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Quality Management Systems in I/M programs Ken “Ozzy” Gadwah Director of Quality and Manufacturing 5/4/2016
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Trivia #1 What municipality in the 48 contiguous states is largest in square miles?
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Trivia #2 Can you guess who this is?
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Quality Management Systems (QMS) Provide a framework of process control to reduce random variations The ISO 9001 standard defines how to create a QMS The areas we will focus on today are: Risk Management Continual Improvement Improved Customer Satisfaction
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Risk Management Not every program requires a risk management plan, yet there are always risks that can affect the success of the program Most organizations perform some level of risk management even if it’s not explicitly stated An undocumented approach to risk management is in itself a risk for both the agency and the contractor as there are no controls in place
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Risk Management Risk-based thinking is essential for achieving an effective quality management system. The concept of risk-based thinking has been implicit in previous editions of ISO 9001 New to the ISO 9001-2015 Standard is concept of risk- based thinking An organization needs to plan and implement actions to address risks and opportunities. Addressing both risks and opportunities establishes a basis for increasing the effectiveness of the quality management system, achieving improved results and preventing negative effects
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Risk Management
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Continual Improvement Although all contract deliverables may have been met is there an expectation that the contractor will seek to improve functionality and processes? Are enhancements documented and monitored to ensure the desired improvement has been realized? Are improvements transportable to other processes? Is the cost for the improvement considered, is it worth the investment?
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Continual Improvement Need to be properly documented as an enhancement, when a bug or other issue is being resolved that is not recorded as a continual improvement All aspects of the improvement need to be considered, i.e. does a software improvement require that the training process and one or more reports need to be updated?
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Continual Improvement Plan - Recognize an opportunity and plan a change. Do - Test the change. Carry out a small-scale study, pilot or beta test. Check - Review the test results from the Do phase, Are the benefits of the change substantiated? Act - Take action based on what was learned in the check step: If the change did not work, go through the cycle again with a different plan. If it was successful, incorporate what was learned from the test into wider changes. Begin the cycle again.
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Improved Customer Satisfaction The goal of a Quality Management System is to provide a corporate culture where the end product or service meets requirements and satisfies the customer Both Risk Management and Continual Improvement are areas that should help achieve this goal
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Improved Customer Satisfaction The Agency needs to be willing to share their level of satisfaction in a meaningful way It’s understood that there will be both positive and negative feedback at times The purpose of gauging the level of satisfaction leads back to Continual Improvement
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In Closing Quality is more than just calibration results and meeting service level agreements Quality involves more than just the QA/QC staff When a change is made (either to mitigate a risk or implement an improvement) there must be a review step to confirm that the intended results have been achieved
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