Title: ISO-9001: 2000 Awareness Training
1ISO-9001 2000 Awareness Training
- Presentation By Shashikant Gupta
2 ISO 90012000
3CONTENTS
- Course Objectives
- What is ISO?
- What is Quality?
- Terms and definitions
- Stake holders and their expectations
- Quality Management principles
- The software process
- ISO 90002000 Family of Standards
- ISO-90012000 Clauses
- Guidelines for Self Assessment
4COURSE OBJECTIVES
- To provide an overview of ISO 9001 2000
standards - To understand the elements that support the
implementation of an ISO 90012000 Quality
Management System
5What is ISO?
- The International Organization for
Standardization (ISO) is a worldwide federation
of national standards bodies from some 130
countries, one from each country. - ISO is a non-governmental organization
established in 1947. 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 cooperation in
the spheres of intellectual, scientific,
technological and economic activity
6More about ISO
- Worldwide Federation of National Standards Bodies
(ISO Member Countries) - Preparation of International Standards carried
out through - - ISO Technical Committees (TCs)
- - Subcommittees (SCs)
- - Working Groups (WGs).
7More about ISO
- ISO Collaborates closely with the International
Electro-technical Commission (IEC) on all matters
of Electro-technical Standardisation. - Committee Draft (CD) prepared by Technical
Committees. - Draft International Standards (DIS) adopted by
the Technical Committees are circulated to the
Member Bodies for voting. - Publication as an International Standard requires
approval by at least 75 of the Member Bodies
casting a vote. - ISO 9000 Standards prepared by Technical
Committee ISO / TC 176, Quality Management and
Quality Assurance. - ISO 9001 prepared by Subcommittee SC2, Quality
Systems.
8Objectives of ISO 9000
- A successful organisation should offer products
that - - Meet a well defined need, use or purpose.
- - Comply with applicable standards and
specifications. - - Comply with requirements of society.
- - Address environmental considerations.
- - Are available at competitive prices.
- - Satisfy customers expectations.
- - Are provided at a cost which will yield a
profit.
9WHAT IS QUALITY?
- The formal definition of quality as stated in ISO
9000 2000 is - - Ability of a set of inherent characteristics of
a product, system or process to fulfill
requirements of customers and other interested
parties. - Note The term quality may be used with
adjectives such as poor, good or excellent.
10TERMS AND DEFINITIONS
- ORGANIZATIONGroup of people and facilities with
an arrangement of responsibilities, authorities
and relationships.
11TERMS AND DEFINITIONS
- REQUIREMENT
- Need or expectation that is stated, generally
implied or obligatory. - Notes
- 1.Generally implied means it is custom or common
practice for the organization, its customers, and
other interested parties, that the need or
expectation under consideration is implied. - 2.A qualifier can be used to denote a specific
type of requirement, e.g. product requirement,
quality system requirement, customer requirement. - 3.A specified requirement is one which is stated,
for example, in a document. - 4.Requirements can be generated by different
interested parties.
12TERMS AND DEFINITIONS
- PROCESSSet of interrelated or interacting
activities which transforms inputs into outputs. - PRODUCTResult of activities or process.
- Notes
- A product may include service, hardware,
processed materials, software or a combination
thereof. - A product can be tangible (e.g. assemblies or
processed materials) or intangible (e.g.,
knowledge or concepts) or a combination thereof.
13TERMS AND DEFINITIONS
- TRACEABILITYAbility to trace the history,
application or location of that which is under
consideration. - Note When considering PRODUCT, traceability can
relate to - origin of the material and parts-
processing history- distribution and location of
the product after delivery.
14TERMS AND DEFINITIONS
- PROCEDURESpecified way to carry out an activity
or process. - Note A procedure when documented, becomes a
documented procedure. - PROJECTUnique process, consisting of a set of
coordinated and controlled activities with start
and finish dates, undertaken to achieve an
objective conforming to specific requirements,
including the constraints of time, cost and
resources.
15TERMS AND DEFINITIONS
- AUDITSystematic, independent and documented
process for obtaining audit evidence and
evaluating it objectively to determine the extent
to which audit criteria are fulfilled. - REVIEWActivity undertaken to determine the
suitability, adequacy and effectiveness of the
subject matter to achieve established objective.
