Thursday, November 11, 2010

ISO 9000 Standards Certification and Registration


ISO 9000 Standards Certification and Registration

The International Standards Organization is responsible for two major sets of requirements that relate to an overall quality management system to be used by businesses. The ISO 9000 family of standards is the primary set of requirements for most businesses.

Quality management by definition address that the organization does certain things to “fulfill the customer’s quality requirements and applicable regulatory requirements while aiming to enhance customer satisfaction, and achieve continual improvement of its performance in pursuit of these objectives”.
ISO 14000 address the environmental management to minimize harmful effects to the environment. Again, it is a quality management system designed to “achieve continual improvement of its environmental performance.

ISO certification 9000 is the most common. So, let’s take a look at what ISO certification entails and what it means. To become certified, a quality management system must be in place that meets the requirements of the ISO standard. This begins with the business recognizes the requirements and developing a quality system to meet their needs at the same time they meet the requirements.

ISO 9000 certification and ISO 9000 registration are two different entities, though they are often used interchangeably. To achieve ISO certification 9001 , an independent registrar is hired to audit the quality system for thoroughness and compliance to all the standards. When this is accomplished, the business is offered a certificate stating that the quality system conforms to standards within the particular standard.

ISO registration means that the certification has been recorded in its client register. Because most companies have been certified and in turn registered, the terms are offed interchanged in general use. While the term “certification” is the most widely used, “registration” used in North America. Both are completely acceptable, because the business has fulfilled the requirements set forth by ISO.

ISO 9000 CERTIFICATION IS AN APPRAISAL TO COMPANY


ISO 9000 CERTIFICATION IS AN APPRAISAL TO COMPANY

During World WarII, there were quality problems in many British industries such as munitions, where bombs were exploding in factories during assembly. The adopted solution was to require factories to document their manufacturing procedures and to prove by record-keeping that the procedures were being followed. The name of the standard was BS 5750, and it was known as a management standard because it specified not what to manufacture, but how the manufacturing process was to be managed. According to Seddon, “In 1987, the British Government persuaded the International Organization for Standardization to adopt BS 5750 as an international standard. BS 5750 became ISO 9000.”

ISO 9001: 2008 only introduces clarifications to the existing requirements of ISO 9001: 2000 based on eight years of experience of implementing the standard worldwide with about one million certificates issued in 170 countries to date. It also introduces changes intended to improve consistency with ISO14001: 2004.. In fact, the ISO technical committee (TC176) who develops the ISO 9000 series of standards is deliberately planning the next release as an amendment rather than a formal revision. The difference is that an “amendment” is focused on making changes for clarification purposes only and for better alignment with ISO 14001, the standard for environmental management. With the 2008 release, the committee is purposely intending not to introduce substantive changes that will affect the QMS processes and documentation of currently certified organizations. Thus, the new ISO 9001:2008 standard should have limited impact on companies already certified. Some of the requirements in ISO 9001 (which is one of the standards in the ISO 9000 family) include:-

  • a set of procedures that cover all key processes in the business;
  • monitoring processes to ensure they are effective;
  • keeping adequate records;
  • checking output for defects, with appropriate and corrective action where necessary;
  • regularly reviewing individual processes and the quality system itself for effectiveness; and
  • facilitating continual improvement

ADVANTAGES OF ISO 9000 CERTIFICATION:

It is widely acknowledged that proper quality management improves business, often having a positive effect on investment, market share, sales growth, sales margins, competitive advantage, and avoidance of litigation. The quality principles in ISO 9001: are also sound, according to Wade, and Barnes, who says “ISO 9000 guidelines provide a comprehensive model for quality management systems that can make any company competitive.” Barnes also cites a survey by Lloyd’s Register Quality Assurance which indicated that ISO 9001 increased net profit, and another by Deloitte-Touche which reported that the costs of registration were recovered in as less as three months. According to the Providence Business News, implementing ISO often gives the following advantages:

  1. Create a more efficient, effective operation
  2. Increase customer satisfaction and retention
  3. Reduce audits
  4. Enhance marketing
  5. Improve employee motivation, awareness, and morale
  6. Promote international trade
  7. Increases profit
  8. Reduce waste and increases productivity

In today’s service-sector driven economy, more and more companies are using ISO 9000 as a business tool. Through the use of properly stated quality objectives, customer satisfaction surveys and a well-defined continual improvement program companies are using ISO 9000 processes to increase their efficiency and profitability.

