Ineffective task monitoring
Once a task has been assigned, ignoring it until it is done can lead to unexpected results. What’s in your head is not what’s in the employee’s head.
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Ineffective task monitoring
Once a task has been assigned, ignoring it until it is done can lead to unexpected results. What’s in your head is not what’s in the employee’s head.
Vague wording
Vague wording used in requirement documents
Whether you are freshly minted into the QMS position or you are a founder of a Startup or a product manager with a new project… your strategy requires QMS oversight.
QMS Joe is here to guide you through the plethora of information and support you with handy tips & tricks to streamline your way to compliance.
Use precise requirements as much as possible
If the requirement is not clear enough the employees or the sub-contractor could misunderstand or make incorrect decisions related to the given task that might end in an unplanned surprise, and could easily lead to an unsatisfied customer.
Customer satisfaction can be improved by using precise requirements as much as possible in QMS.
Identifying potential hazards
Identifying potential hazards at the beginning of project planning
Assemble a cross-functional team, e.g., design engineer, product development engineer, member of manufacturing team, someone from packaging, someone from marketing, medical consultant, medical writers and quality engineers, to brainstorm potential hazard scenarios. The increased number of perspectives will increase your chances of uncovering more hazard.
It is easier and cheaper to fix risks at the beginning of planning, rather than during production or worse, once the product is in use.
Incorrect Resource Management
Companies are often failing when it comes to properly organize their resources, whether it is material, equipment, people, knowledge, time, financial, etc. Resource management means not just monitoring and following the amount of existing resources, but also balancing between the planned activities and the changing resource requirements. Good resource management is vital to project success, and yet one of the most difficult things to achieve, maintain, and control.
In developing resource plans, there is little chance that the project manager will have all of the necessary resources assigned to the project at its start. Changing resource requirements and needs have to be properly monitored, preferably foreseen and implemented in QMS processes. Since projects are unique resource management and planning should continue throughout the project life cycle.
Quality Planning - Learning to Think Ahead
To turn your ideas into success you must cultivate the skill of looking one move ahead…whether you are good in playing chess or not. Every project should have a quality plan. In reality, very few do.
Why is quality planning important?
Not planning the work means you are constantly retracing your steps instead of moving from one area to the next, you waste time trying to remember what to do and trying to make decisions on the fly. Without a strong quality planning, a project carries an increased risk that you won't be satisfied with the results. Things go much more smoothly if you take some time to consider what you need to do and plan the path for doing it.
Is producing a quality plan a complex job?
Producing a quality plan is not complex. The development of a Project Quality Plan should be a team process, that depends as much on communicating information as it does on planning. Once everyone understands the ultimate reason for what they are doing, people are on the same page and working toward the same goals.
The Quality plan is not just a specific and detailed listing of all quality requirements and standards, use Quality Planning to develop awareness of potential quality issues. Based on this awareness it’s much easier to prepare plans and actions to counter any weaknesses or deficiencies in the project execution…thus ensuring that all quality standards are met effectively.
What are the main elements of a good Quality Plan?
A good Project Quality Plan is defined as a set of activities planned at the beginning of the project that helps achieve Quality in the project being executed.
It includes main points like:
The project’s activities and the relations between them
Development strategy
Milestones clearly identified and dated
Concrete and measurable criteria for project activities and milestones completion Project schedule
Responsible for each activity
Resources for each project activity – human, equipment, material, financial
Quality plan should be regularly updated as project activities proceed
Quality plan should be available for relevant persons
Quality plan and every update should be approved and re-approved
Learning to Think Ahead
Having uncovered the quality issues, be sure you have a mechanism in place to fix the problems. There must be some follow up process to allocate fixes to particular people and ensure they actually make the changes. This implies that time must be built into the schedule for rework following quality events.
There is an overhead in undertaking quality checks, but this is offset by not having to fix things further down the line. Inevitably, the later you find a problem, the longer it takes to fix.
A plan puts the structure in place that allows the Quality Management efforts to gain traction and produce real results.
Now consider that the effectiveness of a QMS software impacts how well the whole organization meets customer expectations. qmsWrapper offers a full circle of QMS, Quality managers with little experience or knowledge of the supported Standards, can easily step into the role and effectively start. That’s the true benefit of a quality management system.