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6 ISO 9000 Implementation

The document discusses ISO 9000 standards for quality management systems. It provides an overview of the clauses in ISO 9000:1994 and ISO 9000:2000, including management responsibility, quality system, contract review, and measurement and analysis. It also discusses the importance of quality policies for organizations and outlines steps for implementing an ISO 9000:2000 quality management system, such as establishing a team, conducting training, and achieving certification through an external audit.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
135 views30 pages

6 ISO 9000 Implementation

The document discusses ISO 9000 standards for quality management systems. It provides an overview of the clauses in ISO 9000:1994 and ISO 9000:2000, including management responsibility, quality system, contract review, and measurement and analysis. It also discusses the importance of quality policies for organizations and outlines steps for implementing an ISO 9000:2000 quality management system, such as establishing a team, conducting training, and achieving certification through an external audit.

Uploaded by

Ignou Delhi
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Guru Jambheshwar University of science and

technology

Haryana School of Business


SESSION 2019-2021.

PRESENTATION TOPIC:- ISO 9000

PRESENTED BY:-
SAKSHI
1901010600
M.B.A (ib)
ISO 9000
Implementation
ISO 9000: 1994 Clauses
1. Management Responsibility
2. Quality System
3. Contract Review
4. Design Control
5. Document Control
6. Purchasing
7. Purchaser Supplied Product
8. Product Identification and Traceability
9. Process Control
10. Inspection and Testing
ISO 9000: 1994 Clauses
11. Inspection Measuring and Test
Equipment
12. Inspection and Test Status
13. Control of Non-Conforming Product
14. Corrective Action
15. Handling, Storage, Packaging and
Delivery
16. Quality Records
17. Internal Quality Audits
18. Training
19. Servicing
20. Statistical Techniques
ISO 9000:2000 Clauses
1. Quality Management System
2. Resource Management
3. Product or Service Realization
4. Management Responsibility
5. Measurement, Analysis and
Improvement
ISO 9000: 2000
Quality Management
System
Quality Management
System
Documentation Standard
ISO 9000

Quality Manual
Policy Statement,
LEVEL 1
Commitment, Organisation,
Responsibilities