ISO 9001 Documents Control – Elements and Requirements


ISO 9001 Documents Control – Elements and Requirements

The ISO 9001 standard is caring for us. It cares for us from several angles. One of these cares regards our documentation. The standard requires that we will document by all means.
But it also cares that we won’t get confused and mix up different documents from different sources. Therefore it requires all documents to be controlled. This is not a recommendation but a requirement. You must control your documents. In order to achieve documents control you must maintain a method. This method must be one of the organizations quality procedures and it should be called “Documents Control”. In this procedure you must refer to the next line of issues.

Types of records
At first, you must define what documents this procedure would include. Documents can be working procedures, diagrams, technical specifications, price quotes etc. In order not to “swirl” around too many documents, let’s make it clear. Let’s define what a document is: Communication of information, evidence for correspondence, sharing of any kind of knowledge, approved documents. Someone within the organization must supervise all documents and see that they are suitable for working before they are released.The reason is to prevent any faults where unsuitable documents are being used or information that is classified is handed to wrong bodies. It is required to define for whom it is authorized and when must he approve any document. Who is responsible? The same one who is responsible for the information documented. It must be part of his job description. There are situations that more than one function would be needed to approve one document. It happens when more than one process is documented on one document.

Updated documents
This requirement assures that always the last version is the version in use – and not an older. Therefore you must define a method for maintaining updated version and elimination of older versions. How would one know what is the last version? Usually organizations manage a list of editions and updates for documents. You can manage the document itself. But most important, it is required to indicate the document itself as the last edition. This way, any employee that would use the document, would be sure that he holds the last edition. Of course, don’t forget to document the method.It is also required to define what to do with the old versions that are now not updated. How do you handle them? Are they to be destroyed, archived etc. Managing editions must include: Date of last update, The reason for the update, The function who demanded the update, The function that authorized the update. Although the ISO 9001 standard doesn’t require these requirements specifically, it would help you to achieve its basic requirements. Of course you would use what is suitable for your organization. Today there is a lot of document management softwares. These software, naturally qualify for the standard requirements but it is recommended to review anyone before purchasing.

Availability and distribution of documents
This is an un separated part of the last requirement. Defining the availability and distribution of documents must include the following:User authorization – to which it is authorized to use the document, the location of the document – where must the document be kept before and after use. Most of today’s process management systems (such as ERP or CRM systems) provide documents control relevant to the process they handle. They present the user with a screen (a screen on a computer system is a document like any other document) with defined information to input. Most of these systems also has authorization module installed. But when systems like the ones mentioned do not exist in the organization, it must provide with his employees the relevant updated documents. That means the latest editions. In order to ensure that, the standard require a documented method. How to obtain that? Well, it depends on your organization and his substructures.

Identification of documents
Any document (internal or external) must be identified somehow. Any internal document must have a name, serial number, catalogue number or whatever. Somehow to define it. The ISO 9001 standard requires that you maintain a method to achieve identification. The identification must include the numbering, coding or however you decided to identify it. But it is required to document the method. You must also include location of documents. How one can trace the document. for example customer’s files are scanned to the computer or stored in some closet. The final purpose of all this is to achieve control of the documents – any employee, once he looks at a document or trying to trace a document, would know where to approach: a department, a process, some function or any kind of identification relevant to your organization. If we look again at process management systems, then it is much simpler. Any document in those systems is identified by a number of some kind, produced by the system. The number is given according to some internal method. In this case you must not document this method but mention it in the procedure that these specific documents are managed. In case there are documents that are manually managed you must document the method. All this also applies for external documents. Any documentation that arrives from outside (with presumption that it is a document as defined) is included in the ISO 9001 standard requirement. In this case you must specify what is to do with these documents and where one can trace them in the hour of need. For example, where to file the documents. Again, you define the method according to your organization’s nature.

Documents removal
You must define a method for documents removal for any reason: un updated, out of use, etc. the method must include what is it to do with the document and who is responsible, once it is out of use. For example, removing old documents from the organization’s server for no further use or removing old forms from the offices that no one would use them again. Some of this things sound trivial and they are, but still this is a ISO 9001 standard requirement..

