The ISO 9001:2015 Standard and the Plan-Do-Check-Act Cycle by Murray Gonzalez ISO 9001:2015 was revised for many reasons. The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) cited the needs driving those changes:
adapt to a changing world reflect the complex environments in which organizations operate provide a consistent foundation for the future ensure the new standard reflects the needs of all relevant interested parties ensure alignment with other management system standards1
A new common clause structure has been developed. Key benefits of the common clause structure:
All ISO management system standards will look the same with the same structure (some deviations) More efficient to address multiple management system requirements (e.g., ISO 9001 and ISO 14001) Provides the option of integrating management systems Standardized core definitionsIbid
The common clause structure is organized into the following ten clauses: 1 Scope 2 Normative references 3 Terms and definitions 4 Context of the organization 5 Leadership 6 Planning 7 Support 8 Operation 9 Performance 10 ImprovementIbid
The Deming Plan-Do-Check-Act Cycle (PDCA), is a model, consisting of the following steps:
Plan – The Plan step involves identifying a goal or purpose, formulating a theory, defining success metrics and putting a plan into action.
Do – The Do step is when the components of the plan are implemented, such as making the product or providing the service.
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