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Quality Resource Center Partners With California Manufacturing Technology Consultants

Silicon Valley based Quality Resource Center (QRC) announced today a partnership with the Torrance, California based California Manufacturing Technology Consultants (CMTC), to provide an array of ISO 9001 and other similar Standards based consulting.

“We are extremely proud of our partnership with California Manufacturing Technology Consultants” stated Dan Terry, President and CEO of Quality Resource Center. “This is a truly synergistic relationship that leverages our more than a quarter century of operation with the vast resources of CMTC. Our product portfolio including ISO 9001, AS9100, ISO 13485, ISO 45001, ISO14001, IATF 16949, and more is an ideal fit for their client base.”

“Working with QRC is indeed a partnership of great synergy. We look forward sharing their industry best experience in so many areas with our highly valued clients” stated Marty Jones, Director of Delivery Resources at California Manufacturing Technology Consulting. “As Dan mentioned, this is a truly synergistic relationship that offers much more than the sum of our separate parts to our valued clients.”

CMTC’s Made in CA Program is dedicated to highlighting the contributions of California’s manufacturers and raising awareness of the products made in the Golden State.

Founded in 1992, California Manufacturing Technology Consultants www.cmtc.com, is headquartered at 690 Knox Street, Suite 200, Torrance, CA 90502.

Founded in 1992, Quality Resource Center (www.qrccentral.com) is the industry’s oldest and most prestigious ISO based consultancy. With offices in both California and New York City, QRC is headquartered at 111 North Market Street, Suite 300, San Jose, California, 95113.

Quality Resource Center Opens New York City Office

San Jose, California based Quality Resource Center is proud to announce the opening of their New York City office.

The Quality Resource Center’s new offices are located at 315 Madison Avenue, 3rd and 4th Floors, New York, New York 10017.

“We are extremely pleased to reach this important milestone. New York city is the epicenter of the entire business world. Demand for our services in this area has increased dramatically over the years, and this action will allow us to better serve the entire east coast of the United States, including New York, Boston, Philadelphia, the Carolinas, Atlanta, Florida, and more. I am pleased to have placed the entire operation under the steady hand of Dennis Marinsik, our Senior Vice President of Major Accounts. Dennis has been with QRC since the beginning, and we know that under his guidance we will continue to perform at a superior level” remarked Dan Terry, President and CEO of The Quality Resource Center.

“We have gained a reputation over the years as the industry leader in ISO 9001 based quality management systems, and a trusted partner for our clients. Our mission is simple: we exist solely for the benefit of the client; we offer superior service, superior value, and we solve our client’s problems. We are committed to their success. When our clients succeed, we succeed. We have retained so many of our original clients over the years. I take that as a point of personal pride for myself, as well as our entire QRC team. Under Dan’s leadership, I expect QRC to continue to thrive” said Dennis Marinsik.

Founded in 1994, The Quality Resource Center is the oldest and most prestigious ISO 9001 based quality management systems consultant firm, with over 500 successful client registrations in more than a quarter century of operation. In addition to ISO 9001, The Quality Resource Center proudly serves the ISO 14001 Environmental Management, AS9100 Aerospace, ISO 13485 Medical Device, ISO 27001 Data Security, and IATF 16949 Automotive industry segments.

The Company’s Headquarters remain at 111 N. Market Street, Suite 300, San Jose, California. Telephone 1-800-244-5409. www.QRCCentral.com. ©Copyright 2020, all rights reserved.

What is Quality 4.0 and What You Need to Know About It.

Quality 4.0 aligns quality management with Industry 4.0. It represents a “failure is not an option” priority for organizations and their quality leaders. To assist quality leaders and their teams in keeping pace with Digital Transformation and lead the Quality 4.0 charge, this article highlights the key elements and philosophies needed to embrace and execute this important new concept.

At its core, Quality 4.0 is the digitalization of quality, management systems and compliance. It does not focus exclusively on the technology itself, but rather on the improvements in culture, collaboration, competency and leadership that are produced by those technologies.

What is Quality 4.0?

Quality is the essential aspect of all businesses that cuts across all industries. It basically includes, but is not limited to, quality engineering, quality management systems, quality control and quality assurance. Quality 4.0 integrates all these elements utilizing new technologies that can be integrated into management systems, certifications, and more.