16TERMS AND DEFINITIONS
- CONFORMITY
- Fulfillment of a requirement
- NON-CONFORMITYNon-fulfillment of a requirement
- DEFECTNon-fulfillment of a requirement related
to an intended or specified use - CORRECTIONAction to eliminate a detected
non-conformity. -
17TERMS AND DEFINITIONS
- CORRECTIVE ACTIONAction to eliminate the cause
of a detected non-conformity or other undesirable
situation. - PREVENTIVE ACTIONAction to eliminate the cause
of a potential non-conformity or other
undesirable potential situation.(Preventive
action is taken to prevent occurrence whereas
corrective action is taken to prevent
recurrence.)
18TERMS AND DEFINITIONS
- CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
- Customers opinion of the degree to which a
transaction has met the customers needs and
expectations. - QUALITY MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
- System to establish a quality policy and quality
objectives and to achieve those objectives.
19TERMS AND DEFINITIONS
- QUALITY POLICY
- Overall intentions and direction of an
organization related to quality as formally
expressed by Top Management. - Note 1 The quality policy should be consistent
with the overall policy of the organization and
should provide a framework for the settings of
quality objectives. - Note 2 Quality Management principles of this
International Standard may form a basis for the
establishment of a quality policy.
20TERMS AND DEFINITIONS
- QUALITY OBJECTIVE
- Something sought or aimed for, related to
quality. - Note 1 Quality objectives should be based on
organizations quality policy. - Note 2 Quality objectives are specified at
different levels in the organization.
At an operational level, quality
objectives should be quantitative. - Note 3 Different terms are sometimes used for
quality objectives, such as quality
targets, quality aims or quality goals.
21TERMS AND DEFINITIONS
- TOP MANAGEMENT
- Person or group of people who direct and control
an organization at the highest level.
22TERMS AND DEFINITIONS
- QUALITY PLANNING
- Part of quality management focused on setting
quality objectives and specifying necessary
operational processes and related resources to
fulfill the quality objectives. - QUALITY IMPROVEMENT
- Part of quality management, focused on
increasing effectiveness and efficiency .
23TERMS AND DEFINITIONS
- QUALITY CONTROLOperational techniques and
activities that are used to fulfil requirements
for quality. - QUALITY ASSURANCEPlanned and systematic
activities implemented within the quality system
and demonstrated as needed to provide adequate
confidence that an entity will fulfil given
requirements for quality.
24TERMS AND DEFINITIONS
- EFFECTIVENESS
- Measure of the extent to which planned
activities are realized and planned results
achieved. - EFFICIENCY
- Relationship between the result achieved and the
resources used.
25TERMS AND DEFINITIONS
- SUPPLIER Organisation that provides a product to
the customer. - CUSTOMERRecipient of a product provided by the
supplier. - Notes
- Example Consumer, client, end-user, retailer,
beneficiary or purchaser. - The customer can be either external or internal
to the organisation.
26TERMS AND DEFINITIONS
- SUPPLIER CHAIN AS PER ISO 90012000
- SUPPLIER
-
- ORGANIZATION
-
CUSTOMER
27STAKE HOLDERS AND THEIR EXPECTATIONS
Organizations stakeholder Typical expectations
Customers (Interested Parties) Product Quality
Employees Career / work satisfaction
Owners Return on Investment
Suppliers Continuing Business opportunity
Society Responsible stewardship
28QUALITY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES
- Customer Focus
- Leadership
- Involvement of people
- Process Approach
- System Approach to Management
- Continual improvement
- Factual approach to decision making
- Mutually beneficial supplier relationships
29QUALITY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES
- Customer Focus
- -Understand current and future customer needs
- -Meet customer requirements and strive to
exceed customer expectations
30QUALITY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES
- Leadership
- -Establish unity of purpose, direction, and the
internal environment of the organization. - -Create the environment in which people can
become fully involved in achieving the
organizations objectives.
31QUALITY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES
- Involvement of people
- -People at all levels are the essence of an
organization and their full involvement enables
their abilities to be used for the
organizations benefit.
32QUALITY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES
- Process approach
- -A desired result is achieved more
efficiently when related resources and
activities are managed as a process. - System approach to management
- -Identifying, understanding and managing a
system of interrelated processes for a given
objective contributes to the effectiveness
and efficiency of the organization.
33QUALITY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES
- Continual improvement
- -A permanent objective of the organization is
continual improvement. - Factual approach to decision making
- -Effective decisions are based on the
logical or intuitive analysis of data and
information.
