Quality Management, Standardization and Auditing Meet Multiple Organizational Risks, Strengthening Open Market Understanding and Social Responsibility
Authors/Creators
Description
This paper describes how the standardization essentially, rather than referring to goals, outputs and
outcomes, addresses duties, roles and actions, while eventually the latter ones affect and empower the
former. The quest for quality is still on-going in pursuit of effectiveness and efficiency combined with
social responsibility, as long as it is dependent upon societies’ willingness to change the world and
share a better future. Although organizations have a long way to walk toward synergism and integration,
quality management is being transformed from compliance to collaboration driven. The wide range of
standards implementing the quality management systems based on ISO 9001 materializes its strategic
direction to be functionally adapted to specific sectors and industries. On the other hand, plenty of later
standards deal with the additional requirements that are applicable only to specific industries. They
surely carry pros and cons. There is, however, a threatening likelihood that the relevant markets would
reject some of the standards in case multiple standards overlap each other, creating complex
bureaucratic burdens. Health and Safety standards are a success story against such concerns, while a
plethora of Control and Risk management standards compete each other, which may be perceived more
as a source of creativity rather than confusion.
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06. 127 Quality Management, Standardization and Auditing Meet NOE 2018.pdf
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