Risk-based thinking! An important catchword that has its starting point in ISO 9001:2015 and can be found in many ways in companies. Even if there are always one or two gaps in the corresponding measures that should be derived from risk identification and assessment. But the topic has arrived and, by and large, is being mastered. But risk is, after all, only one side of the coin. On the other side is the opportunity. And here we cannot speak of a gap – rather of a gorge. The good thing is that this gorge is full of opportunities. But few companies dive into this topic constructively. Now, a management system is not highly dysfunctional because opportunities are not recognized, or even sought. But then it is not functional either.
The topic “opportunities” was newly introduced in 2015, so it had no tradition in quality management. Continuous or ongoing “improvement” is not the same as “opportunities”; actually, everyone is clear about that, too. But how to deal with the topic systematically is certainly still one of the greatest potentials of ISO 9001:2015. Because, as one sees more often in companies: achieving a process or even a company goal is not an opportunity; that is the intention, the goal. Opportunities arise beyond the goals. Let’s take an example: In a nursing home, a company health management is introduced for the employees in order to prevent damage to their health. But now that occupational health management is in place in the company, why not communicate this to the outside world via HR marketing and thus make oneself more attractive as an employer?
Tip: Companies should look at/question their processes, their procedures, their resources, their suppliers, their employees and others much more intensively to see which “already there” prerequisites are present – and thus derive which opportunities arise for the company’s objectives.
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