A good example of this is Blockchain, offers valuable methods for process traceability, from equipment maintenance and calibration certificate to even process data analysis control. A blockchain is a growing list of records called blocks that are linked cryptographically. Each individual block contains a cryptographic hash of the previous block, a timestamp, and transaction data. By definition, a blockchain is resistant to modification of the data.

“Big Data” and “The Internet of Things” (IoT) data are already used for real-time process monitoring and measurement. Augmented reality, the art of blending the physical-digital environment and helping navigate through it easier is another great example. Greater connectivity, new modes of production, and intelligent processing with computing capabilities allows visualization of data faster and better than ever.

The Intersection of Quality and Technology

Industry 4.0 and its technologies provide new ways for people, machines and data to interact, transforming powerful technologies into accessible commodities, resulting in a disruptive synergy of culture, leadership, collaboration and compliance, resulting in forward thinking quality teams standing ready to resolve many long-standing challenges that have prevented innovation and improvement.

The Foundational Pillars of Quality 4.0

Data – By definition, Quality is data driven, and data driven decision making is the key. Organizations must seek ways to combine data from various systems to ensure accuracy and transparency in their decision making.

Analytics –Traditional quality metrics typically describe what has happened, why it happened and what might happen next, but they fail to determine what actions to take. This type of analysis can be achieved by utilizing Big Data, Machine Learning (ML) and Artificial Intelligence. Successful organizations will develop an analytics strategy after or concurrently with a data strategy or the value of the analysis will be of little value.

Connectivity – The integration of various business information technologies (IT) (e.g., EQMS, ERP, PLM, etc.) with operational technology (OT) (e.g., technology used in laboratories, manufacturing and service) is a longstanding challenge. The key here will be enabling data, processes and people to work together in symbiotic fashion.

Collaboration – The adoption of Enterprise Quality Management Software (EQMS) facilitates execution of collaborative processes with the help of email, automated workflows, portals and even paper documents. The advent of social listening and blockchain have transformed collaboration in recent years, and future success will utilize the disruptive powers of connectivity, data and analytics.

App Development – The creation of created “mashup” apps that combine content from multiple sources into a single interface, represent an emerging tool for operations and management, thus realizing the full potential of interactive apps available today, including wearables, augmented reality and virtual reality.

Scalability – Many companies cite disjointed data sources and systems as significant roadblocks to achieving quality objectives. Cloud computing can be a valuable tool to achieving scalability, along with data lake technologies (A data lake is a system or repository of data stored in its natural/raw format,[1] usually object blobs or files. A data lake is usually a single store of all enterprise data including raw copies of source system data and transformed data used for tasks such as reporting, visualization, advanced analytics and machine learning). Start by assessing the current scalability – or the ability to support data volume, users, devices and analytics on a global scale – of your in-house systems.

Management Systems – As of the writing of this paper, less than a quarter of companies have adopted an EQMS. The resulting core process fragmentation makes it difficult for companies to deploy effective quality technology. Harmonizing and automating processes and systems enables quality staff to shift their focus to innovation and improvement.

Compliance – A large percentage of companies report that ensuring compliance was a key strategic objective for quality management, closely followed by reducing the total cost of quality. Quality 4.0 provides multiple opportunities to automate compliance. Highly configurable, automated and connected EQMS solutions, and tools to automate validation are now available.

Culture – Few organizations and their cross-functional teams clearly understand how quality contributes to strategic success. The improved connectivity and collaboration offered by Quality 4.0 makes a culture of quality attainable.

Leadership – Barely ten percent of companies report that quality is a priority for top management. To confront this, quality teams must align their objectives and clearly link them to the organization’s strategic objectives. Quality leaders must advocate and lead quality across the organization, especially at the executive level.

Competency – Quality 4.0 facilitates an improved baseline competency of workers, as well as better scaling of specialized knowledge. Other technologies including certain social media, Machine Learning, Artificial Intelligence, mashup apps, wearables and VR can yield improvements in training and knowledge sharing.

What Should you do?

  1. Evaluate where you stand on each of the 11 elements of Quality 4.0
  2. Recognize and embrace the potential uses of analytics, apps, data, connectivity and other technologies to influence performance across the enterprise
  3. Establish a Digital Transformation strategy. Align your quality objectives with it.

