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Iso 9001 management




Implementing a quality management such as ISO 9001:2008 requires transforming the
culture. It will affect the entire company, not just the quality department. More people in
the organization are affected by it than just the management representative, or the person
spearheading the effort. Implementing a quality system to the point of certification and
registration is a daunting task but is achievable with your current resources.
Implementation times can vary but it can be accomplished.

When considering implementation of a quality system such as ISO 9001:2008 you should
consider "why are you doing it?" Companies pursue quality system implementation for
various reasons, to become better, their customer's are requesting it, they are having
quality problems or they would like the recognition of being certified. In either scenario,
the circumstances are different as will be the driving force to implement the quality
management system. An organization should consider the benefits of having an ISO
9001:2008 quality system and are not concerned about flying the flag. The following
steps best describe the implementation process:

1. Why do you want to implement an ISO quality system?

2. Educate Top Management

3. Commitment from Top Management

4. Select a Management Representative

5. Select Implementation Team

6. Understand the current system and processes

7. Understand the Standard

8. Gap Analysis

9. Create an Implementation Plan

10. Employee Training

11. Monitor

12. Internal Auditor Training

13. Internal Audits
14. Select Registrar

15. Management Reviews

16. Continual Improvement

17. Pre-Assessment Audit

18. Registration Audit

Why implement a quality management system such as ISO 9001:2008 To understand
why you would consider implementing a quality management system, let us understand
the various quality management systems. There is the ISO 9001:2008 standard along with
the industry specific standards such as ISO/TS 16949 (Automotive), TL 9000
(Telecommunications) and AS9100 (Aerospace). In addition to these standards is the
Malcolm Baldrige Award.

The ISO 9000 standards cover all areas of control which has a potential to impact the
degree of compliance of a product or service. The standard is not a cookie cutter quality
system that means you will have the same quality system as your competitor, or
customer. It means you will have quality systems that meet the minimum requirements
but the details of how the requirements are met can vary dramatically.

There are several misconceptions surrounding the standard, one is it creates a great deal
of non value added paperwork, another misconception is it does not provide any value
because all I have to do is "say what I do and do what I say" and they third misconception
is it restricts creativity by burdening employees with structured approaches.

Addressing the first concern of generating non value added paperwork. The belief is you
must document, document, document everything you do. Actually, the standard requires
one quality manual, six procedures, instructions where necessary and 26 records. This
may sound like a lot but it really is not. The need for extensive documentation can be
mitigated with a thorough training program that reinforces what is to be done and how it
should occur. It is common for companies to utilize more documentation than the
standard requires, simply because they find it valuable. When you are in an environment
of continuous change and improvement, processes, duties and tasks are continually
changing to keep pace with improvement. It could be extremely hard to know what the
agreed upon method was without a formal documentation and change process. The end
process would drift because the tasks within the process drift. It would be analogous to
not having maximum speeds posted; they would be verbally communicated from area to
area.

The second misconception is that the standard does not really benefit a company because
it simply means you documented what you do (even if it is wrong) and you can show you
do it. I recall an example when I was touring a manufacturer and I could see they were
lacking in quality systems. I asked the Vice President of Quality if they considered
adopting an ISO quality system. He replied, "ISO is nothing more than doing what you
say you'll do. We could make cement life jackets and we could get certified. Our
customers wouldn't buy cement life jackets". I listened to what he said (laughing inside)
and suggested he get some training on the standard, because that is not the intent. The
current standard focuses on ensuring you provide a product or service that continually
meets the requirements of the customer with the aim of improving customer satisfaction.
To make a long story short you could have a system that is extremely well documented
and everyone follows the procedures and instructions. If this system is not producing an
output that is meeting the requirements of your customer you will not get certified, end of
story. Understand, the documentation portion of the standard is a tool or method, the end
game is customer satisfaction and meeting you business goals.

The third misconception perceives the standard as restrictive in that it binds employees
into a specific, structured way to do their job. It removes creativity and replaces it with a
mundane repetitive approach. This is to some degree true and dependent upon the
organization. The level of control is at the discretion of the company. My experience
supports having a level of structure that is consistent with achieving the desired output of
the process. For example, if the process is purchasing, the desired output is to have
quality product delivered on time in the correct quantities.