34QUALITY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES
- Mutually beneficial supplier relationships
- -The ability of the organization and its
suppliers to create value enhanced by mutually
beneficial relationships.
35THE SOFTWARE PROCESS
SOFTWARE PROCESS
SOFTWARE PRODUCTS OR SERVICES
RESOURCES
PEOPLE HARDWARE SOFTWARE TIME EFFORT MONEY
QUALITY VALUES
FEEDBACK
CONTROL
36TO ACHIEVE PROCESS CONTROL
- Measurement is effected.
- Comparison against a pre-set goal is made.
- Any deviations are corrected by a feedback
mechanism.
37C U S T O M E R
C U S T O M E R
CONTINUAL IMPROVEMENT OF THE QUALITY MANAGEMENT
SYSTEM
SAT I S FACT ION
MANAGEMENT RESPONSIBILITY
R E Q U I R E M E N T S
MEASUREMENT, ANALYSIS, IMPROVEMENT
RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
PRODUCT REALISATION
OUTPUT
INPUT
PRODUCT
MODEL OF THE PROCESS APPROACH
38ISO 90002000 FAMILY OF STANDARDS
SUBJECT STANDARD
1. QUALITY MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS FUNDAMENTALS AND VOCABULARY ISO 9000 2000
2. QUALITY MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS - REQUIREMENTS ISO 9001 2000
3. QUALITY MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS GUIDELINES FOR PERFORMANCE IMPROVEMENTS ISO 9004 2000
39MODEL FOR QUALITY
- ISO 9001 2000
- QUALITY MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
- REQUIREMENTS
40STANDARDS / GUIDELINES FORCERTIFICATION
- ISO 9000 2000 - QMS Fundamentals Vocabulary
- ISO 9001 2000 - QMS Requirements
- ISO 9004 2000 - QMS Guidelines for
PerformanceImprovement - ISO 9000 - 3 1997 - Guidelines for application
of ISO to the development, supply, installation
and maintenance of Computer Software - ISO 10005 1995 QM Guidelines for Quality
Plans - ISO 10006 1997 QM Guidelines for Quality in
Project Management
41STANDARDS / GUIDELINES FORCERTIFICATION
- ISO 10007 1995 QM Guidelines for
Configuration Management - ISO 10013 1995 Guidelines for developing
Quality Manuals / Documentation - ISO / IEC 12207 1995 Information Technology
Software life cycle process - ISO / IEC 9126-1 2001 Software Engineering
Product Quality
(non-functional attributes) - ISO 19011 2000 Guidelines for Quality Systems
Auditing
42ISO 9001 2000QUALITY MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS -
CLAUSES
- 4. Quality Management System
- 4.1 General Requirements (For Software
Development and Services) - 4.2 Documentation Requirements
- 4.2.1 General
- 4.2.2 Quality Manual
- 4.2.3 Control Of Documents
- 4.2.4 Control Of Records
-
43- 5. Management Responsibility
- 5.1 Management Commitment
- 5.2 Customer Focus
- 5.3 Quality Policy
- 5.4 Planning
- 5.4.1 Quality objectives
- 5.4.2 Quality management system
44- 5. Management Responsibility
- 5.5 Responsibility, Authority and
Communication - 5.5.1 Responsibility and Authority
- 5.5.2 Management Representative
- 5.5.3 Internal Communication
- 5.6 Management Review
- 5.6.1 General
- 5.6.2 Review Input
- 5.6.3 Review Output
45- 6.Resource Management
- 6.1 Provision Of Resources
- 6.2 Human Resources
- 6.2.1 General
- 6.2.2 Competence, Awareness and training
- 6.3 Infrastructure
- 6.4 Work Environment
46- 7. Product Realization
- 7.1 Planning the Product Realization
- 7.2 Customer Related Process
- 7.2.1 Determination of Requirements
related to the Product - 7.2.2 Review of Requirements related to the
product - 7.2.3 Customer Communication
47- 7. Product Realization
- 7.3 Design And Development
- 7.3.1 Design And Development planning
- 7.3.2 Design And Development inputs 7.3.3 Desig
n And Development outputs - 7.3.4 Design And Development review
- 7.3.5 Design And Development verification
- 7.3.6 Design And Development validation
- 7.3.7 Control of Design And Development
- changes
48- 7. Product Realization
-
- 7.4 Purchasing
- 7.4.1 Purchasing Process
- 7.4.2 Purchasing Information
- 7.4.3 Verification of Purchased Product
49- 7. Product Realization
- 7.5 Product and Service Provision
- 7.5.1 Control of Service Provision
- 7.5.2 Validation of Processes for
production and service provision - 7.5.3 Identification and traceability
- 7.5.4 Customer Property
- 7.5.5 Preservation of Product
- 7.6 Control of monitoring and measuring devices
