Risks to the management review process which can lead, or be preferenced by errors, that can be easily identified include the following:
- Senior management not present
- Reviews occurring infrequently
- No established agenda
- Lack of process ownership when reporting
- Insufficient or irrelevant information presented
- Lack of support for management review facilitator
It does not take much to make management review ineffective but the risks noted above should be acknowledged to make the review of the quality management system effective and reduce errors in reporting outcomes.
Have a great week!
It will be interesting to track the impact of this years virtual audits on each one of these items. With the company I am at we had a very successful internal audit this year. Successful as defined by we experienced a number of findings and process improvements as a result. This audit began in a virtual format and expanded to a non-virtual one.
One common issue is that the middle management does not often highlight the crucial issues to the upper management .
They try and protect their job and people around them .
Good Morning.
Very important aspect, rather heart of QMS.
Here are my two cents.
I am a Lead Auditor with a global certifying body.
Senior management is present in the Management Reviews. Even with Covid 19 they lead the proceedings by using Skype or WebEx.
Reviews occurring at least once a year, sometimes more times too.
With the ISO 9001:2015 and family of standards lot of improvements have been done by the companies I have audited, in the agenda and the minutes of Management Reviews domain.
Management Review is taken by the leadership and middle management as an important KPI benchmarking tool.
Thanks very much.
Best Regards,
Girish Trehan
QMS Lead Auditor-independent contractor
Partial-Load Professor, Sheridan College
ASQ Education Chair Section 0402
I have found that the Management Review becomes ineffective when it is treated as an "activity" and not a "process". How many times have you seen that the action items from the previous Management Review meeting were completed the week leading up to the current meeting (similar to the flurry of activity before an Internal Audit)
In my opinion, .. it is noted in #2 above - "Reviews occurring infrequently" ... I got around this problem by implementing regular, scheduled updates as well as a simple but efficient and effective dashboard to follow-up action items and bring up new items throughout the year.
@William Hackett Great summary, just completed our annual management review meeting a few days ago and this is so relatable. Thank you for sharing
I wrote my thoughts on management review here: Management Review – a Structured Analysis of Reality – Investigations of a Dog (investigationsquality.com):
@William Hackett Well said and very true. The one that hit home the most for me was #4.
Lack of process ownership when reporting
The presentation of information to top management should not be the responsibility of one individual (i.e. quality manager, management representative) but of management from all areas covered by the scope of the quality management system.
I have struggled with getting participation from other areas and haven't found a good way to resolve it. Upper management is very supportive of the process so no issues there; the struggle is with lower management of an area covered by the scope of the quality management system. It takes a team; not just the Quality Manager for this process to be effective and worthwhile.
@William Hackett
Good morning,
I agree, this is a very nice summary of common management review problems. As a new member of the upper management team at my company that is currently working on obtaining ISO certification, I would like to use these points to drive the importance home to the team on the importance of holding regularly scheduled, meaningful, and productive management review meetings.
Thank you again for your InSite, and have a wonderful holiday season.
@William Hackett These are right on the money! And they are all rooted in the perception of lack of value and consequent lack of commitment to the management system. Management chooses to view it as cramping their style and telling they how to run their business, instead of adding what they feel is missing and aligning elements of the management system standard to it. Quality professionals have four choices: (1) ignore reality until it affects their job situation (2) keep trying new ways to drive the missing alignment and commitment (3) find a more supporting organization (4) start a career in a different field