The ISO 9001:2008 quality system standard provides an organization with a solid quality
management system to build upon and improve. The objective of the ISO 9001:2008
standard is to provide a guideline which enables an organization to deliver a consistent
product or service that meets the customer's requirements and strive to enhance customer
satisfaction. The requirements within the standard are developed for a company to
maintain a predictable output from their key business processes and continually improve
those processes.

ISO 9000 is a combination of three quality system standards, ISO 9000, ISO 9001 and
ISO 9004. The ISO 9000 standard covers the concepts and vocabulary. The ISO 9004
standard is guideline for improvement. The ISO 9001 standard is for quality system
requirements and is the only standard with requirements. ISO 9001:2008 means the ISO
9001 standard with the revision year of 2008. From this point forward when I reference
the standard I am referring to the ISO 9001:2008 requirements standard.

Is an ISO 9001 quality system right for you? To answer that you must first answer why
are you going to implement and possibly get certified to the standard? Let me give you a
few scenarios that may help.

Scenario 1 Your company is doing well. Your sales are increasing, you have little or no
competitive pressure to reduce costs and upper management is happy with the current
state of the company and the business climate. Your customers are not requesting you to
become certified and do not perceive a competitive advantage with having an ISO
9001:2008 certification. Implementing and becoming certified to the standard is probably
not right for you at this time. Chances are you will not get the support you need or
convince anyone in upper management there is a need. Could implementing an ISO 9001
quality system improve your current situation? Absolutely, you could see cost savings
and improvements in all types of areas. Implementation is more of timing thing and right
now sounds like the wrong timing.

Scenario 2 Your company is doing well. Your sales are increasing, you have competitive
pressure but your current business practices are able to keep you competitive. Upper
management is happy with the current state of the company, but your customers are
requesting it of you. You are pursuing ISO 9001:2008 certification because your
customers require it. I have experienced this difficult situation many times. The major
obstacle is that nobody in the organization wants it or realizes a need for it. The driving
force is external. An ISO 9001 quality system will probably be implemented and
certified. The big question lies in the long term effectiveness and sustainability of the
system or is it only needed to "fly the flag". You can approach this by learning as much
as you can about the standard so you can speak intelligently about it. You will continually
"sell" this program to upper management to obtain their buy in. Once the benefits of the
program begin to surface, your selling efforts will diminish.

Scenario 3 Your company is doing marginal to bad. Sales are level to decreasing; you
have quality problems that are adding a lot of cost. You are experiencing pressures from
global competitors. Upper management is not content with the current state of the
business, but they are unsure what to do. The climate is good for implementing an ISO
9001 quality system. If you can convince top management of the benefits and expected
results of having a quality system this can be very good environment for implementation.
You can choose to not become certified, you will gain benefits by simply having a quality
system modeled after ISO 9001:2008. The benefits of having a structured quality system
will provide the incentive and reward. Having implemented ISO 9001 quality systems in
all three scenarios, experience has proven scenario 3 is the best. It is much easier to
achieve buy in and commitment from the top.

The overwhelming question for top management to answer is "why are we doing this and
what do we want from it?" Understand why you are doing it and be fair regarding what
you want from it. Don't go in with expectations of an elite quality system generating a
great deal of benefits if you're going to seek the path of less resistance toward
implementation and registration.

Educate Top Management The education process for top management is a two-part
approach. One part is to educate them on what ISO 9001:2000 is, the benefits, how it fits
into your current business and what it will take to implement the system and be certified.
The second part is to educate them and ensure they understand why they are doing it and
what the challenges are.

What are the ISO 9000 standards? We discussed this previously; ISO 9000 is a
combination of three quality system standards, ISO 9000, ISO 9001 and ISO 9004. The
ISO 9000 standard covers the concepts and vocabulary. The ISO 9004 standard is
guideline for improvement. The ISO 9001 standard is for quality system requirements
and is the only auditable standard.
The ISO 9000 standards are internationally recognized. They are developed, maintained
and revised by the International Organization for Standardization or ISO. ISO maintains
thousands of standards. The ISO 9000 standards deal with quality management. You may
have heard of ISO 14000 which deals with environmental management.

The ISO 9001:2000 standard is adopted as a national quality system in more than 100
countries throughout the world. There are over 700,000 ISO 9001:2000 certificates issues
in more than 140 countries worldwide. The number of certificates in Europe exceeds
200,000; the number in the US is over 60,000 with an estimated 30,000 organizations
currently pursuing ISO 9001:2000 certification.

