| |
Quality Management
Principles
The following text is an integral reproduction of the content of
the document "Quality Management Principles".
Introduction
This document introduces the eight quality management principles on
which the quality management system standards of the revised ISO 9000:2000 series are
based. These principles can be used by senior management as a framework to guide their
organizations towards improved performance. The principles are derived from the collective
experience and knowledge of the international experts who participate in ISO Technical
Committee, which is responsible for developing and maintaining the ISO 9000 standards.
The eight quality management principles are defined in ISO
9000:2000, Quality management systems Fundamentals and vocabulary, and in ISO
9004:2000, Quality management systems Guidelines for performance improvements.
This document gives the standardized descriptions of the principles
as they appear in ISO 9000:2000 and ISO 9004:2000. In addition, it provides examples of
the benefits derived from their use and of actions that managers typically take in
applying the principles to improve their organizations' performance.
|
Organizations depend
on their customers and therefore should understand current and future customer needs,
should meet customer requirements and strive to exceed customer expectations. |
Key benefits:
- Increased revenue and market share obtained through flexible and fast responses to
market opportunities.
- Increased effectiveness in the use of the organization's resources to enhance customer
satisfaction.
- Improved customer loyalty leading to repeat business.
Applying the principle of customer focus typically leads to:
- Researching and understanding customer needs and expectations.
- Ensuring that the objectives of the organization are linked to customer needs and
expectations.
- Communicating customer needs and expectations throughout the organization.
- Measuring customer satisfaction and acting on the results.
- Systematically managing customer relationships.
- Ensuring a balanced approach between satisfying customers and other interested parties
(such as owners, employees, suppliers, financiers, local communities and society as a
whole).
|
Leaders establish unity
of purpose and direction of the organization. They should create and maintain the internal
environment in which people can become fully involved in achieving the organization's
objectives. |
Key benefits:
- People will understand and be motivated towards the organization's goals and objectives.
- Activities are evaluated, aligned and implemented in a unified way.
- Miscommunication between levels of an organization will be minimized.
Applying the principle of leadership typically leads to:
- Considering the needs of all interested parties including customers, owners, employees,
suppliers, financiers, local communities and society as a whole.
- Establishing a clear vision of the organization's future.
- Setting challenging goals and targets.
- Creating and sustaining shared values, fairness and ethical role models at all levels of
the organization.
- Establishing trust and eliminating fear.
- Providing people with the required resources, training and freedom to act with
responsibility and accountability.
- Inspiring, encouraging and recognizing people's contributions.
|
People at all levels are
the essence of an organization and their full involvement enables their abilities to be
used for the organization's benefit. |
Key benefits:
- Motivated, committed and involved people within the organization.
- Innovation and creativity in furthering the organization's objectives.
- People being accountable for their own performance.
- People eager to participate in and contribute to continual improvement.
Applying the principle of involvement of people typically leads to:
- People understanding the importance of their contribution and role in the organization.
- People identifying constraints to their performance.
- People accepting ownership of problems and their responsibility for solving them.
- People evaluating their performance against their personal goals and objectives.
- People actively seeking opportunities to enhance their competence, knowledge and
experience.
- People freely sharing knowledge and experience.
- People openly discussing problems and issues.
|
A desired result is
achieved more efficiently when activities and related resources are managed as a process. |
Key benefits:
- Lower costs and shorter cycle times through effective use of resources.
- Improved, consistent and predictable results.
- Focused and prioritized improvement opportunities.
Applying the principle of process approach typically leads to:
- Systematically defining the activities necessary to obtain a desired result.
- Establishing clear responsibility and accountability for managing key activities.
- Analysing and measuring of the capability of key activities.
- Identifying the interfaces of key activities within and between the functions of the
organization.
- Focusing on the factors such as resources, methods, and materials that will improve key
activities of the organization.
- Evaluating risks, consequences and impacts of activities on customers, suppliers and
other interested parties.
|
Identifying,
understanding and managing interrelated processes as a system contributes to the
organization's effectiveness and efficiency in achieving its objectives. |
Key benefits:
- Integration and alignment of the processes that will best achieve the desired results.
- Ability to focus effort on the key processes.
- Providing confidence to interested parties as to the consistency, effectiveness and
efficiency of the organization.
Applying the principle of system approach to management typically
leads to:
- Structuring a system to achieve the organization's objectives in the most effective and
efficient way.
- Understanding the interdependencies between the processes of the system.
- Structured approaches that harmonize and integrate processes.
- Providing a better understanding of the roles and responsibilities necessary for
achieving common objectives and thereby reducing cross-functional barriers.
- Understanding organizational capabilities and establishing resource constraints prior to
action.
- Targeting and defining how specific activities within a system should operate.
- Continually improving the system through measurement and evaluation.
|
Continual improvement of
the organization's overall performance should be a permanent objective of the
organization. |
Key benefits:
- Performance advantage through improved organizational capabilities.
- Alignment of improvement activities at all levels to an organization's strategic intent.
- Flexibility to react quickly to opportunities.
Applying the principle of continual improvement typically leads to:
- Employing a consistent organization-wide approach to continual improvement of the
organization's performance.
- Providing people with training in the methods and tools of continual improvement.
- Making continual improvement of products, processes and systems an objective for every
individual in the organization.
- Establishing goals to guide, and measures to track, continual improvement.
- Recognizing and acknowledging improvements.
|
Effective decisions are
based on the analysis of data and information |
Key benefits:
- Informed decisions.
- An increased ability to demonstrate the effectiveness of past decisions through
reference to factual records.
- Increased ability to review, challenge and change opinions and decisions.
Applying the principle of factual approach to decision making
typically leads to:
- Ensuring that data and information are sufficiently accurate and reliable.
- Making data accessible to those who need it.
- Analysing data and information using valid methods.
- Making decisions and taking action based on factual analysis, balanced with experience
and intuition.
|
An organization and its
suppliers are interdependent and a mutually beneficial relationship enhances the ability
of both to create value |
Key benefits:
- Increased ability to create value for both parties.
- Flexibility and speed of joint responses to changing market or customer needs and
expectations.
- Optimization of costs and resources.
Applying the principles of mutually beneficial supplier
relationships typically leads to:
- Establishing relationships that balance short-term gains with long-term considerations.
- Pooling of expertise and resources with partners.
- Identifying and selecting key suppliers.
- Clear and open communication.
- Sharing information and future plans.
- Establishing joint development and improvement activities.
- Inspiring, encouraging and recognizing improvements and achievements by suppliers.
This document provides a general perspective on the quality
management principles underlying the ISO 9000:2000 series. It gives an overview of these
principles and shows how, collectively, they can form a basis for performance improvement
and organizational excellence.
There are many different ways of applying these quality management
principles. The nature of the organization and the specific challenges it faces will
determine how to implement them. Many organizations will find it beneficial to set up
quality management systems based on these principles.
| |
|