Current State –

A recent American Society of Quality survey of companies around the world found that only 16% of companies have started any Quality 4.0 initiatives. 63% of companies reported that they have not even started any planning on the topic.

Furthermore, Europe is ahead of the Quality 4.0 race. Nearly a quarter of companies have already started planning on the subject. In the US this number drops to just 6%.

Companies that initiated Quality 4.0 initiatives have stated that they intend to apply the concept for quality data centralization, data security and continuous monitoring anywhere, anytime.

While the initiative is still very new, quality professional must be increasingly aware of it and endeavor to understand the need to create a plan to define their strategies in their companies.

Quality 4.0 will transform all aspects about implementation and quality controls.

QRC SALESFORCE

Silicon Valley based Quality Resource Center is pleased to offer Q-Force™, our Salesforce Customer-Relationship Management (CRM) Consulting services.

 

CRM manages a company’s interaction with current and potential customers using complied data analysis from a range of different communication channels, including a company’s website, telephone, email, live chat, marketing materials, social media and more.

 

Utilizing the CRM approach allows businesses to learn more about their target audiences and how to best cater to their needs, thus improving business relationships with customers by specifically focusing on customer retention and ultimately driving sales growth.

 

Offerings include but are limited to–

  • Design, Development and Administration
  • Business and Systems Use Case Analysis
  • Project Scoping
  • Manage and prioritize daily case inquiries
  • Upgrade cycles
  • Development of reports and dashboards
  • Documentation and Presentations
  • Quality assurance and testing processes
  • Manage and prioritize daily case inquiries
  • Visualforce/Apex development
  • Salesforce.com Web Services APIs – Force.com SOAP and REST-based Web Service APIs, etc.

Quality Resource Center offers over a quarter century of elite client services, with over 1,000 satisfied customers supporting a multitude of diverse businesses and markets. Please contact Quality Resource Center today to arrange a live, complementary 20 minute consultation.

 

ISO 9001 – A Great Idea!

The benefits of ISO 9001 should not be underestimated. Organizations of all sizes benefit greatly by leveraging this standard, realizing cost and efficiency savings, and resulting improvements in the bottom line. Here are six good reasons to embrace the ISO 9001 –

  1. Optimization of Process Integration – Viewing the overall processes and how they interact using the process approach of ISO 9001 enables the Organization to more readily identify improvements in efficiency, resulting in cost savings. Optimizing process flows can also drive efficiencies, reduce errors, reduce rework, and eliminating waste that can occur when processes are not maintained with consideration of inefficiencies.
  2. Employee Engagement – involving employees in improving the processes they work with results in happier and more engaged employees, enabling greater productivity. Engaged employees are especially more productive when they understand the process and how they contribute to the result. No one is more valuable than the people working on the process in identifying areas that need improvement and helping design and implement real improvements.
  3. A Culture of Continual Improvement – Continual improvement is a cornerstone management principle of ISO 9001. Embracing the commitment to improve your processes and organizational outputs will identify inefficiencies by design and deployment use of systematic methodologies.  This is especially evident when problems occur and effective in reducing the impacts of problems by eliminating their root causes. Embedding this in your organization’s DNA results in tangible, continual year over year improvements greatly benefiting the Organization.
  4. Enhancing the Image of the Organization – ISO 9001 is the gold standard of internationally recognized quality management systems and has become the de facto method for creating world class quality management systems. It is often a requirement when an organization is considering a supplier. This is particularly the case when competing for public sector jobs in many countries. Holding ISO 9001 certification is a powerful marketing tool.
  5. Customer Satisfaction – A foundational principle of the ISO 9001 is measuring and improving customer satisfaction.  Improving customer satisfaction results in retaining customers. This means more repeat business, better customer testimonials, and more customer referrals. And more revenue!
  6. Fact based Decision Making – Another key principle of ISO 9001 is the evidence-based decision making. Decisions based on evidence, rather than “gut feeling” focuses on applying resources to the areas that will improve efficiencies and increase cost savings with less trial and error. Monitoring the processes you are improving allows you to see how much improvement has occurred – based on the data.

 

ISO 9001 Is Foundational

ISO 9001 is a solid foundation for implementing many other Annex SL based management standards, such as ISO 14001 for environmental management and ISO 27000 for IT service management, which follow much of the same structure and organization

The international nature of ISO 9001 has already been identified and is, in fact, such a basic and influential standard that it has been used as the basis when industry groups want to add specific industry requirements, thus creating their own industry standard. Among these are IATF 16949 (Automotive), AS9100 (Aerospace), and ISO 13485 (Medical Devices).

