Quality Management Systems
Chapter 10
Introduction
• ISO- International Organization for
Standardization
• Founded in 1946, in Geneva, Switzerland
• Main function is to promote the development
of standardization of goods and services, to
better accommodate a world wide market.
• ANSI- American National Standards Institute
• ANSI represents U.S. in the ISO
ISO Registration
• Companies can become registered as an ISO
company
• This involves the registrar giving an
assessment of the operations a company, and
then making periodic surveillance audits
• Primary Reason: To give your customer the
comfort of knowing that you have a quality
plan in place, and it is being monitored by an
objective third party
Internal Reasons for Becoming ISO
Registered
• 100 Italian manufacturing firms were surveyed
to find out what improved after certification.
– Internal quality: less scrap, rework, nonconformities
– Production reliability: less breakdowns, less time
with emergencies, downtime
– Time performance: time to market, punctual
deliveries
Externally: less nonconformities
Negatives
• Prevention and appraisal costs increased
– Only one negative shown in 100 surveys.
– Positives outweigh negatives
– Takes time to implement, but worth it in the long
run
ISO 9000
• The ISO 9000 series of standards is generic
• It is designed to adapt to fit any industry type
• Three standards of the 9000 series:
– ISO 9000:2015- Fundamentals and vocabulary
– ISO 9001:2015- Requirements
– ISO 9004:2009- Guidelines for performance
improvements
Sector-specific Standards
• Some industries require special set of ISO
rules; not operated the same as most
• Three other quality systems:
– AS9100-
– ISO/TS 16949
– TL9000
AS9100
• This standard is specifically for the aerospace
industry
• Attempt at unifying the requirements of
NASA, DOD, and FAA
• At the same time satisfying the industry’s
needs
ISO/TS 16949
• Standard specifically for automotive suppliers
• Merges supplier quality requirements of U.S.
with German, French, and Italian automakers
• Goal- provide continuous improvement,
defect prevention, reduce variation and waste
• Is assumed that this standard will show 85%
improvement rate in first 5 years
TL9000
• Telecommunications Industry
• Consolidate various quality systems
requirements
• Defines design, development, production,
delivery, installation and maintenance of
telecommunications
• Customers receive benefits , worldwide
competition, benchmarks, improvement
initiatives
TL 9000 continued-
• This standard focused on:
– Hardware Specific Requirements and Measures
– Software Specific Requirements and Measures
– Services Specific Requirements and Measures
ISO 9001 REQUIREMENTS
• The standard has 8 clauses
1) Scope
2) Normative Reference
3) Terms and Definitions
4) Quality Management Systems
5) Management Responsibility
6) Resource Management
7) Product Realization
8) Measurement Analysis and Improvement
1. Scope
To provide a product that meets
a) Customer Requirement
b) Regulatory Requirements
c) Customers Satisfaction
2. Normative Reference:
Fundamentals and vocabulary
3. Terms and Definitions:
Supplier Organization Customers
4. Quality Management System:
a) General Requirements
b) Documentation
* General Documentation
* Quality Manual
* Control of Documents
* Control of Records
5) Management Responsibility:
a) Management commitment
b) Customer Focus
c) Quality policy
d)Planning
* Quality Objectives
* Quality Management System
Planning
e) Responsibility, Authority, And Communication
* Responsibility and Authority
* Management Representative
* Internal Communication
f) Management Review
* General Management
* Review Input
* Review Output
6) Resource Management :
a) Provision of Resources
b) Human Resources
* General
* Competence, Awareness and Training
c) Infrastructure
d) Work Environment
7) Product Realization
a) Planning of product Realization
b) Customer Related Processes
* Determination Of Requirement Related to the Product
* Review Of Requirement Related to the Product
*Customer Communication
c) Design And Development
* Design And Development Planning
* Design And Development Inputs
* Design And Development Outputs
* Design And Development Review
* Design And Development Verification
* Design And Development Validation
* Control of Design And Development Changes
d) Purchasing
* Purchasing Process
* Purchasing Information
* Verification Of Purchased Product
e)Production And service Provision
* Control Of Production And service Provision
* Validation Of Processes For Production And
service Provision
*Identification And Traceability
* Customer Property
* Preservation of Product
f) Control Of Monitoring And Measuring Devices
8) Measurement , Analysis, And Improvement
a) General
b) Monitoring And Measurement
* Customer Satisfaction
* Internal Audit
* Monitoring And Measurement Of Processes
* Monitoring And Measurement of Product and Service
c) Control Of Nonconforming Product
d) Analysis Of Data
e) Improvement
* continual improvement
* corrective Action
* preventive Action
IMPLEMENTATION
1) Top Management Commitment
2) Appoint the Management Representative
3) Awareness
4) Appoint an Implementation Team
5) Training
6) Time Schedule
7) Select Element Owners
8) Review the Present System
9) Write the Documents
10) Install the New System
11) Internal Audit
12) Management Review
13) Preassessment
14) Registration
DOCUMENTATION
policy
procedures
Work instructions
or
practices
Records or proof
States Policy and Objectives for each of
the pertinent ISO elements
Departmental Procedures & responsibilities
Forms, Work Instructions &
Equipment Instructions
Business supporting documents
POLICY:
• This is a document that defines what will be done
and why.