The benefits of an ISO 9001:2008 quality system The soft benefits of an ISO 9001:2008
quality system are improved quality and customer satisfaction. The hard savings come in
the form of a tangible reduction in the cost of quality. Appraisal costs will decrease
significantly as will failure costs. A slight increase in prevention costs should be
observed, which is desired, but the savings in the other two areas will overshadow the
slight increase you see in prevention costs. For a quick review, appraisal costs are those
costs associated with inspecting, evaluating and testing. Failure costs are costs associated
with scrap, both internal and external along with warranty. Prevention costs are
associated with quality planning, fmea's, control plan development and quality
engineering. Depending upon your company's current situation including market, size,
business practices and culture, it should be safe to estimate a savings in the area of 1% of
sales. There is no reason why you can't realize savings of up 2 - 5% of sales. This
amounts to approximately $1,250,000 annually for a $50,000,000 company. On average
for a $10,000,000 company you could expect savings in the $250,000 range. Where do
the savings come from? They are in the form of reduced inspection, rework, scrap,
warranty and handling customer complaints. How does the implementation of an ISO
9001:2008 quality system realize cost savings? It is estimated that approximately 75% of
the total quality costs are the result of internal and external failures. For a manufacturing
company, failure costs are associated with sorting or reworking product. For a service
company, examples of failure costs would be working with a customer to resolve a
problem or revising documents because they were not done correctly. Having a quality
system in place will reduce significantly the amount of failure costs incurred. You will
also be able to reduce the amount of appraisal costs or how much you test, inspect or
validate the product or process. Below is an example of the savings realized by a
company after implementing an ISO 9001:2008 quality system.

A study was completed that showed a company reduced it's total cost of quality from
$1,323,302 to $748,567. These are staggering improvements. Keep in mind that sales
remained level but direct labor hours did not. A reduction in direct labor hours was
observed due to process improvements. The cost of quality breakdown does not include
financial gains in productivity, inventory reduction and reduction in changeover time. An
important feature to recognize in the chart above is the shift in costs from appraisal and
failure category to prevention.
The important thing to remember is the savings are only visible if the accounting systems
are in place to accurately report them. The process to capture, report and analyze the cost
of quality is very detailed and beyond the scope of this article. There is a financial reward
for implementing an ISO 9001:2008 quality system.

How ISO 9001:2008 fits into your current business model The thought of a quality
management system similar to ISO 9001:2008 brings fear to people because they believe
they have to adopt someone else's program, or force a system or method to work for
them. The intent of the standard is to adopt a system that works for you. You could
benchmark a company and observe how they determine customer satisfaction and your
first thought is, "that would never work at our place". That is alright, there is more than
one way to "skin a cat".

Here is the best piece of advice I can offer, there is no best way to implement a process or
create a system. There is no single best method or the right way to do it. That is where
continual improvement becomes important. Don't become overwhelmed with trying to
find the one correct method, get something implemented and continually improve it. The
power and value with the standard is that you start somewhere and improve. Not
everyone starts at the same place or ends at the same place. This endeavor to implement
an ISO 9001:2008 quality system does not end with certification. Not all ISO 9001:2000
registered companies quality systems are the same. Just like not all doctors, lawyers,
teachers or car mechanics are the same. They all have certifications and credentials but
differentiation lies in their approaches to the job.

The implementation and maintenance of a quality management system can be tailored to
a specific company. Don't confuse this with allowance to not meet the requirements. It
means there are many ways to meet the requirements. You can choose to meet the
requirements or you can choose to exceed the requirements. It is dependent upon the
organization. My hope is that should you adopt the ISO 9001:2008 standard and
implement it, your decision is to do more than just simply meet the requirements of the
standard. This is where so many companies fall short in realizing gains from a quality
management system. They do just enough to meet the requirements but never push
themselves to exceed. The implementation of a quality management system is like
anything else in life, you get out of it what you put in.

