RE: ISO 9k/2k relevance

2002-08-09 Thread David Sproul

Hello Brian,
I don't have any helpful answers for you.  I used to sell ISO 9000 and the
majority of times I heard its benefits praised was by my bosses and the
sales information. I do remember a small number of customers saying that,
for them to be considered in bids, they had to have ISO 9000.  However, I
have also work for ISO 9000 companies whose day to day working practices
were a mess, but come audit day they would come up smelling of roses.  I
suspect that ISO 9000 / 2000 will improve this situation, and perhaps
through time, if customer companies see marked improvements in their own
operations, more of them will start to insist on their suppliers having the
same accreditation.

>From personal experience, the companies I have had dealings with are still
in a period of transition from the old ISO 9000, and therefore any benefits
of the new system are still to be realised.

Best regards,
David Sproul

-Original Message-
From: owner-emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org
[mailto:owner-emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org]On Behalf Of Brian O'Connell
Sent: 08 August 2002 15:36
To: Product Safety Technical Committee
Subject: ISO 9k/2k relevance



Good People of the PSTC:

I've had some conversations with our Component Engineers, Sales and QA
people. I could not identify any customer that placed an order based on our
ISO 9k and/or 2k certification.  Nor could I identify any component
specified and/or purchased that was based on whether a supplier has ISO
certification.

Is the ISO "paper mill" relevant? Is there empirical evidence that ISO
certification results in "better stuff"?  Is ISO certification a requirement
for your purchasing policies? Has ISO certification been a determining or
contributing factor for selection of your company's products?

At this point, I am not being critical of the ISO "process"; I am attempting
to understand its ROI and relevance to product quality.

I speak only for myself; nothing said here represents my employer's
policies.

R/S,
Brian


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RE: ISO 9k/2k relevance

2002-08-09 Thread Peter Merguerian

Brian,

Under some Annexes of the European Directives, such as the Meduical Devices
Directive and the RTTE Directive, ISO 9K and/or 2K is a requirement.



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PETER S. MERGUERIAN
Technical Director
I.T.L. (Product Testing) Ltd.
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Tel: + 972-(0)3-5339022  Fax: + 972-(0)3-5339019
Mobile: + 972-(0)54-838175
http://www.itl.co.il
http://www.i-spec.com





-Original Message-
From: Brian O'Connell [mailto:boconn...@t-yuden.com]
Sent: Thursday, August 08, 2002 4:36 PM
To: Product Safety Technical Committee
Subject: ISO 9k/2k relevance



Good People of the PSTC:

I've had some conversations with our Component Engineers, Sales and QA
people. I could not identify any customer that placed an order based on our
ISO 9k and/or 2k certification.  Nor could I identify any component
specified and/or purchased that was based on whether a supplier has ISO
certification.

Is the ISO "paper mill" relevant? Is there empirical evidence that ISO
certification results in "better stuff"?  Is ISO certification a requirement
for your purchasing policies? Has ISO certification been a determining or
contributing factor for selection of your company's products?

At this point, I am not being critical of the ISO "process"; I am attempting
to understand its ROI and relevance to product quality.

I speak only for myself; nothing said here represents my employer's
policies.

R/S,
Brian


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Re: ISO 9k/2k relevance

2002-08-08 Thread Doug McKean

ISO requirement: 
ISO is NOT law.  It is contractual between your company 
and any one or more of your customers. 

ROI: 
If you're company is totally disorganized without procedures 
and without any sort of feedback system from the field (I 
doubt you could exist), implenting an ISO system would 
clean this up.  Simply because it's cleaned up with procedures 
and reports doesn't guarentee your company will be any 
more successful than a company without it. 

The ROI with ISO has basically 2 sides to it. 
1) ISO is based on what a "standard company" would do 
as far as tracking activity on paper.  This is supposed to 
make things repeatable instead of people sitting around 
trying to figure out, "Now just how did we do that?" 
2) ISO makes it easy for any potential customer who 
wants to qualify you as a vendor.  They can walk in on 
any day asking for this or that procedure. 

I'm familiar with ISO 9K.  But that's being replace with 
ISO 2K. ISO 2K has taken away the elements and makes 
it more difficult with which to comply. There's no subdivisions 
with ISO 2K as there was with ISO 9K with 9001, 9002, 
9003 ...  With ISO 2K, if something doesn't apply to your 
company, you have to justify why it doesn't apply. 