• A quality policy manual should be written so it is
clear, precise, practical, and easy to understand.
PROCEDURE:
• The procedures define
1) who should perform specific tasks
2) when the task should be done
3) Where documentation will be made
showing that the task was performed.
WORK INSTRUCTIONS:
• Work instructions are usually department, machine,
task, or product oriented and spell out how a job will
be done.
• The writing of a work instruction is best carried out
by the employee who performs the task.
RECORDS:
• Records are a way of documenting that the polices,
procedures, and work instructions have been
followed.
• Records provide data for corrective action and a way
of recalling products.
DOCUMENT DEVELOPMENT:
• To begin creating the documentation system, the
implementation team should gather all the existing
policies, procedures, work instructions, and forms
that are presently in use.
• When the documents have been completed, they
should be formatted in a manner that will allow for
simple and effective document control.
WRITING THE DOCUMENTS
• When writing the document it should be simple
rather than complex.
• Use flow chart and check sheets where ever possible
wherever possible rather than lengthy verbiage.
INTERNAL AUDITS
Objectives:
1) Determine that actual performance conforms to
the documented QMS.
2) Initiate corrective action activities in response
deficiencies.
3) Follow up on noncompliance items from previous
audits.
4) Provide continued improvement in the system
through feedback to management.
5) Cause the auditee to think about the process,
thereby encouraging possible improvement.
AUDITOR:
A qualified individual who have received
training in auditing principles and procedures
should perform audits.
TECHNIQUES:
During the audit the auditor should employee three
methods:
1) Examination of documents
2) Observation of activates
3) Interviews
Examination of Documents:
The auditor should examine the documents in a
systematic manner
1) Documents are identified with a title, revision
date, and responsible owner.
2) Documents are readily available to users
3) A master list by departments or function for
procedures, work instructions, and records is
appropriately located.
4) There are no obsolete documents at workstations.
5) Changes follow a prescribed procedure.
Observation Activity:
It requires an aptitude for details.
Interviews:
1) Place the auditee in a nonthreathing environment
2) Encourage employees to talk about the process.
3) Focus on the system not on the auditee.
4) Discuss the major issues informally with the
auditee first.
5) Use the appropriate type of questions.
PROCEDURE:
• Before the audit takes place an audit plan and check
list should be prepared.
• The audit itself has three parts
1) The preaudit meeting
2) The audit
3) A closing meeting
REGISTRATION
It is the assessment and audit of a quality system by a
third party, known as a registrar.
Two parts:
1) Selecting a registrar.
2) The registration process.
SELECTING A REGISTRAR
• Qualifications And Experience
• Certificate Recognition
• The Registration Process
• Time And Cost Constraints
• Auditor Qualifications
REGISTRATION PROCESS
The process has six basic steps:
1) Application for registration.
2) Document review.
3) Preassessment
4) Assessment
5) Registration
6) Follow-up surveillance
CLOSING COMMENTS
• The standards are written for contractual compliance
to the standard.
• Before entering into a contract for registration,
management must be able to justify the cost versus
the potential gains in continued or increased business.

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  • 1.
  • 2.
