ISO 9000 (http://www.iso9000-software.com) has received much publicity. Some 
managers see it as a prerequisite for conducting business. For others, it 
substitutes for the difficulties and vagaries of Total Quality Management 
(TQM). Some see only a needless bureaucratic boondoggle. Depending on the 
situation, any of these views might be correct.

Sensibly applied, ISO 9000 (http://www.iso9001store.com) is a qualifier for 
international markets or specific domestic customers. Certification can be a 
valuable marketing tool. The standards are a sound blueprint for a quality 
system (http://www.iso9000-software.com). They can lead the way to the more 
difficult and sophisticated approaches of Total Quality Management. ISO 9000 
can improve a company's cost structure by 5%-20%.

Approached unwisely, ISO 9000 (http://www.e-wia.com) can be costly and 
unproductive. It may create a quality bureaucracy which adds to the cost 
structure and slows product development. It can focus people on paperwork 
instead of customers. It can divert management concentration and energy from 
more vital issues.




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http://www.openobject.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=35879#35879

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