Quality System Procedures


Company Practices,
LEVEL 2
Interfaces

Work Instructions
Written
LEVEL 3 Instructions to
Control Tasks

Forms Quality
LEVEL 4 Records

Sales Desig Purchasi Manufactu Accounts Personn After


n ng ring el Sales
Why have a Quality
Policy?
Need for Quality Policy
 All organizations have in mind some
principles, beliefs which are their
broad guides to managerial conduct
 These guides rest on a philosophical
and ethical base
 They concern important issues and
are intended to have a long life, i.e.
to act as a stabilizer
 Such principles and beliefs are
referred to as a Quality Policy
Need for Quality Policy
 When organizations grow, there are
different managers working under which
various employees are working
 Things need to be defined at that stage as
things start becoming ambiguous
 As the unwelcome incidents accumulate,
there arises a growing urge to think
through, write out, and publish quality
policies to serve as guides to managerial
action
Advantages of Policies
 It provides insiders and outsiders with a
new, superior form of predictability, i.e. a
written guide to managerial action
 It forces the organization to think about
quality problems to a depth never before
achieved. “before you write it down, you
must think it out”
 It establishes legitimacy and can be
communicated in an authoritative,
uniform manner
 It permits practices to be audited against
that policy
Disadvantages of Policies
 Major disadvantage is work involved
 Some managers think that written
policies tend to restrict innovation
and to narrow the range of action
available to adapt to changing
conditions
Corporate Quality
Policies
 As a company grows, it becomes evident
that no one set of quality policies can fit
all company activities
 This problem is solved by creating several
levels of quality policy out of which one is
corporate policy which usually consists of
 The purpose of writing and publishing quality
policies
 A brief statement of corporate intent
 The minimal actions to be taken by the
company divisions with respect to quality
 Interdivisional relationships concerning
quality
 Relationship of quality policies to other
company policies
Corporate Quality
Policies
 A delegation of authority to subordinate
company organization units to establish
subsidiary quality policies appropriate to
their needs
 Summary statement
 It is the policy of the company to provide
products and services of a quality that meet
the initial and continuing needs and
expectations of customers in relation to the
price paid and to the nature of competitive
offerings, and in doing so, to be the leader in
product quality reputation
Corporate Quality
Policies
 Importance of quality
 Leadership in quality has top priority
 Quality shall be given equal priority to costs
and delivery
 Quality competitiveness
 Equal or exceed competitive quality
 Be of the highest quality
 Customer relations
 Provide customer satisfaction
 Meet customer perception of good quality
Corporate Quality
Policies
 Internal Customers
 We regard the receivers of our work results as
“customers” whose needs are important to
understand and satisfy
 Work Force Involvement
 Our policy is to foster a spirit of pride among
employees regarding the company’s quality
performance
 Quality improvement
 Resources will be allocated primarily to the
prevention of defects and corrective action
will be focused on rot-cause identification and
elimination
Divisional Quality
Policies
 The same design shall be used in all
factories making a specific product.
 Quality of design shall be used in all
factories making a specific product
Quality Policies for
Functional Areas
 Many of the policies are prepared to
provide guidance to managers in specific
functional departments such as product
development, manufacturing and
marketing
 New product introduction
 Design reviews shall be conducted with
customer, market and regulatory bodies in
order to ensure the compliance of the design
for quality
 Suppliers
 We seek to establish long-term, open relations
Quality Policies for
Functional Areas
 Manufacturing
 Manufacturing process capability must be
verified during the product development cycle
 Production
 Involvement and a spirit of pride will be
fostered among employees by encouraging
ideas and resolutions regarding the company’s
quality performance
 Customer service
 Service operations shall be conducted so as to
minimize customers’ shutdowns
Quality Objectives
 An objective is an aimed-at-target–
an achievement toward which effort
is extended.
 Quality objective is an aimed-at-
quality target
 Quality objectives should be
quantifiable in nature (measurable) -
SMART
Objectives vs. Policies
Objectives vs. Standards
Implementing ISO
9000:2000
 Awareness Training
 Establish a Team
 Establish ISO 9000 Status
 Prepare Action Plan
 Track Action Plan
 Present Status of Action Plan
 ISO 9000 Readiness Assessment
 Contact Registrar (Certification Body)
 Official ISO 9000 Audit
 Continuous Improvement
 Celebrate!
ISO 9000:2000 Clauses
1. Quality Management System
2. Resource Management
3. Product or Service Realization
4. Management Responsibility
5. Measurement, Analysis and
Improvement
Quality Management
System (QMS)
 Concerned with the documentation
and management of the QMS
 Sub-clauses:
 Quality Manual
 Control of documents

 Control of records
Management
Responsibility
 Concerned with the responsibility of
management in the implementation of the
quality system
 Sub-clauses:
 Management commitment
 Customer focus
 Quality policy
 Planning
 Responsibility, authority, and communication
 Management review
Resource Management
 Concerned with the provision of
resources needed to implement the
QMS
 Sub-clauses:
 Provision of resources
 Human resources

 Infrastructure

 Work environment
Product or Service
Realization
 Concerned with the provision of processes to implement
the product or service
 Sub-clauses:
 Planning of product realization
 Customer related processes
 Customer requirements
 Customer communication
 Design and development
 Control of changes
 Purchasing process
 Production and service provision
 Validation of processes
 Identification and traceability
 Customer property
 Preservation of product
 Control of measuring and monitoring devices
Measurement, Analysis and
Improvement
 Concerned with the establishment of a
measurement program to measure QMS
performance and to identify problems
 Sub-clauses:
 Measurement of customer satisfaction
 Internal audits
 Measurement and monitoring of processes
 Measurement and monitoring of product
 Control of nonconformity
 Analysis of data
 Continual improvement
 Corrective action
 Preventive action
References
 Software Quality Management and
ISO 9001, by Michael Jenner, Ch. 1,
2
 A Practical Approach to Software
Quality, by Gerard O’Regan, Ch. 3

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