 

What Is a Quality Management System (QMS)? — ISO 9001 & Other Quality Management Systems

Quality management systems (QMS) are formalized systems documenting the processes, procedures, and responsibilities needed to achieve quality policies and objectives. An effective QMS coordinates and directs an organization’s activities in meeting both customer and regulatory requirements, continually improving effectiveness and efficiency.  

ISO 9001:2015 is the international standard specifying requirements for quality management systems. It is the most widely accepted approach to quality management systems.

Although the term QMS is sometimes used to describe the ISO 9001 standard or the group of documents detailing the QMS, in practice it literally refers to the entirety of the system. Documentations only serve to describe the system.

Quality management systems serve many purposes, including:

  1. Reducing waste
  2. Lowering costs
  3. Engaging staff
  4. Improving processes
  5. Setting organization-wide direction
  6. Facilitating and identifying training opportunities

 

Standardization

Quality became increasingly important during World War II. To expedite production processes without sacrificing safety, the United States military began to use quality techniques of sampling for inspection, aided by the publication of military-specification standards and training courses.

In the post-war economy, the importance of quality only increased. Japanese Industry embraced a quality revolution, reversing their reputation for poor quality exports by embracing philosophies of American leaders like W. Edwards Deming and/or Joseph M. Juran, effectively shifting focus from inspection to improving all organization processes. By the 1970s the U.S. industrial sectors such as steel, electronics and automobiles had been decimated by Japan’s high-quality competition. Years later the Japanese would fall victim to the Koreans, a result of the same approach.

 

Benefits of quality management systems

Effective design and deployment of a quality management system will impact affects every aspect of an organization.

The major benefits include:

  1. Meeting and or exceeding Customer Requirements
  2. Meeting the organization’s requirements.  

Additional benefits include the ability to produce consistent results, preventing mistakes, reducing costs, and continually improving the organization’s offerings.

 

ISO 9001:2015 and other quality management standards

While other standards related to quality management systems include industry specific super sets of the ISO 9000 family (including ISO 9000 and ISO 9004, ISO 14000 environmental management systems, ISO 13485 quality management systems for medical devices, ISO 19011 auditing management systems, and IATF 16949 for automotive-related products, and AS9100D for aerospace management systems), ISO 9001:2015 is by far the most implemented quality management system standard in the world.

 

Elements and requirements of a quality management system

  1. Quality policy and quality objectives
  2. Internal processes and their interactions
  3. Quality manual
  4. Procedures, instructions, and records
  5. Data management
  6. Customer satisfaction from product quality
  7. Improvement opportunities
  8. Quality analysis

Each element serves a purpose toward the overall goals of meeting the customers’ and organization’s requirements.

 

Establishing and Deploying a QMS

The Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA) allows for continuous improvement to both the product and the QMS. The basic steps to implementing a quality management system are as follows:

  1. Design
  2. Create
  3. Deploy
  4. Control
  5. Measure
  6. Analyze
  7. Improve

 

Design and Construction

The design and construction activities serve to develop the structure of a QMS, its processes, and plans for deployment. Top management must oversee this portion to ensure that their vision, the needs of the organization, and the needs of its customers are a driving force behind the systems development.

 

Deployment

Deployment is best achieved in a systematic manner, stratifying each process into subprocesses, and educating staff on documentation, tools, and metrics.

 

Control and Measurement

Control and measurement are accomplished through routine, systematic audits of the quality management system.

 

Review and Improve

  1. Review and improvement deal with how the results of an audit are handled.
  2. Determine the effectiveness and efficiency of each process toward its objectives
  3. Communicate these findings to the employees,
  4. Develop new best practices and processes based on the data collected during the audit.

The design and deployment of an effective QMS is a major organizational commitment and should not be taken lightly. Organization’s great increase the effectiveness and efficiency of their QMS by retaining industry experts like the Quality Resource Center www.TheQualityResourceCenter.com. With over a quarter century of service, the Quality Resource Center remains the gold standard in ISO based quality management consulting. The Quality Resource Center – Experience the Difference.

