Wednesday, October 13, 2010

ISO 9000 AND THE CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY


ISO 9000 AND THE CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY

A formal quality management system has the potential to change attitudes, cultures, and work procedures at any construction firm in a way the organization has never experienced before. In most cases, in order to set up a
formal quality management system at a construction firm, there has to be direct demands from their customers, whose requirement for quality is essential for doing business. Most of the construction organizations will not enter into the cost and allocation of resources to implement a quality management system unless they will be compensated. There is a general movement towards making implementation of a quality management system a contractual requirement. Small to medium sized organizations can always argue that they ‘operate to a quality system’ although this is not formalized. However, since the existence of such ‘informal’ quality systems are
difficult to justify, the International Standards Organization, (ISO) has come up with ISO 9001 series of standards that are applicable to all organizations irrespective of size or nature of business.
ISO 9000 refers to a set of quality management standards. Standards present an opportunity for an organization to develop a quality management system that meets the requirements specified by ISO 9001:2000, which are
recognized internationally, making the organization competitive. ISO 9001 family of standards is undeniably the most prolific of all formal standards. This could be due to the worldwide applicability standardization and
flexibility with which the standards are associated, even though there are some experts that still question the standards’ applicability in the construction industry. It is important to note that ISO 9001:2000 has replaced ISO 9001:1994, ISO 9002:1994 and ISO 9003:1994, while the old ISO 9002 and ISO 9003 standards have been discontinued.

A formal quality management system has the potential to change attitudes, cultures, and work procedures at any construction firm in a way the organization has never experienced before. In most cases, in order to set up aformal quality management system at a construction firm, there has to be direct demands from their customers,whose requirement for quality is essential for doing business. Most of the construction organizations will not enterinto the cost and allocation of resources to implement a quality management system unless they will becompensated. There is a general movement towards making implementation of a quality management system acontractual requirement. Small to medium sized organizations can always argue that they ‘operate to a qualitysystem’ although this is not formalized.

However, since the existence of such ‘informal’ quality systems aredifficult to justify, the International Standards Organization, (ISO) has come up with ISO 9001 series of standardsthat are applicable to all organizations irrespective of size or nature of business. ISO 9000 refers to a set of quality management standards. Standards present an opportunity for an organization todevelop a quality management system that meets the requirements specified by ISO 9001:2000, which arerecognized internationally, making the organization competitive. ISO 9001 family of standards is undeniably themost prolific of all formal standards. This could be due to the worldwide applicability standardization andflexibility with which the standards are associated, even though there are some experts that still question thestandards’ applicability in the construction industry. It is important to note that ISO 9001:2000 has replaced ISO9001:1994, ISO 9002:1994 and ISO 9003:1994, while the old ISO 9002 and ISO 9003 standards have been discontinued.