What it will take to implement ISO 9001:2000 This is dependent upon how fast you want
to go, status of your current business practices and what type of resources you have. A
typical timeline would be a year. I see no reason why you can't go from where you are
now to certification in one year. Can you do it quicker, say six months, three months, yes.
It just takes time and money. Time and money can cure just about anything. I wish it
could cure everything, but unfortunately it can't. From a human resources standpoint, for
a single location company of about 500 people it will take about 4500 man-hours to
implement on your own. Keep in mind a portion of that time will be consumed because
it's new to you. It wouldn't take a consultant or someone with experience that long
because they've done it before. If you hire a consultant you can reduce the amount of time
it takes, but you will spend it in consulting fees. A good estimate would be about 8 man-
hours per employee to complete it in a year by yourself. At an estimated cost of $25 per
man-hour, you may look at it as $20,000 for a 100 person operation (8 x 100 x 25) =
20,000. One thing to keep in mind is the people working on the project are there anyway,
you are not hiring extra people. You are going to temporarily reassign resources to
accomplish the goal.

Now let's look at the cost to get certified. Depending on the registrar you select and we'll
talk about that later, the costs can vary slightly. A good baseline for costs to become
certified and maintain certification, are as follows:

Document Review $750 onetime cost, pre Assessment Audit $4,500 Registration Audit
$7,500 one time cost Surveillance Audits $4,500 ongoing annual cost

Training costs should be in the $1,400 - $10,000 range for internal auditor training. You
can cut some costs of training by having one person in your facility trained and then have
them train your internal auditors ($1,400) or you can have all of your internal auditors
trained by an outside source ($10,000).

Commitment from top management I can't teach you how to get commitment from top
management, I'm not that good, and nobody is. What I can teach you is how important it
is, what it means and how to tell if top management is really supporting the
implementation of a quality system. Can you implement an ISO 9001:2008 quality
system without top management support and commitment? Yes, but the resultant quality
system will not be as effective as it could be and you will probably find yourself asking
where the benefits are. You will question the validity of the standard and the quality
system because you won't see a dramatic change in your complaints, quality levels,
quality costs and warranty. You can implement a system, pass a registration audit and get
your company ISO 9001:2008 certified. I have seen a large number of companies that are
certified but are not reaping the benefits of the standard or the quality system. The root
cause of this is most often top management support.

In an attempt to avoid this scenario, it is important to educate top management of the
commitment requirement and the ramifications of falling short. Educating top
management does not guarantee the commitment. When the results are not there and
people begin to question the initiative, you can point to this as a possible way to right the
ship.

Top management commitment does not mean they verbalize it. When it comes to an
endeavor such as implementing an ISO 9001:2008 quality management system, people
will not care what you say; they want to see what you do. It will be extremely difficult to
get momentum when top management talks the talk but will not walk the walk.
Employees at all levels of the organization will be watching to see if this is real, or is it
another "flavor of the month". They won't look at the management representative
singularly; they will be watching the members of top management and particularly the
highest ranking individual at that site.
That individual must provide continual support for the implementation process. They
achieve that with actions that are consistent with what is spoken. For example, a situation
exists where an area is having problems with a specific supplier. This has been occurring
for six months and no activity is taking place. People will not believe top management is
serious or supports the implementation of a quality system if this occurs. Take the same
scenario but now the top ranking individual communicates to the employees what is
being done and when. This is a big step. The biggest step is doing something to correct
the problem.

The key for top management is to be visible and active in the effort and have their actions
consistent. If this hasn't been a characteristic of top management at your facility then they
need to change. Can it be implemented without this, yes but as we stated above it will be
much more difficult and the results you get will be significantly reduced. This effort can't
be viewed as something the quality manager, improvement manager or any other
anointed person does. This must be an effort spearheaded, guided and monitored by top
management. If it is not, everyone associated will know and the progress will be slow, the
results will be substandard and your frustration level will be high.

Select Management Representative and Implementation Team The management
representative is the person who has the responsibility to report on the status of the
quality system and is most often the person who will spearhead the efforts. This person
oversees the implementation process and is responsible to ensure management is aware of
the condition of the quality system in order to facilitate continual improvement. It is not
imperative this person is part of top management, but it does help. If the management
representative is not a member of top management make certain they have direct report to
someone in top management. The management representative is to the ISO 9001:2008
implementation what a black belt is to a six sigma project. They are the catalyst that
makes the reaction move. Important characteristics of a management representative are
forward thinking, change agent, and embody continual improvement, positive thinking
and not content with just getting by.

The next step is to identify the implementation team. This can vary depending upon the
size of the organization. A 500 person facility could have an implementation team of
perhaps 10 - 15 people. A 50 person facility could manage with an implementation team
of 1 to 2 people. For the implementation team you're looking for some resources that
could carve 1 - 2 hours per day out of their schedule and work on the ISO
implementation. You are also looking for change agents within the company. You do not
want to fill your implementation team with individuals who are antagonistic, negative
thinking and happy with simply doing what it takes to meet the requirements.


