Both "
ISO 9000" and "
ISO 14000" are actually families of standards which are referred to under these generic titles for convenience. Both families consist of standards and guidelines relating to management systems, and related supporting standards on terminology and specific tools, such as auditing (the process of checking that the management system conforms to the standard).
ISO 9000 is primarily concerned with "
quality management". In the everyday context, like "beauty", everyone may have his or her idea of what "quality" is. But, in the ISO 9000 context, the standardized definition of quality refers to all those features of a product (or service) which are required by the customer. "Quality management" means what the organization does to ensure that its products or services satisfy the customer's quality requirements and comply with any regulations applicable to those products or services.
ISO 14000 is primarily concerned with "
environmental management". In plain language, this means what the organization does to minimize harmful effects on the environment caused by its activities.
In addition, both
ISO 9000 and
ISO 14000 require organizations that implement them to improve their performance continually in, respectively,
quality and environmental management.
Both
ISO 9000 and
ISO 14000 concern the way an organization goes about its work, and not directly the result of this work. In other words, they both concern processes, and not products - at least, not directly. Nevertheless, the way in which the organization manages its processes is obviously going to affect its final product.
In the case of
ISO 9000, the efficient and effective management of processes is, for example, going to affect whether or not everything has been done to ensure that the product satisfies the customer's quality requirements. In the case of
ISO 14000, the efficient and effective management of processes is going to affect whether or not everything has been done to ensure a product will have the least harmful impact on the environment, at any stage in its life cycle, either by pollution, or by depleting natural resources.
However, neither
ISO 9000nor
ISO 14000 are product standards. The
management system standards in these families state requirements for what the organization must do to manage processes influencing quality (ISO 9000) or the processes influencing the impact of the organization's activities on the environment (ISO 14000). In both cases, the philosophy is that management system requirements are generic. No matter what the organization is or does, if it wants to establish a
quality management system or an
environmental management system, then such a system has a number of essential features which are spelled out in the relevant ISO 9000 or ISO
14000 standards.
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