AS9100D – Risk Management vs Risk-Based Thinking: Just What is the Difference?

AS9100D – Risk Management vs Risk-Based Thinking: Just What is the Difference?

Risk-Based Thinking requires organizations to consider the risks they face during strategic planning, planning for product and service conformity, management review, and when taking corrective action. The idea is that the organization works to identify risks, decides if action is required, and if applicable, takes action. That said, It is important to note that it is not necessary to track the risk as the project progresses to judge the effectiveness of the action, and whether additional action is necessary.

Risk Management, on the other hand, is a process for identifying risks, determining actions to mitigate those risks, tracking those actions, and then re-assessing any remaining risk after actions are deployed. It involves not just thinking about risk at certain stages during the realization of products and services, but also having a process to track these risks until they are addressed, mitigated, or eliminated.

What is required for operational risk management, and what isn’t?

To start with what is not required – there is a note specifying that while clause 6.1 “Actions to address risks and opportunities” addresses the risks and opportunities for the QMS, clause 8.1.1 “Operational Risk Management” is limited to risks that are associated with operational processes needed by the organization to provide its’ products and services. Therefore, while your organization may identify a QMS risk that your organization might soon have a rival company to compete with, this is not a risk that needs to be tracked according to the risk management requirements, as it is not an operational risk.

There are at least five requirements that an organization needs to consider during the planning, implementation, and control of the operational risk management process. They are:

  1. Assign Responsibilities – Who owns the process? Who constitutes the Team? Which departments need to be included? If actions are likely to be assigned to a certain department or function, it is best to have them involved in the whole management process.
  2. Determine Risk Assessment Criteria – What criteria will be used for risk assessment? How will you quantify which risks to accept and what you will mitigate? A note in this clause states that within the aviation, space, and defense industry, risk is generally expressed in terms of the likelihood of the occurrence and the severity of the consequences (a good example of this might be Failure Mode Effects Analysis or FMEA).
  3. Identify, Assess, and Communicate Risks – Any risk of product failure due to must be communicated to those who design and realize the product. Without effective communication, risk identification is ineffective.
  4. Identify, Implement, and Manage Mitigation Actions – There are a multitude of ways to address risk, ranging from risk reduction all the way to complete elimination of the risk – or, in other words, try to prevent the risk from happening. If a risk exceeds your acceptable criteria, take actions to address the risk and track those actions.
  5. Re-evaluate the Risk that remains when mitigation is complete, and continue to work to reduce it – Risk management is an iterative process, where the risk can always be reduced.

Has anything really changed from AS9100 Rev C?

The requirements have remained greatly unchanged since the past revision. Risk management process requirements were already included in AS9100 Rev C as risk management, and the five requirements have remained basically as they were. The real change here is the clarification that these requirements only applied to operational risk, hence the name change in the clause. The other change from Rev C is the addition of the two notes to clarify how these requirements are separate from risk-based thinking and to make it clear that risk in aerospace is a combination of likelihood and severity. For organizations that are already compliant with AS9100 Rev C, the current risk management process should most likely remain unchanged.

ISO 9001:2015 Transitions – Embracing the Challenge and Lessons Learned So Far

Quality Resource Center proudly announces the successful completion of our 100th ISO 9001:2015 project. During that time, we have learned a lot…

It’s estimated that less than 25 percent of the more than one million organizations certified globally have made the transition to ISO 9001:2015 (as of mid-2017). The September 2018 deadline is approaching and your quality management system (QMS) isn’t going to transition itself. But there is so much to consider; Where to begin? How do you start? What happens next? This paper will assist you in answering those questions.

As with any successful project, start by defining your objectives and create a plan to achieve them. The main objective is to identify the additional as well as modified requirements within the standard and then demonstrate compliance to them during your organization’s transition audit.

But how? What does that involve? These steps can be invaluable in your successful transition to ISO 9001:2015.

Step 1: Get 39,000 Foot View

The fact that your Organization is transitioning means you are already working with an accredited Certification Body (CB), or Registrar. It is important to note that they too had to develop a plan, vetted by their accreditation body, to facilitate the transition. In other words, your Registrar will may have their own analysis for the transition. So, talk to your registrar. Better yet, contact Quality Resource Center, the industry’s oldest and most successful ISO 9001 consulting firm, with over 25 years of operation, and let us talk to them.

