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ISO 9000:2000
• ISO is the International Organization for Standardization. It is located in Switzerland and was established in 1947 to develop common international standards in many areas. Its members come from over 120 national standards bodies.
• ISO 9000 applies to all types of organizations. It doesn’t matter what size they are or what they do. It can help both product and service oriented organizations achieve standards of quality that are recognized and respected throughout the world.
What is ISO 9000?
ISO first published its quality standards in 1987, revised them in 1994, and then republished an updated version in 2000. These new standards are referred to as the “ISO 9000 2000 Standards“
ISO 9001:2000 presents requirements, while ISO 9000:2000 present guidelines
The quality management system must meet ISO’s requirements, not its guidelines.
ISO 9000 is sweeping the world, is rapidly becoming the most important quality standard.
• It saves money
• Customers expect it
• Competitors use it
How to develop a quality management system (QMS) ?
• Develop a QMS Development Plan which conforms to ISO 9001 2000 requirements.
• QMS Development Plan should use a process approach.
• Organizations must identify and manage the
processes that make up their quality management systems.
22 QMS processes:
1. Quality Management Process
2. Resource Management Process
3. Regulatory Research Process
4. Market Research Process
5. Product Design Process
6. Purchasing Process
7. Production Process
8. Service Provision Process
9. Product Protection Process
10. Customer Needs Assessment
11. Customer Communications Process
12. Internal Communications Process
13. Document Control Process
14. Record Keeping Process
15. Planning Process
16. Training Process
17. Internal Audit Process
18. Management Review Process
19. Monitoring and Measuring Process
20. Nonconformance Management Process
21. Continual Improvement Process
22. General Systemic Process
Following each of these 22 Steps/Plans, you will end up with
a complete quality management system, one that meets all of the
ISO 9001 2000 requirements!
Authority and Accountability
In most projects, “authority” is separated from “accountability” (consequences of success or failure), senior management has authority (but often not held accountable for success or failure of the project), while the project manager is held accountable (with insufficient authority over the resources to ensure completion of work).
PRINCE2 calls for an accountable Project Board to own the project, helping to ensure their commitment to getting the work completed. At the same time, the Project Board grants authority to the Project Manger by explicitly committing resources as the project progresses.
The PMBOK suggests this will happen under certain organizational structures; PRINCE2 believes it can be implemented in most environments.
Plans: Plans are the backbone of the management information system required for any project, and require the approval and commitment of the appropriate levels of the project organization
Controls: Control is about decision making: its purpose is to ensure that the project
a) |
is generating the required products which meet defined Acceptance Criteria |
b) |
is being carried out to schedule and in accordance with its resource and cost plans |
c) |
remains viable against its Business Case. |
Management of Risk: Risks is an essential part of project management. To contain risks during the project, they must be managed in a disciplined manner, through risk analysis and risk management (as in the PMBOK)
Quality in a Project Environment: Quality management ensures that the quality expected by the customer is achieved through a quality system (similar to the PMBOK). Quality requirements of the project’s deliverables are based in Product Descriptions, prepared by the Project Manager and approved by the Project Board
Configuration Management: Configuration Management gives the project management team control over the project’s assets (the products that it develops), and is vital to any quality system. It provides mechanisms for tracking and controlling the project’s deliverables, and a system for tracking project Issues
Change Control is a required part of any complete (ISO 9001-certified) quality management system
Change Control: Controlling scope change means assessing the impact of potential changes, their importance, cost, impact on the Business Case, and a decision by management on whether or not to include them
Issue Management: Tracking and managing the issues is a vital activity for any project, No project methodology could qualify for “maturity” without an Issue Management process in place
PRINCE2 is not meant to stand on its own and needs experience and the depth of PMBOK
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Use it for its unique approaches and insights into project management |
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