Summary:
The ISO 9001 standard requires that we document all sorts of our documents. It also requires that we would not confuse all kinds of documents from different sources. Therefore we must define a method for documents control. This is not a recommendation but a requirement.
The method must be presented as a documented procedure.
The documented procedure would be called “Documents control”.
You must include a definition of documents within the method – what is a document.
All documents must be approved before use. The purpose is to verify that the documents are suitable for work.
All documents must be updated. You must define a method to ensure the use of updated documents only. The method should include management documents editions and documents indications.
All documents must be identified. The organization must specify a method for documents identification. The purpose is that any employee would know which document he holds or where to trace it.
It is also required to manage availability and distribution of documents. You must verify that the documents that are distributed to the employees are the correct ones.
You must define a method for documents removal. When and why to remove documents and in whose responsibility.

ISO 9001 Standards Quality Manual Preparation


ISO 9001 Standards Quality Manual Preparation

An ISO 9001 quality manual details how an organization will actively ensure customer satisfaction through the application of established quality management principles. For this reason, the quality manual is one of the most scrutinised high-level documents present in an organization. This article discusses a number of issues surrounding the format and content of the manual.

There are no requirements defining the format of the ISO 9001 quality manual, most organizations often use a pre-formatted template which is easily modified as the quality system develops. Using a quality template will afford an organization more time to focus on documenting systems and processes with greater accuracy during the implementation phase.

There is often considerable debate about the format and content of the manual. The balance of opinion is divided between those who believe the manual’s format does not matter, as long as, what occurs out in the field complies with the requirements and those who believe the quality manual should say something ‘personal’ about the organization’s approach to quality management.

It would be true to say that every company has their own style of operation which will inevitably be reflected in the manual and procedures. This variance is fine; all that matters is that the quality manual and procedures are able to respond positively to these questions:

1. Does it define the scope of the organization’s approach to quality management?

2. Does it define how the scope is applied?

3. Does it give suitable reason for permissible exclusions from that scope?

4. Does it contain, or make reference to, documented procedures?

5. Does it ensure a cycle of feedback exists to allow improvement?

It is important to maintain a clear distinction between the contents of the manual and the purpose and scope of the procedures. The QMS should define top management’s intent to operate an effective quality management system, while the procedures define how those intentions will be implemented at an operational level.

The quality manual should not be over burdened with excessive detail which requires frequent change to ensure relevance is maintained. The approach taken many companies to avoid over-burdening their manual is by allowing lower-level documents, such as procedures and work instructions to contain operational detail. Then, simple reference is made to the procedures and work instructions from within the manual itself. In other words, let the procedures take the strain of controlling day-to-day activities; after all, they are ‘working’ documents the organization uses to achieve the goal of customer satisfaction.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

How To Get ISO 9001 Certified


How To Get ISO 9001 Certified

The ISO 9001 accreditation is part of the International Organization for Standardization 9000 standards. They are awarded to businesses for quality. The ISO 9001 is recognized worldwide as an award for a company’s internal quality management or actions that the company takes to ensure the product or service they provide is of the highest quality. Customer satisfaction is a major factor in whether a company will be awarded an ISO 9001 accreditation. The International Organization for Standardization in Geneva, Switzerland publishes thousands of international standards to help companies throughout the world more efficiently do business with one another. The 27 page ISO 9001 standard is focused on defining minimum business practices for the production and delivery of a company’s products and services through the implementation of a formal “quality management system”, or QMS. An ISO QMS is made up of certain processes, documentation and other formal practices that control internal company operations to ensure customer requirements are consistently met. To pass an audit, an organization must follow these guidelines: Develop a Quality Management System (QMS) manual. Develop the procedures required by the ISO 9001 Standard. Determine the additional processes and procedures that are needed by the organization to perform work and satisfy the requirements in the ISO Standard. Operate in accordance with the organization’s documented QMS. Provide evidence that the organization is operating according to the QMS. The achievement of an ISO 9001 certification is a milestone in demonstrating to your customers that you have implemented a reliable system of producing and delivering your products and services. The focus of this “system” is twofold: providing consistent products and services; and continual improvement in your processes leading to better results. The ISO 9001 certification is granted by a third-party auditing firm called a Registrar who specializes in quality system auditing. There are a wide variety of Registrars located in every ISO participating country. Some firms have offices internationally; others have a more regional focus. The selection of your Registrar is one of the more important decisions you will make to ensure the best alignment with your type of business, your location(s) and overall cost of maintaining the certification. The initial certification audit is conducted in two parts. The Stage 1 audit is a general review of your QMS documentation to ensure you have addressed all of the requirements of the ISO 9001 standard. Depending upon the size of your business, this can be conducted in a one to two day visit to your facility or virtually via phone. Any discrepancies noted during the Stage 1 audit will be documented in a formal report and must be corrected before the Stage 2 audit. The main part of the ISO audit is the Stage 2 audit which is always conducted onsite at your location(s) and will be focused on the implementation and effectiveness of your QMS. During this audit which can take 1 day (for very small companies) to several days, the auditor(s) will tour your company, speak to managers and employees, and review documentation and records (along with any Stage 1 discrepancies) to ensure that your system is fully implemented. If nonconformances are found, they will be documented in a formal report for correction. Following the Stage 2 audit, you are generally given thirty (30) days to submit corrective action plans for all audit nonconformances. Once corrective actions are received, your certification is complete and your certificate is issued. In order to maintain the certification, you will participate in an annual surveillance audit from your Registrar where they confirm that you are maintaining your QMS. Every third year, a more comprehensive re-certification audit is conducted, similar to the initial certification audit.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Certification Of ISO 14001