Regards, Doug McKean 



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RE: ISO 9k/2k relevance

2002-08-08 Thread Clement Dave-LDC009

Ron,
If you are following the requirements documented in ISO 9k you will be
producing product that meets your own and your customers requirements. It
specifically requires you to design to statutory and regulatory
requirements. It specifically requires you to look for potential sources of
non conformances (preventive action), under the corrective action clause
specifically requires you to address customer complaints and it requires
that management be reviewing these activities to see if they are appropriate
for the business. If you are doing those things effectively you can't be
making "bad product". No ISO does not define a level of goodness, it's a
generic standard, that's up to you and the business you are in to define
that. The requiremens of ISO will not allow you to "make cement life
jackets" as the naysayers like to tell you. 

Brian,
Your question regarding whether ISO is relevent: If your business is with
the RBOCs then TL9000 (the telecom specific version of ISO 9k) is quickly
becoming mandatory to do business with them and this version of the standard
requires you to push it down to your primary suppliers. If you business is
with the auto manufacturers QS9000 (the automotive version) is pretty much
mandatory. Having a registered quality system is still a requirement for
product approvals in a large number of countries. RFPs from most larger
companies will have a check box for ISO on their check lists. It may not be
the final decider but certainly could be a tie breaker.

I think you will find that any successful world class company will have
embraced the basic principles of ISO 9000 a long time ago regardless of
whether they feel it is necessary to have a certificate or not. It's tuff to
measure if you improved after obtaining ISO because you would have needed to
be making relevent measurements before and if you were doing it before then
you were likely meeting the spirit of ISO anyway.

Dave Clement
Motorola Inc.
Test Lab Services
Homologation Engineering
20 Cabot Blvd.
Mansfield, MA 02048

P:508-851-8259
F:508-851-8512
C:508-725-9689
mailto:dave.clem...@motorola.com
http://www.motorola.com/globalcompliance/


-Original Message-
From: ron_well...@agilent.com [mailto:ron_well...@agilent.com]
Sent: Thursday, August 08, 2002 11:59 AM
To: boconn...@t-yuden.com; emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org
Subject: RE: ISO 9k/2k relevance



Hello Brian,

ISO 9K accreditation only verifies that you have a quality system in place.
It doesn't matter if you make good product or bad product because ISO 9K
doesn't measure that, your Customers do. 

Regards,
+=+
|Ronald R. Wellman|Voice : 408-345-8229   |
|Agilent Technologies |FAX   : 408-553-2412   |
|5301 Stevens Creek Blvd.,|E-Mail: ron_well...@agilent.com|
|Mailstop 54L-BB  |WWW   : http://www.agilent.com |
|Santa Clara, California 95052 USA|   |
+=+


-Original Message-
From: Brian O'Connell [mailto:boconn...@t-yuden.com]
Sent: Thursday, August 08, 2002 7:36 AM
To: Product Safety Technical Committee
Subject: ISO 9k/2k relevance



Good People of the PSTC:

I've had some conversations with our Component Engineers, Sales and QA
people. I could not identify any customer that placed an order based on our
ISO 9k and/or 2k certification.  Nor could I identify any component
specified and/or purchased that was based on whether a supplier has ISO
certification.

Is the ISO "paper mill" relevant? Is there empirical evidence that ISO
certification results in "better stuff"?  Is ISO certification a requirement
for your purchasing policies? Has ISO certification been a determining or
contributing factor for selection of your company's products?

At this point, I am not being critical of the ISO "process"; I am attempting
to understand its ROI and relevance to product quality.

I speak only for myself; nothing said here represents my employer's
policies.

R/S,
Brian


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RE: ISO 9k/2k relevance

2002-08-08 Thread John Juhasz

I went through the process at my last employer. 
I thought it was a good idea.

1) There was traceability in all areas, finance, tech support,
sales, R&D, purchasing, manufacturing, in short - everywhere.
If a problem arose, it was traceable and could be remedied.
2) Better stuff? Perhaps. But there definitely was consistency.
If you design junk, you'll at least be consistent in building it.
3) If your vendors have it, you could reduce or in some cases
elminate, certain in-coming inspection steps/tests. That in itself
saves time/money, and reduces problems.  
4) In large RFPs that I dealt with, filling out the huge sections 
requiring large amounts of information to demonstrate quality/quality
assurance practices, design control, etc. were waived
if we had ISO certification. Saved A LOT of time, and we stood-out
against those that didn't have it. It was an edge.

