we researched, formally and informally, knew anything about this thinking. The Standard does not talk about it; moreover, the Standard effectively discourages managers from learning about it by representing quality in a different way. According to ISO 8402 (quality vocabulary), quality is: “The totality of features and characteristics of a product or service that bear on its ability to satisfy stated or implied needs.” Everything we have learned about ISO 9000 suggests that the people who created this definition were thinking about the things which need to be controlled, those things which “bear on its ability . . .”. The builders of the Standard assumed that customer needs would be listed in contractual agreements between the supplier and customer. ISO 9000 has a “make” logic — procedures for “how you do what you do” — and a “control” logic — check to see that it is done. It is a relic of the era when contractual agreements were perceived to be an important device for regulating the behaviour of suppliers. In these ways, ISO 9000 encouraged “planning for quality”. Planning for quality sounds plausible, but it assumes many things: that the plan is the right plan, that it is feasible, that people will “do it”, that performance will improve. It is an approach which, paradoxically, leads to poor decisions. Planners of quality systems, guided by ISO 9000, start with a view of how the world should be as framed by the Standard. Understanding how an organisation is working, rather than how someone thinks it should, is a far better place from which to start change of any kind.

Standards Certification In Business

In our business we often need to describe our policy and practice regarding quality of service, responsibility towards environment and employees health to our clients. There are three set standards i.e. ISO 9001, ISO 14001 and OHSAS 18001 accepted globally.

ISO 9001 is the internationally recognised Quality Management Standard for all types of organisations. It’s all about managing your processes and continually improving the way you do things. It doesn’t require you to change any of your operating procedures or do anything that isn’t good practice. It simply asks you to “Say what you do, and do what you say”.

ISO 9001 is by far the world’s most established quality framework, currently being used by over ¾ million organizations in 161 countries, and sets the standard not only for quality management systems, but management systems in general.

Having ISO 9001 certification demonstrates that your organisation is well managed, knows where it is going and has a plan to get there. Also, having a plan means you are far more likely to succeed.

Certification to the ISO 14001 Standard demonstrates your ‘Green’ credentials to the world at large and your customers in particular. It gives them the confidence to know that behind the certificate there is an organisation that is aware of its environmental responsibilities and is doing everything it can to minimise any adverse impact.

ISO 14001 standard is applicable to any organization that wishes to:

  • implement, maintain and improve an environmental management system
  • assure itself of its conformance with its own stated environmental policy (those policy commitments
  • of course must be made)
  • demonstrate conformance
  • ensure compliance with environmental laws and regulations
  • seek certification of its environmental management system by an external third party organization
  • make a self-determination of conformance

OHSAS18001 sets out the requirements for an Occupational Health & safety Management system that enables organisations to control physical, work related risk, protect employees’ health and improve business performance. It requires the creation of a relevant Management System and has been developed to promote best practice in this field.

Obtaining OHSAS 18001 demonstrates that you have:

· procedures for risk assessment, risk control and hazard identification

· structured health and safety training and required competences

· emergency procedures and response mechanisms

· formal communication channels for disseminating health and safety information

· performance measures and improvement plans

Achieving ISO compliance and certification can take significant amounts of time but should prove valuable for companies interested in successful global networking and high levels of customer satisfaction.