Certification Of ISO 14001

International Organization for Standardization (ISO) is functioning from Geneva in Switzerland as a worldwide federation of national standards organizations. The mission of ISO is to promote the development of standardization and related activities in the world with a view to facilitating the international exchange of goods and services, and to developing corporation in the spheres of intellectual, scientific, technological and economic activity. ISO’s works result in international agreements which are published as international agreements which are published as international standards.

ISO 9000

Previous version of ISO 9000 (1994) emphasize on documents and document control. But as per new standard the extent of documentation can differ from company to company in a simplified manner.

ISO 9000 system requires records at relevant stages which provide data for continual improvement and can be used for legacy as a data bank.

ISO 14000

ISO 14000, the environmental management system family of standards, was formally published by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) on September 2, 1996. ISO 14001 is the conformance standard within the ISO 14000 series. After extensive groundwork, the revised version of ISO 14001 was released on 15th of November 2004. ISO 14001:2004 will replace ISO 14001:1996 after a transition period of 18 months, ending on 14th May 2006, and will become the basis for the certification procedure for environmental management. All ISO 14001:1996 certificates will be rendered invalid on 15th May 2006

Since 1996 the ISO 14001 has formed the basis for structuring, implementation, review and further development of environmental management systems. It lays down the applicable demands for organizations of all kinds and sizes as well as for diverse geographical, cultural and social conditions. The overall objective is to promote environmental protection and the prevention of environmental stress in harmony with economic, social and political requirements.

OHSAS 18001 is an Occupation Health and Safety Assessment Series for health and safety management systems. It is intended to help an organizations to control occupational health and safety risks (OH&S). The importance of managing Occupational Health and Safety is recognized by all interested parties – employers, employees, customers, suppliers, insurers,shareholders, the community, contractors, and regulatory agencies. It enables an organization to control occupational health and safety risks risks and to improve performance.

Who Is ISO 9001 Consultant?

Who Is ISO 9001 Consultant?

ISO 9001 Consulting has been available ever since the ISO management system standards were initially published in the late 1970’s. As of now, nearly a million business companies internationally have been certified to one or more of several ISO business standards. These include ISO 9001, ISO 14001, AS9100, ISO/TS 16949, etc. The statistics that have been accumulated to date indicate that while many organizations deployed ISO standards using internal know-how, those that used outside ISO 9001 consulting services profited the most in terms of speed of implementation, effectiveness and return on investment.

ISO 9001 Consultancy firms provide a numberof services. Let’s take a look at some of these so that you can determine what collection of services would best suit your company:

How To Interpret The ISO 9001 Standard?

The ISO 9001 quality management system standard can be a hard document to understand. It is written in semi-legal language and specifies requirements in in a very general sense. This is deliberately so, as it is meant to consider just about any type of business activity. Many companies have problems relating it to their specific organizations. An experienced ISO 9001 consultant can show you exactly how to apply the standard to your specific business processes.

ISO 9001 Gap Evaluation

Prior to implementing the ISO standard within your organization, you need to know the gap between your existing business practices and controls relative to ISO 9001. Using ISO 9001 consulting services, you can have an evaluation done of your current management system practices, controls and documentation, to determine to what extent you comply to ISO 9001 requirements. The consultant will give you a detailed audit report listing the gaps in your company, along with their recommendations. This will assist in developing your ISO 9001 project implementation plan to accomplish full compliance.

