ISO 9000 is a series of international quality standards that
have been developed by the International Organization for Standardization. More
than 100 countries now recognize the 9000 series. The idea behind the standards
is defects (or poor service) can be prevented through the planning and
application of best practices at every stage of business—from design
through manufacturing and then installation and servicing. These standards
focus on identifying criteria by which any organization, regardless of whether
it is manufacturing or service oriented, can ensure that product leaving its
facility meets the requirements of its customers. These standards ask a company
to first document and implement its systems for quality management, and then
verify, by means of an audit conducted by an independent accredited third
party, the compliance of those systems to the requirements of the standards.
Regardless of whether an organization is
involved in a total manufacturing operation, including design, or only
inspection and testing process, it can develop a quality management system
based on one of the ISO 9000 requirements standards. By design, these standards
can accommodate variation from company to company and between economic sectors.
It is simply up to each individual business to interpret the appropriate
requirements standards of its own processes.
The
principal standards within the group are ISO 9001, 9002 and 9003. These are the
requirements standards, and all the other standards within the series are
related to these three. Of these three, ISO 9001 is the most comprehensive.
Divided into 20 specific elements, it provides a foundation for basic quality
management and continuous improvement practices. Each of its 20 elements covers
a particular area of an organization‘s business processes:
2. Quality Planning
3. Contract Review
4. Design Control
5. Document & Data Control
6. Purchasing
7. Control of Customer-Supplied Product
8. Identification & Traceability
9. Process Control
10. Inspection & Testing
11. Control of Inspection, Measuring & Test Equipment
12. Inspection and Test Status
13. Control of Nonconforming Product
14. Corrective and Preventive Action
15. Storage, Handling, Packaging Preservation & Delivery
16. Control of Quality Records
17. Internal Quality Audit
18. Training
19. Servicing
20. Statistical Technique
ISO 9002 and
ISO 9003 are derivatives of the 9001 requirements standard. But why is it
important to become ISO 9000 certified? For one reason, it is essential from a
purely competitive standpoint. Simply stated, ISO 9000 compliance is “good
business practice”. Adopting ISO 9000 should produce the following
benefits:
·
Improved
efficiency of operations
·
Optimized
company structure & operational integrity
·
Improved
utilization of time and materials
·
Clearly
defined responsibilities and authorities
·
Improved
accountability of individuals, departments, and systems
·
Improved
communication and quality of information
·
Improved
records in case of litigation against the company
·
Formalized
systems with consistent quality, punctual delivery, and a framework for future
quality improvement
·
Documented
systems with useful reference and training tools
·
Fewer rejects;
therefore, less repeated work and warranty costs
·
Rectified
errors at an earlier stage; therefore, less scrap
·
Improved
relationships with customers and suppliers
·
Ability to
tender for ISO 9000 contracts at home and abroad
The ability of implementing ISO 9000 is
directly proportional to management commitment. Executive management must realize
that the quality element plays a key role in the success of the business. The
quality system must be “lived day-to-day”. Its success or failure does
not rest on the shoulders of the quality manager alone. If a business is not
profitable, does management fire the finance manager? Of course not! A
successful company is operated through teamwork.
It is interesting to note that according
to the latest ISO Survey of Certifications -- 2007 reveals certification
activity around one or more of ISO‘s management system standards in 175
countries, up from 170 in 2006 – ―a clear demonstration‖, according to the
survey, ―that they have become essential tools of the world economy. ISO
Secretary-General Alan Bryden comments: “The survey illustrates in a very
concrete manner the extent to which ISO management system standards are meeting
the organization’s strategic objective of global relevance – in other words,
adding value for the organizations that use them all over the world.” (ISO News
2008.)
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