If you want to download over free 50 ebook for iso 9001 standard, you can visit:

http://iso9001ebooks.info

Best regards

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Iso 9001 management

  • 1. Iso 9001 management Implementing a quality management such as ISO 9001:2008 requires transforming the culture. It will affect the entire company, not just the quality department. More people in the organization are affected by it than just the management representative, or the person spearheading the effort. Implementing a quality system to the point of certification and registration is a daunting task but is achievable with your current resources. Implementation times can vary but it can be accomplished. When considering implementation of a quality system such as ISO 9001:2008 you should consider "why are you doing it?" Companies pursue quality system implementation for various reasons, to become better, their customer's are requesting it, they are having quality problems or they would like the recognition of being certified. In either scenario, the circumstances are different as will be the driving force to implement the quality management system. An organization should consider the benefits of having an ISO 9001:2008 quality system and are not concerned about flying the flag. The following steps best describe the implementation process: 1. Why do you want to implement an ISO quality system? 2. Educate Top Management 3. Commitment from Top Management 4. Select a Management Representative 5. Select Implementation Team 6. Understand the current system and processes 7. Understand the Standard 8. Gap Analysis 9. Create an Implementation Plan 10. Employee Training 11. Monitor 12. Internal Auditor Training 13. Internal Audits
  • 2. 14. Select Registrar 15. Management Reviews 16. Continual Improvement 17. Pre-Assessment Audit 18. Registration Audit Why implement a quality management system such as ISO 9001:2008 To understand why you would consider implementing a quality management system, let us understand the various quality management systems. There is the ISO 9001:2008 standard along with the industry specific standards such as ISO/TS 16949 (Automotive), TL 9000 (Telecommunications) and AS9100 (Aerospace). In addition to these standards is the Malcolm Baldrige Award. The ISO 9000 standards cover all areas of control which has a potential to impact the degree of compliance of a product or service. The standard is not a cookie cutter quality system that means you will have the same quality system as your competitor, or customer. It means you will have quality systems that meet the minimum requirements but the details of how the requirements are met can vary dramatically. There are several misconceptions surrounding the standard, one is it creates a great deal of non value added paperwork, another misconception is it does not provide any value because all I have to do is "say what I do and do what I say" and they third misconception is it restricts creativity by burdening employees with structured approaches. Addressing the first concern of generating non value added paperwork. The belief is you must document, document, document everything you do. Actually, the standard requires one quality manual, six procedures, instructions where necessary and 26 records. This may sound like a lot but it really is not. The need for extensive documentation can be mitigated with a thorough training program that reinforces what is to be done and how it should occur. It is common for companies to utilize more documentation than the standard requires, simply because they find it valuable. When you are in an environment of continuous change and improvement, processes, duties and tasks are continually changing to keep pace with improvement. It could be extremely hard to know what the agreed upon method was without a formal documentation and change process. The end process would drift because the tasks within the process drift. It would be analogous to not having maximum speeds posted; they would be verbally communicated from area to area. The second misconception is that the standard does not really benefit a company because it simply means you documented what you do (even if it is wrong) and you can show you do it. I recall an example when I was touring a manufacturer and I could see they were lacking in quality systems. I asked the Vice President of Quality if they considered
  • 3. adopting an ISO quality system. He replied, "ISO is nothing more than doing what you say you'll do. We could make cement life jackets and we could get certified. Our customers wouldn't buy cement life jackets". I listened to what he said (laughing inside) and suggested he get some training on the standard, because that is not the intent. The current standard focuses on ensuring you provide a product or service that continually meets the requirements of the customer with the aim of improving customer satisfaction. To make a long story short you could have a system that is extremely well documented and everyone follows the procedures and instructions. If this system is not producing an output that is meeting the requirements of your customer you will not get certified, end of story. Understand, the documentation portion of the standard is a tool or method, the end game is customer satisfaction and meeting you business goals. The third misconception perceives the standard as restrictive in that it binds employees into a specific, structured way to do their job. It removes creativity and replaces it with a mundane repetitive approach. This is to some degree true and dependent upon the organization. The level of control is at the discretion of the company. My experience supports having a level of structure that is consistent with achieving the desired output of the process. For example, if the process is purchasing, the desired output is to have quality product delivered on time in the correct quantities. The ISO 9001:2008 quality system