ISO 9001 Project Planning and Organization

Depending size and complexity of your business, an ISO 9001 implementation project can take as few as 4 months to over 18 months to complete. Your ISO project needs to well-planned in terms of time and resources needed, specific activities to be carried out, who will be responsible for each activity, milestone reviews, authorizations, training, dealing with problems, etc. A good ISO 9001 consultant can be an invaluable resource in assisting a business address with this important activity.

ISO 9001 Business Process Identification and Documentation

ISO 9001 views business processes as the main point of control. These include internal as well as outsourced processes. Quite a few companies have issues differentiationg between processes, departments and functional activities. ISO 9001 consulting experts can assist you identify and effectively document all organizational processes pertaining to your quality management system. These include customer-oriented, management, product realization, resource planning, measurement, support and outsourced processes.

ISO 9001 System Development and Implementation

The main thrust of the ISO 9001 standard is on effective planning, operation and control of thrust all relevant quality management system processes. This is probably the most time-consuming and difficult aspect of any ISO implementation project. Many questions may arise as to what processes must be be controlled, what should be an effective control, how best to communicate and implement it, the inter-process impact, how to set process goals and objectives and what records to keep. Here is where using external ISO 9001 consulting will significantly help in answering these questions, provide focus and speed up implementation.

ISO 9001 Management System Documentation

The latest ISO 9001:2008 standard minimizes the emphasis on documentation and maximizes its attention on effective planning and control. Adequate documentation is however needed for many business processes in order to establish consistent application of effective controls. Some business have either too much or too little documentation. An experienced consultant can help your organization determine where it is needed, how much and how it should be documented.

ISO 9001 Pre-assessment

ISO 9001 Registrars (also referred to as Certification Bodies) conduct their certification audit in two stages. In stage 1, they determine your state of readiness (which includes your planning, documentation and internal review activities) and in stage 2 they evaluate your management system for effective implementation of planned controls, in both cases relative to the ISO 9001 standard. After spending several months of implementation, you feel your company ready for the certification audit, it might be useful to use external consulting to do an assessment to determine if you are truly ready, identify any issues and help you take appropriate corrective action, prior to the Registrar audit.

ISO 9001 Training

ISO 9001 Consultancy services generally provide a number of training alternatives. These include

- ISO 9001 awareness training to employees at all levels

- An executive summary of the ISO standard to senior management

- Process identification, mapping, analysis and improvement

- ISO project management

- ISO documentation and implementation

- Internal audit

- Use of problem-solving tools

Based on the amount of internal expertise inside your organization, you may want to have an external ISO 9001 consulting service provide some or all of this training.

Develop and Maintain your ISO 9001 Internal Audit Program

To be certified and maintain your certification, the ISO 9001 Standard requires your organization to plan and conduct an internal audit program of its quality management system. In these days, some comapnies are short on resources, internal audit expertise and personnel availability outsource the upkeep of their internal audit programs to ISO 9001 consulting firms.

ISO 9001 Continual Improvement Process

The ISO 9001 standard requires your quality management system to be dynamic and work towards continually improving the effectiveness and efficiency of your organization and enhance customer satisfaction. Some ISO 9001 consulting firms have diversified skills and experience in continual improvement strategies and methods. These mayinclude problem-solving, six sigma, lean manufacturing, use of various business software and tools, etc. They can significantly accelerate your pace at gaining further operational efficiency, customer satisfaction and increased business profitability.

Standards Certification In Business

In our business we often need to describe our policy and practice regarding quality of service, responsibility towards environment and employees health to our clients. There are three set standards i.e. ISO 9001, ISO 14001 and OHSAS 18001 accepted globally.

ISO 9001 is the internationally recognised Quality Management Standard for all types of organisations. It’s all about managing your processes and continually improving the way you do things. It doesn’t require you to change any of your operating procedures or do anything that isn’t good practice. It simply asks you to “Say what you do, and do what you say”.

ISO 9001 is by far the world’s most established quality framework, currently being used by over ¾ million organizations in 161 countries, and sets the standard not only for quality management systems, but management systems in general.

Having ISO 9001 certification demonstrates that your organisation is well managed, knows where it is going and has a plan to get there. Also, having a plan means you are far more likely to succeed.

