Title: ISO 9000/9001
1ISO 9000/9001
- Software Process Improvement Initiative
Omer Azmon Anna Brjezovskaia VelimirLesikov Eduard
o Borjas Darius Vincent Salim
2Preview of ISO 9000/9001
- What is ISO?
- General Background
- Who Uses ISO 9000/9001
- Motivation for ISO 9000/9001
- Goals for ISO 9001
- Features of ISO 9001
- Comparison With Other SPI Initiatives
- Team Opinions
- Q A Session
3What is ISO?
- ISO stands for the International Organization
for Standardization. - Central Secretariat is located in Geneva,
Switzerland. - A network of the national standards institutes of
162 countries with one member (one vote) per
country. - A non-governmental organization that forms a
bridge between the public and private sector. - Standards are developed by technical committees.
- Certifications are performed by an independent
third party registrar company accredited by a
national accreditation body.
4General Background
- ISO 9000 describes fundamentals of quality
management systems, which form the subject of the
ISO 9000 family, and defines related terms. - ISO 9000 is 1 of the over 17,500 standards, which
were published by the ISO. It first came out in
1987, the latest standard was published in 2005.
- ISO 9001 specifies requirements for a quality
management system. It first came out in 1994, the
latest standard was published in 2008.
5Who Uses ISO 9000/9001
- ISO 9001 is used from certified companies, most
of the time it involves two major positions in
the company - Consultant - that prepares the documentation
- The company's management and staff to guarantee
that the new system is properly documented and
the documentation is properly implemented. - Used by small companies mainly because of a need
from their corporate partners which are looking
for better quality and standardizing methods.
6Motivation for ISO 9000/9001
- Started in England during WWII for quality
management of weapons manufacturers - Into the 1970s many organizations (Ford, British
Ministry of Defense) had their own quality
management systems - The problem then became that there was no single
standard for quality in England - From there it became first a British standard,
then a European standard, and ultimately an
international standard
7Goals for ISO 9001
- ISO 90012008 specifies requirements for a
quality management system where an organization - needs to demonstrate its ability to consistently
provide product that meets customer and
applicable statutory and regulatory requirements,
and - aims to enhance customer satisfaction through the
effective application of the system, including
processes for continual improvement of the system
and the assurance of conformity to customer and
applicable statutory and regulatory requirements.
Source International Organization for
Standardization (http//www.iso.org)
8Goals for ISO 9001 (continued)
- Reduce waste and increase productivity
- Improve employee awareness, morale and motivation
- Raise profits
- Improve marketing
- Increase customer satisfaction
- Create a more effective and efficient operation
- Decreased variation, increased consistency and
predictability of operations
9Features of ISO 9001
- Say It.
- Document/define
- Processes
- Do It.
- Implementation
- Prove It.
- Objective evidence (records, audits responses)
- Maintain It Improve It!
- Ongoing management commitment
- Adequate resources
- Continual improvement of the system
10Features of ISO 9001 (continued)
- 1 Scope
- 2 Normative Reference
- 3 Terms and Definitions
- 4 Quality Management System
- 5 Management Responsibility
- 6 Resource Management
- 7 Product Realization
- 8 Measurement, Analysis and Improvement
11Features of ISO 9001Scope
- Demonstrate consistent conformance to customer
regulatory requirements - Address customer satisfaction through
- Effective system
- Based on continual improvement preventive
actions - Application
- Define in quality manual
12Features of ISO 9001 Normative Reference
- normative means that it is included as an
auditable requirement. - ISO 9000 Quality Management Systems -
Fundamentals and Vocabulary
13Features of ISO 9001Terms and Definitions
- ISO 90002000 Quality Management Systems -
Fundamentals and Vocabulary - Supplier ? Organization ?Customer
- Product Result of a process (Hardware,
software, services)
14Features of ISO 9001Quality Management System
- Establish, implement, document, maintain and
continually improve the QMS processes. - Identify processes and sequence
- Determine effectiveness
- Monitor, measure, analyze, and implement actions
- Documentation includes procedures, quality
policy, instructions, quality manual, data and
records - Control of documents and records
15Features of ISO 9001Management Responsibility
- Management Commitment
- Customer Focus
- Quality Policy
- Business Planning and Objectives
- Responsibility, Communication and Authority
- Management Reviews
16Features of ISO 9001Resource Management
- Provide Resources
- Human Resources
- Training, awareness competency
- Personnel assignment
- Work Environment
- Infrastructure
17Features of ISO 9001Product Realization
- Planning for Product Realization
- Customer-related Processes (Product requirements
communication) - Purchasing (Supplier evaluation, purchasing
requirements, verification) - Design/Development (Planning, inputs, outputs,
reviews, verification, validation change
control)
18Features of ISO 9001Measurement, Analysis and
Improvement
- Monitoring, Planning, and Measurement
- Customer satisfaction
- Internal audits
- Process Product monitoring/measurement
- Analysis of Data
- Improvement
- Constant Improvement
- Preventive Action
- Corrective Action
19Comparison With Other SPI Initiatives
- CMMI - ISO 9000 is more basic. The documentation
involves fewer details and it has to be
constantly improved for further product updates
- in comparison to CMMI, where further process
improvements are already covered when
documentation and specifications are created. - Six Sigma - ISO 9000 is using documentation as
continuous quality assurance, rather then data.
20Team Opinions
- Positives
- Democratic
- Internationally Used
- Easy To Implement
- Good Starting Point
- If Used Correctly Will Lead To Consistent Quality
Products - Negatives
- Doesnt Necessarily Lead To A Quality Product
- Can Lead To Just An Empty Plaque On The Wall
- Not Software Specific Like ISO/IEC 900032004
21Question Answer Session
22Thank You
Omer Azmon Anna Brjezovskaia VelimirLesikov Eduard
o Borjas Darius Vincent Salim