standard provides an organization with a solid quality management system to build upon and improve. The objective of the ISO 9001:2008 standard is to provide a guideline which enables an organization to deliver a consistent product or service that meets the customer's requirements and strive to enhance customer satisfaction. The requirements within the standard are developed for a company to maintain a predictable output from their key business processes and continually improve those processes. ISO 9000 is a combination of three quality system standards, ISO 9000, ISO 9001 and ISO 9004. The ISO 9000 standard covers the concepts and vocabulary. The ISO 9004 standard is guideline for improvement. The ISO 9001 standard is for quality system requirements and is the only standard with requirements. ISO 9001:2008 means the ISO 9001 standard with the revision year of 2008. From this point forward when I reference the standard I am referring to the ISO 9001:2008 requirements standard. Is an ISO 9001 quality system right for you? To answer that you must first answer why are you going to implement and possibly get certified to the standard? Let me give you a few scenarios that may help. Scenario 1 Your company is doing well. Your sales are increasing, you have little or no competitive pressure to reduce costs and upper management is happy with the current state of the company and the business climate. Your customers are not requesting you to become certified and do not perceive a competitive advantage with having an ISO 9001:2008 certification. Implementing and becoming certified to the standard is probably not right for you at this time. Chances are you will not get the support you need or convince anyone in upper management there is a need. Could implementing an ISO 9001
  • 4. quality system improve your current situation? Absolutely, you could see cost savings and improvements in all types of areas. Implementation is more of timing thing and right now sounds like the wrong timing. Scenario 2 Your company is doing well. Your sales are increasing, you have competitive pressure but your current business practices are able to keep you competitive. Upper management is happy with the current state of the company, but your customers are requesting it of you. You are pursuing ISO 9001:2008 certification because your customers require it. I have experienced this difficult situation many times. The major obstacle is that nobody in the organization wants it or realizes a need for it. The driving force is external. An ISO 9001 quality system will probably be implemented and certified. The big question lies in the long term effectiveness and sustainability of the system or is it only needed to "fly the flag". You can approach this by learning as much as you can about the standard so you can speak intelligently about it. You will continually "sell" this program to upper management to obtain their buy in. Once the benefits of the program begin to surface, your selling efforts will diminish. Scenario 3 Your company is doing marginal to bad. Sales are level to decreasing; you have quality problems that are adding a lot of cost. You are experiencing pressures from global competitors. Upper management is not content with the current state of the business, but they are unsure what to do. The climate is good for implementing an ISO 9001 quality system. If you can convince top management of the benefits and expected results of having a quality system this can be very good environment for implementation. You can choose to not become certified, you will gain benefits by simply having a quality system modeled after ISO 9001:2008. The benefits of having a structured quality system will provide the incentive and reward. Having implemented ISO 9001 quality systems in all three scenarios, experience has proven scenario 3 is the best. It is much easier to achieve buy in and commitment from the top. The overwhelming question for top management to answer is "why are we doing this and what do we want from it?" Understand why you are doing it and be fair regarding what you want from it. Don't go in with expectations of an elite quality system generating a great deal of benefits if you're going to seek the path of less resistance toward implementation and registration. Educate Top Management The education process for top management is a two-part approach. One part is to educate them on what ISO 9001:2000 is, the benefits, how it fits into your current business and what it will take to implement the system and be certified. The second part is to educate them and ensure they understand why they are doing it and what the challenges are. What are the ISO 9000 standards? We discussed this previously; ISO 9000 is a combination of three quality system standards, ISO 9000, ISO 9001 and ISO 9004. The ISO 9000 standard covers the concepts and vocabulary. The ISO 9004 standard is guideline for improvement. The ISO 9001 standard is for quality system requirements and is the only auditable standard.
  • 5. The ISO 9000 standards are internationally recognized. They are developed, maintained and revised by the International Organization for Standardization or ISO. ISO maintains thousands of standards. The ISO 9000 standards deal with quality management. You may have heard of ISO 14000 which deals with environmental management. The ISO 9001:2000 standard is adopted as a national quality system in more than 100 countries throughout the world. There are over 700,000 ISO 9001:2000 certificates issues in more than 140 countries worldwide. The number of certificates in Europe exceeds 200,000; the number in the US is over 60,000 with an estimated 30,000 organizations currently pursuing ISO 9001:2000 certification. The benefits of an ISO 9001:2008 quality system The soft benefits of an ISO 9001:2008 quality system are improved quality and customer satisfaction. The hard savings come in the form of a tangible reduction in the cost of quality. Appraisal costs