    Introduction • ISO- InternationalOrganization for Standardization • Founded in 1946, in Geneva, Switzerland • Main function is to promote the development of standardization of goods and services, to better accommodate a world wide market. • ANSI- American National Standards Institute • ANSI represents U.S. in the ISO
  • 3.
    ISO Registration • Companiescan become registered as an ISO company • This involves the registrar giving an assessment of the operations a company, and then making periodic surveillance audits • Primary Reason: To give your customer the comfort of knowing that you have a quality plan in place, and it is being monitored by an objective third party
  • 4.
    Internal Reasons forBecoming ISO Registered • 100 Italian manufacturing firms were surveyed to find out what improved after certification. – Internal quality: less scrap, rework, nonconformities – Production reliability: less breakdowns, less time with emergencies, downtime – Time performance: time to market, punctual deliveries Externally: less nonconformities
  • 5.
    Negatives • Prevention andappraisal costs increased – Only one negative shown in 100 surveys. – Positives outweigh negatives – Takes time to implement, but worth it in the long run
  • 6.
    ISO 9000 • TheISO 9000 series of standards is generic • It is designed to adapt to fit any industry type • Three standards of the 9000 series: – ISO 9000:2015- Fundamentals and vocabulary – ISO 9001:2015- Requirements – ISO 9004:2009- Guidelines for performance improvements
  • 7.
    Sector-specific Standards • Someindustries require special set of ISO rules; not operated the same as most • Three other quality systems: – AS9100- – ISO/TS 16949 – TL9000
  • 8.
    AS9100 • This standardis specifically for the aerospace industry • Attempt at unifying the requirements of NASA, DOD, and FAA • At the same time satisfying the industry’s needs
  • 9.
    ISO/TS 16949 • Standardspecifically for automotive suppliers • Merges supplier quality requirements of U.S. with German, French, and Italian automakers • Goal- provide continuous improvement, defect prevention, reduce variation and waste • Is assumed that this standard will show 85% improvement rate in first 5 years
  • 10.
    TL9000 • Telecommunications Industry •Consolidate various quality systems requirements • Defines design, development, production, delivery, installation and maintenance of telecommunications • Customers receive benefits , worldwide competition, benchmarks, improvement initiatives
  • 11.
    TL 9000 continued- •This standard focused on: – Hardware Specific Requirements and Measures – Software Specific Requirements and Measures – Services Specific Requirements and Measures
  • 12.
    ISO 9001 REQUIREMENTS •The standard has 8 clauses 1) Scope 2) Normative Reference 3) Terms and Definitions 4) Quality Management Systems 5) Management Responsibility 6) Resource Management 7) Product Realization 8) Measurement Analysis and Improvement
  • 13.
    1. Scope To providea product that meets a) Customer Requirement b) Regulatory Requirements c) Customers Satisfaction
  • 14.
    2. Normative Reference: Fundamentalsand vocabulary 3. Terms and Definitions: Supplier Organization Customers 4. Quality Management System: a) General Requirements b) Documentation * General Documentation * Quality Manual * Control of Documents * Control of Records
  • 15.
    5) Management Responsibility: a)Management commitment b) Customer Focus c) Quality policy d)Planning * Quality Objectives * Quality Management System Planning e) Responsibility, Authority, And Communication * Responsibility and Authority * Management Representative * Internal Communication f) Management Review * General Management * Review Input * Review Output
  • 16.
    6) Resource Management: a) Provision of Resources b) Human Resources * General * Competence, Awareness and Training c) Infrastructure d) Work Environment
  • 17.
    7) Product Realization a)Planning of product Realization b) Customer Related Processes * Determination Of Requirement Related to the Product * Review Of Requirement Related to the Product *Customer Communication c) Design And Development * Design And Development Planning * Design And Development Inputs * Design And Development Outputs * Design And Development Review * Design And Development Verification * Design And Development Validation * Control of Design And Development Changes
  • 18.
    d) Purchasing * PurchasingProcess * Purchasing Information * Verification Of Purchased Product e)Production And service Provision * Control Of Production And service Provision * Validation Of Processes For Production And service Provision *Identification And Traceability * Customer Property * Preservation of Product f) Control Of Monitoring And Measuring Devices
  • 19.
