Transition from ISO 9000:1994 to ISO 9001:2000

A

Allison Rees

I have made the transition to the new standard, many benefits, but transition wasn't as easy as I thought it would be.
Have you made the transition yet?
If so, what did you think?
Did you have any problems? If so, what were they?

I'm looking into this as part of my MSc dissertation - please help!

Thanks.
 
J

Jim Green

Where did the speed bumps lie? We are making the move to the upgrade.
 
R

RosieA

Hi Allison,
I think you could write a dissertation from everything that's been posted on the forums about the 2000 rev!

I transitioned a year ago and my major issues were with a contract ISO auditor who had only done one previous transition audit and took some very rigid stances on items like 4.2.2 (C), the description of the interaction of processes in the quality manual. Because my manual serves two locations, with differing tier 2 and 3 procedures, I'd made a reference to a tier 2 document in the quality manual to explain the interaction in my division. He took exception to that and insisted that it had to be in the quality manual, not just referenced in the manual.

Some of this auditors findings were later withdrawn by a follow-up auditor as being without merit.

Preparing for the audit was fine. My company has a very mature quality system and good compliance. But auditor interpretations of the language, especially when the standard is new, can throw some curves at you. Some auditors take a very rigid interpretation of the standard, as mine did, and fail to understand that the quality system has to fit the company in order to work well and be of value.
 
C

Craig H.

RosieA said:

Some of this auditors findings were later withdrawn by a follow-up auditor as being without merit.

Preparing for the audit was fine. My company has a very mature quality system and good compliance. But auditor interpretations of the language, especially when the standard is new, can throw some curves at you. Some auditors take a very rigid interpretation of the standard, as mine did, and fail to understand that the quality system has to fit the company in order to work well and be of value.


RosieA & Allison:

Indeed. Make what you have EFFECTIVE and make the auditor tell you why it is not compliant.

The nice thing about ISO 9001:2000 is this: you have to make it work. If it has been working, then challenge them. As long as you have the SHALLS covered, they have no quarter. None at all.

RosieA, I did a MSQA a year or two ago. If you think I can be any help, let me know.

You ROCK!! Great challenge.

Craig
 
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