50- 8. Measurement, analysis and improvement
- 8.1 General
- 8.2 Monitoring and measurement
- 8.2.1 Customer Satisfaction
- 8.2.2 Internal Audit
- 8.2.3 Monitoring and measurement of process
- 8.2.4 Monitoring and measurement of product
51- 8. Measurement, analysis and improvement
- 8.3 Control of non conforming product
- 8.4 Analysis of data
- 8.5 Improvement
- 8.5.1 Continual Improvement
- 8.5.2 Corrective Action
- 8.5.3 Preventive Action
52GUIDELINES FOR SELF - ASSESSMENT
- Specific features of the ISO 9004
self-assessment methodology are that it can - Be applied to the entire Quality Management
System or to a part of the Quality Management
System - Be applied to the entire organization or a part
of the organization - Be completed in a short period of time with
internal resources
53GUIDELINES FOR SELF - ASSESSMENT
- Be completed by a cross-section team or by one
person in the organization, when supported by Top
Management - Form the input to a more comprehensive Quality
Management System self-assessment process - Identify and facilitate the prioritization of
opportunities for improvement
54GUIDELINES FOR SELF - ASSESSMENT
- Facilitate the maturity of the Quality Management
System towards world - class performance levels - Another advantage to the use of this methodology
is that is can be regularly used to appraise the
progress of improvement efforts
55PERFORMANCE MATURITY LEVELS
Maturity Level Performance Level Guidance
1 No formal approach No systematic approach evident, no results, poor results or unpredictable results.
2 Reactive approach Problem - or prevention-based systematic approach minimum data on improvement results available.
3 Stable formal system approach Systematic process-based approach, early stage of systematic improvements data available on conformance to objectives and existence of improvements trends.
56 PERFORMANCE MATURITY LEVELS
Maturity Level Performance Level Guidance
4 Continual improvement emphasized Improvement process in use good results and sustained improvement trends.
5 Best-in-class performance Strongly Integrated Improvement process best-in-class benchmarked results demonstrated.
57PROCESSMETHODOLOGY FOR IMPROVEMENT
- Actions for continual improvement should consist
of the following steps - Reason for improvement select an area for
improvement and the reason for working on it. - Current situation Evaluate existing process
efficiency. Collect and analyse data to discover
what types of problems occur most often. Select a
problem and set a target for improvement.
58PROCESSMETHODOLOGY FOR IMPROVEMENT
- Analysis Identify and verify the root causes of
the problem. - Identification of possible solutions Explore
alternatives and implement solutions that will
eliminate the root causes of the problem and
prevent them from recurring.
59PROCESS METHODOLOGY FOR IMPROVEMENT
- Evaluation of effects Confirm that the problem
and its root causes have been decreased, the
solution worked, and the target for improvement
has been met. - Evaluation of efficiency of the process and
effectiveness of the improvement action Review
the improvement projects effectiveness and plan
solutions to remaining problems and objectives
for further improvement.
60QUALITY SYSTEM DOCUMENT HIERARCHY
Describes the quality system in accordance with
the stated Quality Policy and objectives and the
applicable standard Describes the activities of
individual functional units needed to implement
the quality system elements in the
organization. Consists detailed
work documents
QUALITY MANUAL (LEVEL I)
QUALITY PROCEDURES (LEVEL II)
OTHER QUALITY DOCUMENTS (WORK INSTRUCTIONS,
STANDARDS, GUIDELINES, TEMPLATES, FORMS)
(LEVEL III)
61DEMINGS PDCA CYCLE
-
- WHERE YOU ARE
- WHERE YOU WANT TO BE
Benchmark - Plan
Initial Approach
Plan
Revise Approach
Deployment - Impediments - Short Term -
Long Term
Improve Plan
Act
Do
Results
Check
62Outcome of this awareness training
- An overview of ISO-90012000 standards
- Understanding Quality and its importance
- Definitions of certain frequently used ISO
terminologies - Knowledge about Quality Management Principles
- How a Software Process works?
- PDCA life cycle
- Meaning of ISO-90012000 clauses and its
application