9001:2015 ISO REGISTRATION REQUIREMENTS FAVOR LEAN ORGANIZATIONS (DEMO)
With the looming publication of ISO 9001:2015, many companies are on their toes about changes that they need to make in order to stay in compliance with the quality management systems (QMS) standard. An article on Quality Digest reveals, however, that the text of the new standard highly favors organizations that practice lean management, and draws parallels between the ISO 9001:2015 and several lean principles:
- The process approach, which the 9001:2015 document emphasizes, can be complied with by implementing lean’s value stream approach. In essence, by identifying which aspects of the process add or detract value from the end product, or simply don’t influence it at all, companies would likewise be performing a SWOT analysis to satisfy the process approach.
- The ISO 9001:2015 asserts that organizations must determine their strategic direction. This fits like a glove with the lean process of hoshin kanri, which attempts to identify and standardize an organization’s goals while putting value on and developing ideas that could result in further improvements.
- Risk management, which will be introduced in the 2015 version of ISO 9001, is an integral part of lean practices. By reducing process and systems waste, uncertainty is reduced. This creates a predictable system that inherently mitigates risks.
- ISO 9001:2015 states that organizations must address the “prevention of nonconformity due to human error, such as unintentional mistakes.” In lean, this is achieved with poka-yoke, or mistake-proofing—creating solutions that minimize the possibility of human error, such as with plugs that only fit into sockets in a specific way.