Saturday, September 19, 2009

Goal and Scope of an ISO 9000 quality system

Goal and Scope of an ISO 9000 quality system
The ISO 9000 Standard states its goal in two blunt words: customer satisfaction.How do we achieve customer satisfaction? By meeting customer requirements.The quality management system (QMS) helps us to dothis by:
a. Applying the system. Actually using it. Putting it at the heart ofour organization.b. Continually improving the system. The QMS is never done. Afterall, customer requirements do not stand still—they evolve and grow tougher.So we have to improve continually in order to survive.
(The guidance document, ISO 9004: 2000, sets a compatibleand in some respects more ambitious goal: “improving theprocesses of an organization to enhance performance.”) Prevention of nonconformity. Prevention is the key term here: prevention,rather than detection. Quality management has longsince evolved away from the old “inspect quality in” approach.Prevention is cheaper, more effective, and more protective of thecustomer. Detection is also a different mindset. It requires a veryhigh degree of process orientation, upstream thinking, and relentlessanalysis.To what types of organizations does the Standard apply? Alltypes. The requirements “are generic and applicable to all organizations,regardless of type and size.” A compliant QMS can be implementedby any organization, producing any product or service,anywhere in the world.Within the organization, the impact of the requirements and theQMS are similarly broad. The Standard “applies to the activities of organizationsfrom the identification of customer requirements, throughall quality management system processes, to the achievement of customersatisfaction.” Every activity within the organization that impactsthe process of creating customer satisfaction is affected by therequirements of the Standard.

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