For Quality Managers involved in the product development process, tracking and enforcing quality data across multiple manufacturing plants, dozens of brands and subsidiaries, hundreds of suppliers, and thousands of formulas is a formidable task.
At mid-to large sized food manufacturers, managing quality standards across vendor, material sourcing, manufacturing, and packaging processes is downright impossible without a formal quality assessment tool.
When working with such manufacturers, we often find that the search for a formal system to automate quality assessments begins and ends with the implementation of a stand-alone Quality Management System.
On the surface, this makes complete sense: these systems have alerts, escalations, and tasks tailored specifically to the daily work of Quality teams.
However, there is a strong case that deploying a stand-alone QMS tool can actually hinder quality initiatives. Manufacturers who maintain separate QMS and PLM systems encounter a number of continuing challenges.
Due to the collaborative and data-intensive nature of product development, quality management and product development tasks need to be closely intertwined to ensure nutritional and product safety standards are met during all phases of the process—from product ideation to manufacturing.
Implementing a stand-alone QMS tool that isn’t built to work with the PLM processes from which quality issues arise means organizations often end up running two concurrent workstreams for quality and product development and lack total transparency into how product quality looks in real-time across the organization. That’s because QMS systems are simply not designed or intended to capture the complex details of multi-layered product attributes and formulation choices. This ultimately means that:
Ultimately, what a Quality group might gain in functionality from a standalone QMS system, the entire product lifecycle usually loses in terms of transparency. A siloed approach to product lifecycle makes accurate quality assessments all the more challenging.
Having separate QMS system also leads to unnecessary data duplication across the enterprise. It’s just the nature of the information management when you add a new system into the technology mix.
Because QMS systems aren’t built to be product lifecycle tools, significant data harmonization challenges arise, such as the following:
In order to facilitate professional and actionable quality assessments, quality management teams are best served to work with an integrated PLM system that facilitates data harmonization and treats quality data as an embedded component of product specifications.
Bringing on a QMS tool or increasing the number of internal systems that need to be managed and maintained is problematic. Because quality standards exist and occur across department and product lines, it’s ripe for process and feature redundancies that other groups may already be accomplishing through their own means or systems. Introducing a QMS-only standalone system promotes many unintended complexities and challenges, including:
For many companies, implementing and maintaining QMS technology is also cost-prohibitive. Companies can’t justify spending budget on both enterprise QMS and PLM systems. Budget spent a QMS system ultimately reduces the opportunity to implement multi-functional systems that offer quality control built into broader PLM functionality.
Implementing a QMS system separately also runs counter to the need for collaboration throughout the entire supply chain. Although many QMS systems have a vendor management component, most off-the-shelf standalone QMS systems do not have a dedicated feature that enables supply chain partner participation under customer-designed workflows. Such supply chain challenges that should also be considered from a quality management standpoint include:
Implementing a QMS system only solves part of the quality equation. After all, quality issue arise can arise from so many different areas of the business. This begs the question: Why implement a solution built for just one step in the product development process?
Instead of addressing quality management through costly system integrations, we at Trace One have seen that leading manufacturers who operate quality control tasks as an extension of their PLM systems can solve today’s quality challenges without introducing new ones.