will decrease significantly as will failure costs. A slight increase in prevention costs should be observed, which is desired, but the savings in the other two areas will overshadow the slight increase you see in prevention costs. For a quick review, appraisal costs are those costs associated with inspecting, evaluating and testing. Failure costs are costs associated with scrap, both internal and external along with warranty. Prevention costs are associated with quality planning, fmea's, control plan development and quality engineering. Depending upon your company's current situation including market, size, business practices and culture, it should be safe to estimate a savings in the area of 1% of sales. There is no reason why you can't realize savings of up 2 - 5% of sales. This amounts to approximately $1,250,000 annually for a $50,000,000 company. On average for a $10,000,000 company you could expect savings in the $250,000 range. Where do the savings come from? They are in the form of reduced inspection, rework, scrap, warranty and handling customer complaints. How does the implementation of an ISO 9001:2008 quality system realize cost savings? It is estimated that approximately 75% of the total quality costs are the result of internal and external failures. For a manufacturing company, failure costs are associated with sorting or reworking product. For a service company, examples of failure costs would be working with a customer to resolve a problem or revising documents because they were not done correctly. Having a quality system in place will reduce significantly the amount of failure costs incurred. You will also be able to reduce the amount of appraisal costs or how much you test, inspect or validate the product or process. Below is an example of the savings realized by a company after implementing an ISO 9001:2008 quality system. A study was completed that showed a company reduced it's total cost of quality from $1,323,302 to $748,567. These are staggering improvements. Keep in mind that sales remained level but direct labor hours did not. A reduction in direct labor hours was observed due to process improvements. The cost of quality breakdown does not include financial gains in productivity, inventory reduction and reduction in changeover time. An important feature to recognize in the chart above is the shift in costs from appraisal and failure category to prevention.
  • 6. The important thing to remember is the savings are only visible if the accounting systems are in place to accurately report them. The process to capture, report and analyze the cost of quality is very detailed and beyond the scope of this article. There is a financial reward for implementing an ISO 9001:2008 quality system. How ISO 9001:2008 fits into your current business model The thought of a quality management system similar to ISO 9001:2008 brings fear to people because they believe they have to adopt someone else's program, or force a system or method to work for them. The intent of the standard is to adopt a system that works for you. You could benchmark a company and observe how they determine customer satisfaction and your first thought is, "that would never work at our place". That is alright, there is more than one way to "skin a cat". Here is the best piece of advice I can offer, there is no best way to implement a process or create a system. There is no single best method or the right way to do it. That is where continual improvement becomes important. Don't become overwhelmed with trying to find the one correct method, get something implemented and continually improve it. The power and value with the standard is that you start somewhere and improve. Not everyone starts at the same place or ends at the same place. This endeavor to implement an ISO 9001:2008 quality system does not end with certification. Not all ISO 9001:2000 registered companies quality systems are the same. Just like not all doctors, lawyers, teachers or car mechanics are the same. They all have certifications and credentials but differentiation lies in their approaches to the job. The implementation and maintenance of a quality management system can be tailored to a specific company. Don't confuse this with allowance to not meet the requirements. It means there are many ways to meet the requirements. You can choose to meet the requirements or you can choose to exceed the requirements. It is dependent upon the organization. My hope is that should you adopt the ISO 9001:2008 standard and implement it, your decision is to do more than just simply meet the requirements of the standard. This is where so many companies fall short in realizing gains from a quality management system. They do just enough to meet the requirements but never push themselves to exceed. The implementation of a quality management system is like anything else in life, you get out of it what you put in. What it will take to implement ISO 9001:2000 This is dependent upon how fast you want to go, status of your current business practices and what type of resources you have. A typical timeline would be a year. I see no reason why you can't go from where you are now to certification in one year. Can you do it quicker, say six months, three months, yes. It just takes time and money. Time and money can cure just about anything. I wish it could cure everything, but unfortunately it can't. From a human resources standpoint, for a single location company of about 500 people it will take about 4500 man-hours to implement on your own. Keep in mind a portion of that time will be consumed because it's new to you. It wouldn't take a consultant or someone with experience that long because they've done it before. If you hire a consultant you can reduce the amount of time it takes, but you will spend it in consulting fees. A good estimate would be about 8 man-