There are many more reasons, but those are just a few of what I feel
are key areas. 

John A. Juhasz

GE Interlogix
Fiber Options Div.
Bohemia, NY 


-Original Message-
From: Brian O'Connell [mailto:boconn...@t-yuden.com]
Sent: Thursday, August 08, 2002 10:36 AM
To: Product Safety Technical Committee
Subject: ISO 9k/2k relevance



Good People of the PSTC:

I've had some conversations with our Component Engineers, Sales and QA
people. I could not identify any customer that placed an order based on our
ISO 9k and/or 2k certification.  Nor could I identify any component
specified and/or purchased that was based on whether a supplier has ISO
certification.

Is the ISO "paper mill" relevant? Is there empirical evidence that ISO
certification results in "better stuff"?  Is ISO certification a requirement
for your purchasing policies? Has ISO certification been a determining or
contributing factor for selection of your company's products?

At this point, I am not being critical of the ISO "process"; I am attempting
to understand its ROI and relevance to product quality.

I speak only for myself; nothing said here represents my employer's
policies.

R/S,
Brian


---
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RE: ISO 9k/2k relevance

2002-08-08 Thread Brian O'Connell

Hi Ron

Yes I agree (well it also is supposed to verify that you follow your
documented QMS). But I am looking for empirical (or even anecdotal) data
sets that indicate whether ISO compliance has improved a company's
marketing, or has measurably affected the quality of its products (for
better or worse).

R/S,
Brian

-Original Message-
From: ron_well...@agilent.com [mailto:ron_well...@agilent.com]
Sent: Thursday, August 08, 2002 8:59 AM
To: boconn...@t-yuden.com; emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org
Subject: RE: ISO 9k/2k relevance


Hello Brian,

ISO 9K accreditation only verifies that you have a quality system in place.
It doesn't matter if you make good product or bad product because ISO 9K
doesn't measure that, your Customers do. 


-Original Message-
From: Brian O'Connell [mailto:boconn...@t-yuden.com]
Sent: Thursday, August 08, 2002 7:36 AM
To: Product Safety Technical Committee
Subject: ISO 9k/2k relevance



Good People of the PSTC:

I've had some conversations with our Component Engineers, Sales and QA
people. I could not identify any customer that placed an order based on our
ISO 9k and/or 2k certification.  Nor could I identify any component
specified and/or purchased that was based on whether a supplier has ISO
certification.

Is the ISO "paper mill" relevant? Is there empirical evidence that ISO
certification results in "better stuff"?  Is ISO certification a requirement
for your purchasing policies? Has ISO certification been a determining or
contributing factor for selection of your company's products?

At this point, I am not being critical of the ISO "process"; I am attempting
to understand its ROI and relevance to product quality.

I speak only for myself; nothing said here represents my employer's
policies.

---
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RE: ISO 9k/2k relevance

2002-08-08 Thread ron_wellman

Hello Brian,

ISO 9K accreditation only verifies that you have a quality system in place. It 
doesn't matter if you make good product or bad product because ISO 9K doesn't 
measure that, your Customers do. 

Regards,
+=+
|Ronald R. Wellman|Voice : 408-345-8229   |
|Agilent Technologies |FAX   : 408-553-2412   |
|5301 Stevens Creek Blvd.,|E-Mail: ron_well...@agilent.com|
|Mailstop 54L-BB  |WWW   : http://www.agilent.com |
|Santa Clara, California 95052 USA|   |
+=+


-Original Message-
From: Brian O'Connell [mailto:boconn...@t-yuden.com]
Sent: Thursday, August 08, 2002 7:36 AM
To: Product Safety Technical Committee
Subject: ISO 9k/2k relevance



Good People of the PSTC:

I've had some conversations with our Component Engineers, Sales and QA
people. I could not identify any customer that placed an order based on our
ISO 9k and/or 2k certification.  Nor could I identify any component
specified and/or purchased that was based on whether a supplier has ISO
certification.

Is the ISO "paper mill" relevant? Is there empirical evidence that ISO
certification results in "better stuff"?  Is ISO certification a requirement
for your purchasing policies? Has ISO certification been a determining or
contributing factor for selection of your company's products?

At this point, I am not being critical of the ISO "process"; I am attempting
to understand its ROI and relevance to product quality.

I speak only for myself; nothing said here represents my employer's
policies.

R/S,
Brian


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