Carlos Pereira da Cruz
February 4, 2019
Can you imagine the possible consequences of selling a product or service that no longer complies with legislation because the seller was not aware of legislative changes? Can you imagine receiving a complaint from a customer because he claims that the product received no longer meets the last version of an ISO standard that your company mentions in the product specification sheet? Well, external document control aims to prevent those cases from happening.
ISO 9001:2015 clause 7.5.3.2 mentions that documented information of external origin must be determined, identified and controlled.
What is a documented information of external origin? It is documented information relevant to the quality management system (QMS) and issued by an external entity. Examples of those issuers can be: customers, suppliers, legislators, regulators, standardization bodies, or business partners.
First of all, let’s distinguish the two kinds of documented information of ISO 9001:2015:
Records issued by an outside party can be a customer order, a calibration certificate, or a maintenance report. Relevant records must be determined, and control rules defined. Where and how do you look for a particular record? How long will the organization keep the record? How do you minimize risks concerning those records?
Documents of external origin relevant for the QMS can be, for example, Product Specifications, Logistics Specifications, Material Safety Data Sheets, Legislation, Permits, Standards, Platform Rules, or Work Instructions.
If you need help with identifying an external document, the List of External Documents can be helpful.
A QMS must determine what the relevant documents of external origin are. For example, an organization can use a register that, for each relevant document, can list: name of the document, issuer of the document, updated version and date, internal distribution (who inside the organization use the document), and responsibility for control (who inside the organization is responsible for controlling).
Documents of external origin relevant for a QMS have a particular challenge not applicable to records:
The issuer may know your organization or not, and may care for your organization or not. That way one can draw a matrix about the relationship between an organization with a QMS and the issuers of documents of external origin. Something like:
An effective external document control practice avoids unpleasant and costly surprises. Complaints, recalls, dead inventory, rework and scrap are possible consequences of failing to control external documents.
Be sure that your QMS knows:
In a world where organizations work more and more with other organizations, in ever more complex networks of interested parties, the importance of external documents control is going to increase and become more visible.
To learn more about the basic ISO 9001 documents, check this free Checklist of Mandatory Documentation Required by ISO 9001:2015.