BREAK THE PROCESS DOWN

Like any other large and seemingly involved problem, break it down into smaller more manageable tasks. Choose a familiar task to work on that fits into your current experience and capability. Break it down further by limiting the chosen task to a specific area of your organization. Pick one shift, one department, perhaps one work cell that you are comfortable with.

By limiting your area of implementation you increase your odds for success for several reasons. First, you will only be affecting a small portion of your facility which means expense and disruptions will be minimized. If you make mistakes their impact will not be as detrimental. You will be able to visualize not only what needs to be done, but how well you are progressing. You will be able to debug your system on the fly without having to remove the controls, etc. to keep your normal production on schedule.

Secondly, you will be able to determine exactly what is required to implement the change. Do you have the necessary data on hand? What supporting processes or documentation will be required? Is your staff capable of handling all the duties? Will additional investigation, personnel or training be required? You will be able to spread out the expenses over a longer period and allow the necessary time to train your staff.

Furthermore, as you finish a task you will gain a clearer understanding of what will be required to implement this same task into other areas. This will allow you to budget your costs and time much more accurately in the future. As you complete the required documentation and procedures you will have valuable templates that can be easily adjusted for use in other areas or for different processes.

And lastly, once your system has been debugged and implemented in one area it will be much easier to implement it in another. The entire process will also be more readily accepted by your workforce as you progress because having taken the time to get it right the first time, you will have made it easier to understand and comply in the rest of your operation.

LEARN AS YOU GO

As you progress through the standard and the different areas of your organization you be gaining the experience and confidence needed to be successful. Your technical writing skills will improve. Your team building skills will improve. Your mentoring abilities will improve. Your staff will have a deeper and broader understanding of your processes and capabilities down to the fine details. All these will improve your operations and your bottom line. Before you know it, you will be running a much more efficient, capable and reliable business.

As your processes improve so will your competitiveness in the market and you can take advantage of your new found experience to streamline your operations. You will be able to sell, estimate, produce and deliver to more accurate numbers. You will be capable of predicting trouble, discovering problems, solving issues and adapting to your needs more quickly than you could before. When the time comes to increase personnel you will have a clearer picture of the skills the potential employees need to bring with them to your company.

GET ONLY THE HELP YOU REALLY NEED

As an issue comes to light you can’t readily handle, do the research or hire the help you need at that time. Attend the seminars, take the classes or hire a consultant to provide the needed help or direction. Another great source of help in this area is your insurance provider or the underwriter you propose to use when the time comes for certification. You can greatly reduce your training costs by getting the assistance as it is actually needed. Rather than pay for a broad range of advice and direction, some of which you will undoubtedly already possess, get the specific help you actually need and only as the need arises.

DECIDE IF CERTIFICATION IS RIGHT FOR YOU

As you progress through the implementation of the ISO system your understanding of what is required to achieve success will grow. Those tasks which at first seemed complicated and beyond comprehension will become clearer and attainable and suddenly you will be at a point where the system is in place and working. Now is the time to determine if you want to take that last step and actually become ISO certified.

Becoming certified offers some advantages. Certification is a way to celebrate your new found success. The inherent requirements of certification lend themselves to keeping the system in place and functioning properly. It also tells your current and prospective customers, as well as your competition, that you are a world class organization. Certification opens the door to markets that were previously closed to you. Still, certification may not be for everyone. If your products or market access are not limited by being ISO then you may decide to delay or put off certification altogether.

Whether you opt for that piece of paper or not, you will still be able to reap the benefits the ISO system provides. By taking the time to implement the ISO system on your own terms you can significantly reduce the costs of doing so and outperform that section of your competition that found ISO unnecessary or too costly. At the end of the day, the fact is, you will have made enormous strides in your organizations potential, and even though it may have taken you a bit longer, it is still better late than never.  James Cavalluzzi