This type of guidance will give you valuable information on issues and challenges that may affect your organization’s transition:

• Deadlines – No later than Sept. 14, 2018, however it may be earlier based on your CB’s policies.

• Audits – It might be possible to have your transition conducted as part of a regularly scheduled surveillance or recertification. Some CB’s may offer separate standalone transition audits. In either case, determine what this audit will involve and how it will be conducted. Additional time may be added to address the changes, they may require additional preparation, and it will cover specific new elements of the new standard. Having your ISO 9001:2015 Internal Audits and Management Review conducted by Quality Resource Center can provide great value; having the industry’s premiere Audit teams prepare you for your Registrar audits can identify embarrassing and painful findings at the internal level and guard against ugly exposure and the consequences of same at your surveillance or re-certification audits. Studies show that outsourcing these activities to Quality Resource Center can result in as much as 85% reductions in time and cost, and greatly enhance your chances for a trouble free Registration audit process.

• Existing Certifications – You will want to maintain your existing ISO 9001:2008 certification until your organization has successfully completed the transition— but what will that entail? When does your current registration expire? How can you best achieve a seamless transition?

• Get Trained by Professionals – Gain a working knowledge of the standard. Your CB will give you a glimpse of what to expect in the new standard (and what they might expect from you), from the new clause structure to the new requirements. Quality Resource Center offers invaluable expertise in this area. If you plan on doing your own Audits, they will need training and certification. Quality Resource Center offers superior training and certification services.

Once you have an outline of the project and potential impacts, begin to fill in your plan. Target the audit date at which you wish to have your transition, then backfill the dates from there to develop a roadmap. Be sure to communicate with your CB to align expectations and availability for your transition audit, and make sure your target date works within the deadlines, gives you enough time to address any potential non-conformances, doesn’t risk any lapse of coverage, etc.

Finally, work on how you’ll address the new structure; start thinking about some of the major changes such as risk and context. Prioritize, prioritize, and, finally, prioritize. . Communicate the agreed upon schedule and plan to your organization, and ask for feedback.

Best advice is to have Quality Resource Center prepare your plan, and commit it to paper with a professional Gantt chart.

Step 2: Do Your Homework – Study the Standard

Read and comprehend the standard. You cannot address requirements you haven’t even read. It’s not a lengthy;

Get the companion ISO 9000 document, it provides guidance on terms and fundamental concepts used in the new standard.

The standard can also be a bit vague, however; that’s again where you should consult with a Quality Resource Center professional. QRC can provide expert knowledge regarding topics like the context of the organization, leadership, risks and opportunities, organizational knowledge, and other critical areas and changes pertinent for transition, and in many cases offer interpretive guidance on the expected outcomes related to these changes.

GAP analysis can cut through the interpretation of minor wording changes and get to the changes that need to be addressed within your organization’s QMS. Quality Resource offers a very cost effective GAP analysis that can identify all areas of concern.

Once the focal points have been identified, utilize the standard to determine the actual requirement and key deliverables. You may find existing processes that address these elements. Utilize them wherever possible. The key to successful deployment of ISO 9001:2015 is alignment with your actual business activities.

Regarding documentation (or documented information) – It is important to note that while the new standard does not require any specific documented procedures. However, documented information in the form of procedures, forms, records, etc. are beneficial for any new or changed requirements. Having objective evidence to review during a transition audit will avoid unnecessary back and forth.

Step 3: Implement, Operate, and Review

Once the key elements of the new standard are identified and the plan to address them has been developed, the required changes and improvements to your QMS need to be deployed. Take time to communicate the changes to the organization to ensure their understanding. Next, the new and updated QMS needs review and correction, similar to the preparation for your initial registrar audits. Identify and work with the appropriate players, especially process owners, throughout the organization to verify and validate changes, and take the time to review everything again before your transition audit. A month or two prior to your scheduled transition audit, conduct your own internal audit to the new requirements, then follow that up with a management review to go over the results and determine the effectiveness of the updated QMS. Again, a good rule of thumb here would be to give enough time to react to any internal audit findings or management review actions items prior to your transition audit. Quality Resource Center can offer valuable assistance in this endeavor.

