Iso 10006, Quality Management - Presentation Transcript
ISO 10006, Quality Management
Guidelines to quality in project management claims to provide \"guidance on quality system
elements, concepts and practices for which the implementation is important to, and has an
impact on, the achievement of quality in project management.\" In our opinion, application of
this document is more likely to have the opposite effect: if attention is given to the items
identified in the standard at the expense of others critical to project management, the result
could very well be a poorly managed and unnecessarily costly project that is compliant with
the standard.
Strong words, perhaps, but let us look at some of guidance the standard provides, and you can
draw your own conclusion.
First of all, ISO 10006 does seem to cover the right subjects — scope, cost, time, risk, and so
on. In fact, it identifies virtually the same set of project management processes and knowledge
areas as A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge. Not much of a surprise since
the ISO committee used a draft of that document as a key input during the development of their
document. There are, however, some notable omissions:
There are no quality management processes. By failing to include the quality
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management processes, ISO 10006 implies that these critical processes are outside the
scope of project management. How does one ensure quality without quality
management?
There is no project execution process. Lots of planning processes, lots of controlling
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processes, but no place to actually do the work of the project. This omission regrettably
reinforces the notion that project management is limited to planning and controlling.
ISO 10006 limits its discussion of scope to developing \"a description of the project
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product.\" In doing so, it minimizes the importance of project scope, of defining the
work of the project. Hardly a recipe for quality in project management.
Second, the document says that it is \"not a guide to project management itself,\" yet the level of
detail provided and the phraseology used in most clauses and subclauses runs counter to this
stated intent. There is much use of prescriptive terms such as \"action should be taken,\"
decisions should be \"formally documented,\" \"special attention should be given to,\" or
\"particular attention should be given to.\" This language creates a false impression of priorities
for successful project management and raises the risk of misuse of the standard.
Third, the standard recognizes that project phases and project life cycles exist, but it provides
no guidance on how the identified project processes relate to project phases. Some of the ISO
10006 processes will occur only in some phases. Unfortunately, the standard fails to identify
which processes these are. This inconsistency is likely to reduce quality in project management
if project organizations attempt to implement processes in phases where they don’t belong.
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