    8) Measurement ,Analysis, And Improvement a) General b) Monitoring And Measurement * Customer Satisfaction * Internal Audit * Monitoring And Measurement Of Processes * Monitoring And Measurement of Product and Service c) Control Of Nonconforming Product d) Analysis Of Data e) Improvement * continual improvement * corrective Action * preventive Action
  • 20.
    IMPLEMENTATION 1) Top ManagementCommitment 2) Appoint the Management Representative 3) Awareness 4) Appoint an Implementation Team 5) Training 6) Time Schedule 7) Select Element Owners 8) Review the Present System 9) Write the Documents 10) Install the New System
  • 21.
    11) Internal Audit 12)Management Review 13) Preassessment 14) Registration
  • 22.
    DOCUMENTATION policy procedures Work instructions or practices Records orproof States Policy and Objectives for each of the pertinent ISO elements Departmental Procedures & responsibilities Forms, Work Instructions & Equipment Instructions Business supporting documents
  • 23.
    POLICY: • This isa document that defines what will be done and why. • A quality policy manual should be written so it is clear, precise, practical, and easy to understand.
  • 24.
    PROCEDURE: • The proceduresdefine 1) who should perform specific tasks 2) when the task should be done 3) Where documentation will be made showing that the task was performed.
  • 25.
    WORK INSTRUCTIONS: • Workinstructions are usually department, machine, task, or product oriented and spell out how a job will be done. • The writing of a work instruction is best carried out by the employee who performs the task.
  • 26.
    RECORDS: • Records area way of documenting that the polices, procedures, and work instructions have been followed. • Records provide data for corrective action and a way of recalling products.
  • 27.
    DOCUMENT DEVELOPMENT: • Tobegin creating the documentation system, the implementation team should gather all the existing policies, procedures, work instructions, and forms that are presently in use. • When the documents have been completed, they should be formatted in a manner that will allow for simple and effective document control.
  • 28.
    WRITING THE DOCUMENTS •When writing the document it should be simple rather than complex. • Use flow chart and check sheets where ever possible wherever possible rather than lengthy verbiage.
  • 29.
    INTERNAL AUDITS Objectives: 1) Determinethat actual performance conforms to the documented QMS. 2) Initiate corrective action activities in response deficiencies. 3) Follow up on noncompliance items from previous audits. 4) Provide continued improvement in the system through feedback to management. 5) Cause the auditee to think about the process, thereby encouraging possible improvement.
  • 30.
    AUDITOR: A qualified individualwho have received training in auditing principles and procedures should perform audits.
  • 31.
    TECHNIQUES: During the auditthe auditor should employee three methods: 1) Examination of documents 2) Observation of activates 3) Interviews
  • 32.
    Examination of Documents: Theauditor should examine the documents in a systematic manner 1) Documents are identified with a title, revision date, and responsible owner. 2) Documents are readily available to users 3) A master list by departments or function for procedures, work instructions, and records is appropriately located. 4) There are no obsolete documents at workstations. 5) Changes follow a prescribed procedure.
  • 33.
    Observation Activity: It requiresan aptitude for details. Interviews: 1) Place the auditee in a nonthreathing environment 2) Encourage employees to talk about the process. 3) Focus on the system not on the auditee. 4) Discuss the major issues informally with the auditee first. 5) Use the appropriate type of questions.
  • 34.
    PROCEDURE: • Before theaudit takes place an audit plan and check list should be prepared. • The audit itself has three parts 1) The preaudit meeting 2) The audit 3) A closing meeting
  • 35.
    REGISTRATION It is theassessment and audit of a quality system by a third party, known as a registrar. Two parts: 1) Selecting a registrar. 2) The registration process.
  • 36.
    SELECTING A REGISTRAR •Qualifications And Experience • Certificate Recognition • The Registration Process • Time And Cost Constraints • Auditor Qualifications
  • 37.
    REGISTRATION PROCESS The processhas six basic steps: 1) Application for registration. 2) Document review. 3) Preassessment 4) Assessment 5) Registration 6) Follow-up surveillance
  • 38.
    CLOSING COMMENTS • Thestandards are written for contractual compliance to the standard. • Before entering into a contract for registration, management must be able to justify the cost versus the potential gains in continued or increased business.