Module 9 Iso
Module 9 Iso
ISO 9001 is defined as the international standard that specifies requirements for
a quality management system (QMS). Organizations use the standard to demonstrate
the ability to consistently provide products and services that meet customer and
regulatory requirements. It is the most popular standard in the ISO 9000 series and the
only standard in the series to which organizations can certify.
ISO 9001 was first published in 1987 by the International Organization for
Standardization (ISO), an international agency composed of the national standards
bodies of more than 160 countries. The current version of ISO 9001 was released in
September 2015.
1. Quality Management and Customer Focus
Unify the purpose and direction of your workforce and create productive
environments for all employees to pursue quality objectives. When
strategies and processes are aligned across all departments, you’re able
to meet quality objectives more efficiently, maximize collaboration
across business functions and coordinate your operations around risk-
based thinking. Quality shouldn’t be thought of as an “add-on” or
separate process; rather, quality should just be the norm for how the
organization operates.
4. Process Approach
A electronic quality management system ( EQMS ) includes a wide array
of inter-related processes to produce consistent and predictable results.
When all stakeholders have a deep understanding of how
the QMS produces results, you’re able to focus more effectively on
opportunities for improvement, optimize cross-functional performance
and convey confidence to partners that you’ll provide consistent quality.
Define objectives clearly and create formal processes to achieve
them
5. Improvement
Risk-based thinking and quality management aren’t one-off events.
Successful organizations focus on continuous improvement to
streamline root-cause investigations , enhance the drive for innovation
and boost your ability to anticipate and react to both internal and
external opportunities.
Educate and train all levels of employees to run basic quality
management tools and methodologies
All decision making involves some level of uncertainty. But basing your
decisions on analysis and evaluation of data is the best way to minimize
risk. Evidence-based decision making will help you maximize operational
efficiency, assess process performance effectively and gain a deeper
understanding of potential unintended consequences.