  • 7. hours per employee to complete it in a year by yourself. At an estimated cost of $25 per man-hour, you may look at it as $20,000 for a 100 person operation (8 x 100 x 25) = 20,000. One thing to keep in mind is the people working on the project are there anyway, you are not hiring extra people. You are going to temporarily reassign resources to accomplish the goal. Now let's look at the cost to get certified. Depending on the registrar you select and we'll talk about that later, the costs can vary slightly. A good baseline for costs to become certified and maintain certification, are as follows: Document Review $750 onetime cost, pre Assessment Audit $4,500 Registration Audit $7,500 one time cost Surveillance Audits $4,500 ongoing annual cost Training costs should be in the $1,400 - $10,000 range for internal auditor training. You can cut some costs of training by having one person in your facility trained and then have them train your internal auditors ($1,400) or you can have all of your internal auditors trained by an outside source ($10,000). Commitment from top management I can't teach you how to get commitment from top management, I'm not that good, and nobody is. What I can teach you is how important it is, what it means and how to tell if top management is really supporting the implementation of a quality system. Can you implement an ISO 9001:2008 quality system without top management support and commitment? Yes, but the resultant quality system will not be as effective as it could be and you will probably find yourself asking where the benefits are. You will question the validity of the standard and the quality system because you won't see a dramatic change in your complaints, quality levels, quality costs and warranty. You can implement a system, pass a registration audit and get your company ISO 9001:2008 certified. I have seen a large number of companies that are certified but are not reaping the benefits of the standard or the quality system. The root cause of this is most often top management support. In an attempt to avoid this scenario, it is important to educate top management of the commitment requirement and the ramifications of falling short. Educating top management does not guarantee the commitment. When the results are not there and people begin to question the initiative, you can point to this as a possible way to right the ship. Top management commitment does not mean they verbalize it. When it comes to an endeavor such as implementing an ISO 9001:2008 quality management system, people will not care what you say; they want to see what you do. It will be extremely difficult to get momentum when top management talks the talk but will not walk the walk. Employees at all levels of the organization will be watching to see if this is real, or is it another "flavor of the month". They won't look at the management representative singularly; they will be watching the members of top management and particularly the highest ranking individual at that site.
  • 8. That individual must provide continual support for the implementation process. They achieve that with actions that are consistent with what is spoken. For example, a situation exists where an area is having problems with a specific supplier. This has been occurring for six months and no activity is taking place. People will not believe top management is serious or supports the implementation of a quality system if this occurs. Take the same scenario but now the top ranking individual communicates to the employees what is being done and when. This is a big step. The biggest step is doing something to correct the problem. The key for top management is to be visible and active in the effort and have their actions consistent. If this hasn't been a characteristic of top management at your facility then they need to change. Can it be implemented without this, yes but as we stated above it will be much more difficult and the results you get will be significantly reduced. This effort can't be viewed as something the quality manager, improvement manager or any other anointed person does. This must be an effort spearheaded, guided and monitored by top management. If it is not, everyone associated will know and the progress will be slow, the results will be substandard and your frustration level will be high. Select Management Representative and Implementation Team The management representative is the person who has the responsibility to report on the status of the quality system and is most often the person who will spearhead the efforts. This person oversees the implementation process and is responsible to ensure management is aware of the condition of the quality system in order to facilitate continual improvement. It is not imperative this person is part of top management, but it does help. If the management representative is not a member of top management make certain they have direct report to someone in top management. The management representative is to the ISO 9001:2008 implementation what a black belt is to a six sigma project. They are the catalyst that makes the reaction move. Important characteristics of a management representative are forward thinking, change agent, and embody continual improvement, positive thinking and not content with just getting by. The next step is to identify the implementation team. This can vary depending upon the size of the organization. A 500 person facility could have an implementation team of perhaps 10 - 15 people. A 50 person facility could manage with an implementation team of 1 to 2 people. For the implementation team you're looking for some resources that could carve 1 - 2 hours per day out of their schedule and work on the ISO implementation. You are also looking for change agents within the company. You do not want to fill your implementation team with individuals who are antagonistic, negative thinking and happy with simply doing what it takes to meet the requirements. If you want to download over free 50 ebook for iso 9001 standard, you can visit: http://iso9001ebooks.info Best regards