Registrars have requirements for internal preparations and reviews such as this, and some may even have tools to use. Consider the checklist transition tools they may have developed for your use; look for any transition checklists, transition audit plans, or transition requirements to leverage in your own internal audits. Quality Resource Center offers a valuable tool set that is extremely cost-effective.

Look for any lessons learned that might help you avoid pitfalls and/or showstoppers.

Here are a few for consideration:

• Have Quality Resource Center convert your existing documentation and upgrade to fit the new standard. Renumbering your documents is not required, but it is a very good idea, especially for your Quality Manual and your QOP’s. Don’t unilaterally eliminate all your documentation, nor your management representative, nor your quality manual! While you have the flexibility to do so (either partly or completely) if it fits the context of your organization, remember that just because the new standard is silent on such things doesn’t prohibit you from keeping such approaches if they work for your organization. It will aid great in your Internal Audits, Management Review, Improvements, and Registrar Audits.

New areas to consider include –

• Context of the Organization (sub-clause 4.1) – This must be addressed within management review as a minimum. Additional consideration may be adding support to this in your quality manual you do retain, or other planning components of your QMS. In short, the context of your organization should drive the approach your QMS (and all applicable processes) takes.

• Leadership (sub-clause 5.1) – Expect auditors to ask for time with top management, see their active involvement in the QMS, and the applicable processes (e.g. objectives, resources, and management reviews).

• Organizational Knowledge (sub-clause 7.1.6) – While this is a new requirement it cannot be overlooked. Auditors will expect to see this addressed in some fashion, and it is an ever-evolving process. Focus on getting it up and running without being overwhelmed by the potential; create a process that can be expanded and improved upon in the future.

• Risks and Opportunities­ (sub-clause 6.1) – This is one of most important areas to consider getting professional training and help with. Risk is an intricate part of the new standard, and there are a variety of tools available. Quality Resource Center can help you identify the tools that will work best for you, and assist you in completing the process.

• And About Those Risks – Risk, specifically risk-based thinking is likely everyone’s No. 1 topic when discussing ISO 9001:2015—it is a given. But how will you demonstrate it? Is it simply by addressing sub-clause 6.1? That is part of it, as would be the inclusion of it in Management Review (sub-clause 9.3.2.e).But it shouldn’t stop there. It is not sufficient to solely consider product-focused risks via Failure Mode and Effects Analysis (FMEA) process. Incorporate risk into the language of any and all processes and departments. View every process in the context of risk, and understand that the actions to address identified risks will yield improvements, which again is synonymous with the overall intent of ISO 9001:2015.

Finally, remember that Quality Resource Center is the recognized industry leader in the upgrade, deployment, and implementation of ISO 9001:2015. We offer a rich skill set that that not only increases your chance for success in your project, it also offers maximum value and cost efficiency.

Experience the Difference that 25 years of Total ISO Solutions offers.

International Standards Upgrades and Direction Forward

2015 and 2016 have seen major revisions of many of the very important and popular international quality management systems standards –

  • ISO 9001:2015 – Released in September, 2015 in conjunction with Annex SL
    – Upgrades no later than 2018
  • ISO 14001:2015 – Released in September, 2015 in conjunction with Annex SL
    – Upgrades no later than 2018
  • AS9100D :2016 – Re-aligned with ISO 9001:2015 and Annex SL – Release by 2016
    – Upgrades no later than 2018
  • ISO 13485:2016 – Released in February 2016
    – Upgrade no later than February 2019
  • ISO/TS 16949:2016 – Re-aligned with ISO 9001:2015 and Annex SL
    – Release by Q4 of 2016; Upgrades no later than 2018

Alignment to Annex SL of these standards (other than ISO 13485:2016) has enabled new and upgraded systems to be easily integrated. This means that adding ISO 14001:2016 to and existing ISO 9001:2015 systems is easily achieved. Similar for upgrading ISO 9001:2016 to include AS9100D or ISO/TS 16949:2016.

It also means that maintaining these systems is more straightforward than ever before. But much depends on the accurate and correct design and deployment of your new or upgraded systems.

Quality Resource Center offers unmatched expertise in these areas.

It also means that you will need additional training, and your auditors will need upgrades to their Auditor Certifications.
Here again, Quality Resource Center is the recognized industry leader.

Take advantage of our complimentary telephone consultation via our toll free line -1 800 244 5409 or simply drop us an email through this we portal.

Quality Resource Center – Experience the Difference.