Certification to the ISO 14001 Standard demonstrates your ‘Green’ credentials to the world at large and your customers in particular. It gives them the confidence to know that behind the certificate there is an organisation that is aware of its environmental responsibilities and is doing everything it can to minimise any adverse impact.

ISO 14001 standard is applicable to any organization that wishes to:

  • implement, maintain and improve an environmental management system
  • assure itself of its conformance with its own stated environmental policy (those policy commitments
  • of course must be made)
  • demonstrate conformance
  • ensure compliance with environmental laws and regulations
  • seek certification of its environmental management system by an external third party organization
  • make a self-determination of conformance

OHSAS18001 sets out the requirements for an Occupational Health & safety Management system that enables organisations to control physical, work related risk, protect employees’ health and improve business performance. It requires the creation of a relevant Management System and has been developed to promote best practice in this field.

Obtaining OHSAS 18001 demonstrates that you have:

· procedures for risk assessment, risk control and hazard identification

· structured health and safety training and required competences

· emergency procedures and response mechanisms

· formal communication channels for disseminating health and safety information

· performance measures and improvement plans

Achieving ISO compliance and certification can take significant amounts of time but should prove valuable for companies interested in successful global networking and high levels of customer satisfaction.

Monday, June 28, 2010

Document Control System in Manufacturing Industry


Document Control System In Manufacturing Industry

Many traditional paper documents would be generated in a manufacturing business as in the examples listed below:

  • Statutory documents such as licenses, records and reports
  • Transactional documents such as purchase and sales invoices, shipping documents and cash vouchers
  • Production related documents such as operations manuals, specification sheets, production and maintenance schedules, machine production reports, material handling documents, store bin cards and gate passes
  • Management reports where the recipient prefer printed paper documents to computer screen views
  • Business documents such as correspondence, contracts, brochures and reference materials

However, in a modern system, the majority of documents would be generated as computer documents, and remain as such. Different kinds of databases like financial accounts, inventory records and different kinds of analyses are examples. The core functions outlined in the previous section would each produce a continuing flow of voluminous documents.

In addition to providing management information, document management systems also do the following:

  • Ensure that only authorized persons are able to access sensitive documents
  • Minimize the danger of damage and loss of important documents
  • Preserve the documents as long as needed by statute or for management purposes

Environmental Aspects In ISO 14001 Standards EMS

Environmental Aspects In ISO 14001 Standards EMS

First make lists of the environmental aspects (issues) that are relevant

to the business. The environmental review mentioned earlier should

provide most of this information and the Annex to ISO 14001 provides

guidance on the format for doing this.

Consider the inputs, outputs and processes/activities of the business in

relation to;

a) emissions to air

b) releases to water

c) waste management

d) contamination of land

e) use of raw materials and natural resources

f) other local environmental and community issues

Consider both site (direct) and offsite (ie. indirect) aspects that you

control or have influence over (such as suppliers) and in relation to

normal operations, shut-down and start-up conditions and reasonably

foreseeable and emergencies situations

A simple written procedure is then required to determine which of the

aspects identified are really or probably significant (important) and should

therefore be managed by the EMS. This process which is

similar to health and safety risk assessment ranks the aspects by order

of importance and the significant aspects identified are then the core

of the environmental management system.

There are various methods of determining significance but most are

based on the principle of attributing a relative value for the

environmental hazard or potential to cause harm (eg. on a scale of 1-

5) and the risk or likelihood of occurrence (eg. on a scale of 1-5). The

relative significance is then determined by multiplying the hazard by

the risk. (eg. max score of 25). An arbitrary but cautious threshold

value is then set above which environmental aspects are considered to

be significant. This threshold can be determined by a common sense

consideration of the aspects identified.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

The ISO 9001 & ISO 14001 Standards and the environment

The ISO 9001 & ISO 14001 Standards and the environment

The ISO 14000 family of International Standards on environmental management is a relative newcomer to ISO’s portfolio – but enviroment-related standardization is far from being a new departure for ISO.

In fact, ISO has two-pronged approach to meeting the needs of business, industry, governments, non-governmental organizations and consumers in the field of the environment.

On the one hand, it offers a wideranging portfolio of standardized sampling, testing and analytical methods to deal with specific environmental challenges. It has developed more than 350 International Standards (out of a total more
than 12000) for the monitoring of such aspects as the quality of air, water and soil. These standards are means of providing business and government with scientifically valid data on the environmental effects of economic activity.

