POV Total Quality Management An Early Adopter of The ISO Process Approach 1634453099052
POV Total Quality Management An Early Adopter of The ISO Process Approach 1634453099052
POV Total Quality Management An Early Adopter of The ISO Process Approach 1634453099052
Total Quality Management (TQM) is an approach that focuses an organisation's efforts towards continually improving
its ability to deliver high quality products and services to its customers.
TQM enjoyed widespread attention during the late 1980s and early 1990s, but since then it has been somewhat
overshadowed by the ISO 9000 family as well as Lean and Six Sigma. However, it is worth spending time thinking
about, both because its implementation is generally based on the 8 principles of quality management - which were
later formalised by the ISO 9000 certification processes - and because TQM describes a management approach to
long-term success through customer satisfaction.
Both ISO 9001 and TQM require all members of an organisation to participate in improving processes, products,
services and the culture in which they work.
Adopting a process approach to achieving both ISO 9001 and TMQ delivers best results. The process approach is both
one of the quality management principles (refined to 7 principles by ISO 9001:2015) and a way of achieving continual
improvement.
This article sets out to explain the process approach and looks at some of the ways it can help you implement a TQM
culture, achieve ISO 9001:2015 certification and some examples of how to fix problems that may exist around
achieving your quality objectives. Use the links below if you would like to jump to a specific section:
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This definition is set out in ISO/TC 176/SC 2/N1289 - an ISO guidance paper entitled, 'The Process Approach in ISO
9001:2015'.
A very flexible approach therefore... and powerful as, 'risk‐based thinking is used throughout the process approach to:
Decide how risk (positive or negative) is addressed in establishing the processes to improve process outputs and
prevent undesirable results
Define the extent of process planning and controls needed (based on risk)
Improve the effectiveness of the quality management system
Maintain and manage a system that inherently addresses risk and meets objectives'
For more on risk management process steps, please read the article: Risky Business: 4 Actions for a Successful Risk
Management Process
The three concept of the process approach, risk- based thinking and PDCA together form an integral part of the ISO
9001:2015 standard. PDCA is a tool that can be used to manage processes and systems. PDCA stands for:
P Plan: set the objectives of the system and processes to deliver results (“What to do”
C Check: monitor and measure processes and results against policies, objectives and
Click the link to now download an expert guide on how to achieve ISO 9001:2015.
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Taking a process approach should give staff immediate access to easy to use information on the processes that they
need to follow, or put another way, should 'define the interfaces, risks and activities within the process'. Each
organization, 'should determine which processes need to be documented on the basis of risk‐based thinking, including,
for example:
ISO is also careful not to be prescriptive about how processes are documented, just stating that a 'process approach
can facilitate the implementation of any management system'.
All business process management systems should however be embedded at the heart of the organisation, enabling all
staff to easily access information and documentation on how to transform an initial input, into a quality, desired
output. There are three types of documentation to help a staff member transform an input into an output, at Triaster
we classify these as follows:
Having all of your processes mapped out - explains in a very easy to follow manner 'what to do' to produce the desired
output. From these process maps you can hyperlink out to the policies that govern the processes - also to the 'how to
do' documentation. Making this information available for staff whenever they need it is crucial when trying to produce
quality first time. Using this method, there is no chance that a staff member cannot find the information they need to
produce quality first time.
All organisations also always benefit from implementing their agreed processes so that they have to be followed by
everyone. This is key to delivering quality first time and finally process execution is available to all organisations
whatever their size.
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Activities, tasks and decisions throughout processes cost precious money, time and resource. The deliverables of
those activities, tasks and decisions are the value in the processes. These are things that a customer may be paying
money for and it is imperative that the activities and tasks being carried out, and the decisions that are being made are
all leading you to produce the best possible quality product or service.
Both TQM and ISO 9001:2015 are also focused on delivering improvement over the long-term and recognise that
improvement is best approached as a culture - so that it continually drives everything that the organisation (and
everyone in it) does.
With your management system at the heart of your organisation and your agreed processes being executed across
your entire organisation, this becomes a reality.
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Creative idea sharing can be encouraged and staff can be given the ability to suggest and discuss opportunities for
improvement. User groups and process champions work well to encourage and enable this.
A feedback button on every process map within the systems really helps too, enabling anyone to provide feedback and
improvement suggestions. After all, who knows the processes best? The people carrying them out!
With regular reviews of the process maps, subject matter experts and business improvement professionals can check
that they are correct and ensure that the processes they document are indeed effective, efficient and compliant to
policy. This should be supported by your BPM system, which should automate the reviewing and approval process.
Taking a process approach allows your management system to be a 3D model of your organisation. Data can be
recorded behind the shapes in the process maps and this data can and should be used by your management system
to encourage continual improvement.
The Triaster Process Library comes with a built in simulation engine, which will calculate the data you put behind the
shapes within your process maps and show you results for as many simulation runs as you wish.
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Quality Improvement Teams (QITs) or excellence teams - Temporary teams set up with the goal of solving
specific recurring problems (usual lifecycle is three to twelve months).
Problem Solving Teams (PSTs) – Temporary teams used to identify and solve causes to problems (typical
lifecycle is one week to three months).
Natural Work Teams (NWTs) – Small groups of skilled workers who share responsibilities. Employee
involvement teams, self-managing teams and quality circles are used within these teams (usually working one to
two hours a week).
Your process management system should have environments set up for different teams. Your content creators (we
refer to them as Authors) should have a Sandpit area to create and initially share content before it is shared with the
whole organisation. Reviewer and approval teams should also have a Prelive environment where they can discuss
required changes and amendments and record communications between themselves and the authors.
Business analysts should also have their own ring fenced environments for analysing, improving and testing
processes. This is also key for the evidence-based decision making required for ISO 9001:2015 certification.
In summary
The process approach can facilitate the implementation of any management system and the benefits are significant:
It is no wonder therefore that the process approach best supports TQM and is a key requirement of ISO 9001:2015.
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Related articles:
Risky Business: 4 Actions for a Successful Risk Management Process
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