Quality Objectives For ISO 9001

Monday, December 14, 2009
posted by qicguru 8:00 AM

Quality management (2)It is the responsiblity of the ISO Auditors tol verify that the organization’s overall quality objectives have been defined, that they reflect the quality policy, are substantially coherent, aligned and compatible with the overall quality management objectives, including customer expectations. If this is not the case, the auditors may further evaluate Top Management commitment to quality.

The fulfilment of quality objectives needs to be measurable and documented.

 There is no specified way of identifying or documenting quality objectives, as these may appear through business plans, management review outputs, annual budgets, etc. It is up to the auditors to satisfy themselves that the objectives are adequately documented.

A good rule of thumb when developing quality objectives, is to describe the following:

 Example: To improve on time delivery to our customers, from 65% to 95% by December 2010.

  1. What is the present state of the proposed objective? Where are you now?
  2. Where do you want to be once you have achieved your objective?
  3. When do you want to complete the objective? It is o.k. to push the end date out, if it ends up taking longer than anticipated, but you should put a stake in the ground to indicate your commitment to completing them.

 Next you will need to show the auditor how you have gotten from point “A” to point “B”. What did you do to achieve your objective? Record all the steps that you took to reach your objective. What is most important is to clearly describe your objective and record progress toward achieving it.

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One Response to “Quality Objectives For ISO 9001”

  1. Oussama says:

    Objective setting is one of the hardest tasks that face management and Quality objectives are among the hardest.
    Objectives in general should be realistic, achievable, measurable, in line with the organisations objectives and most importantly do not conflict with those of other departments. It is in the objective setting session that each manager has to outline the importance of each objective and how it is going to be achieved, validated and measured.
    The ISO auditor or any QA auditor for that matter has only to ensure compliance.

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