They also serve in a number of countries as the technical basis for environmental regulations.

ISO is leading a strategic approach by developing environmental management system standards that can be implemented in any type of organization in either public or private sectors (companies, administration, public utilities). To spearhead this strategic approach, ISO establish a new technical commitee, ISO /TC 207, Environmental management, in

1993. This followed ISO’s successful pioneering experience in management system standardization with the ISO 9000 series for quality management.

ISO’s direct involvement in environmental management stemmed from an intensive consultation process, carried out within the framework of a Strategic Advisory Group on Environment (SAGE),set up in 1991, in which 20 countrie, 11 international organizations and more than 100 environmental experts participated in defining the basic requirements of a new approach to environment-related standards.

This pioneering work was consolidated with ISO’s commitment to support the objective of “sustainable development” dicussed at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro in 1992.

Today, delegations of business and government experts from 55 countries have participate actively within TC 207,

and another 16 countries have observer status. These delegations are chosen by the national standars institute concerned and they are required to bring to TC 207 a national consensus on issue being addressed by the commitee.

This national consensus is derived from a process of consultation with interested parties.

From its beginning, it was recognized that ISO/TC 207 should have close cooperation with ISO/TC 176, Quality management and quality assurance, in the areas of management systems, auditing and related terminology. Active efforts are under way to ensure compatibility of ISO environmental management and quality management standards, for the benefit of all organizations wishing to implement them.

Monday, April 5, 2010

Assessment to ISO 9000 Standards

Assessment to ISO 9000 Standards
Once all the requirements of ISO 9000 have been met, it is time for an external audit. This should be carried out by a third party, accredited certification body. In the UK, the body should be accredited by UKAS. The chosen certification body will review the quality manuals and procedures. This process involves looking at the companys evaluation of quality and ascertains if targets set for the management program are measurable and achievable. This is followed at a later date by a full on-site audit to ensure that working practices observe the procedures and stated objectives and that appropriate records are kept.
After a successful audit, a certificate of registration to ISO 9000 will be issued. There will then be surveillance visits (usually once or twice a year) to ensure that the system continues to work.

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Origin Of ISO 9001 Standards

The story of ISO 9000 Standards is a story of standards, methods and regulation. The brief history that follows is in no way comprehensive but is intended to illustrate four things:
1. that ISO 9000 standards are an ancient concept that survived several millennia; that a means of verifying compliance often follows the setting of standards;
2. that the formalizing of working practices is centuries old and seen as a means to consistently meet standards;
3. that market regulation (relative to the standard of goods and services) has been around for centuries for the protection of both craftsmen and traders.
4. ISO 9000 is a symptom of practices that were around centuries before anyone coined the term quality management. It is in some respects a natural progression that will continue to evolve. The story is told from a British viewpoint.

ISO 9000 grew out of BS 5750, a standard published by the British Standards Institution (BSI) in 1979. Initially, it was used only in manufacturing industries. ISO 9000 is now employed across a variety of other types of businesses. It is a set of international standards of quality management systems. ISO 9000 has been accepted by more than 100 countries as their national quality assurance standard by the end of 1997.
The history of ISO 9000 Standards dates back to Mil-Q-9858a, the first quality standard for military procurement established in 1959 by the US. By 1962, NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration) developed its quality system requirements for suppliers. In 1965, NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) accepted the AQAP (allied quality assurance procedures) specifications for the procurement of equipments.
During the 1970s, BSI published BS 9000 (the first UK standard for quality assurance) and BS 5179 (guidelines for quality assurance) norms. In 1979, it created BS 5750, a series of standards for use by manufacturing companies. They were enforced through assessments and audits. In 1988, ISO (International Standards Organization) adopted the BS 5750 standard without changes and published it globally under the name ISO 9000. The ISO adopted this standard with a view to create an international definition of the necessary characteristics of a quality system for all businesses, regardless of industry. In 1994, the ISO revised the ISO 9000 standard and published it globally.
In the beginning, ISO 9000 was implemented exclusively by large companies. But by mid-1990s, small and mid-sized companies began to increasingly implement these standards. In the United States, the total number of registrations increased from a little more than 2,200 in 1993 to more than 17,000 in 1998. Of these 17,000 registrations, almost 60 percent were held by businesses with annual sales of $100 million or less.