In the US, customers of certification bodies are becoming more informed about standards and certification. Consequently, these increasingly knowledgeable auditees have become more demanding, and find it harder to accept service failures from the auditors that represent their independent, accredited certification bodies.
There are also changes in the certification industry. Under the previous standard, EN 45013, the difficulty, according to the Quality Society of Australasia (QSA), was that the approach relied on experience, number of audits, analysis and audit report which does not comprehensively examine the application of acquired knowledge.
The new standard for organizations certificating people, ISO/IEC 17024:2003, aims to define and objectively measure competence. It states clearly, for the first time, the industry's expectations of performance and specific competences, which has meant that, according to QSA: 'The alignment of the competence of the person to defined business outcomes is now the essential first step in the certification process.'
Indeed, 90 per cent of formal and informal complaints that QSA receives each year relate to the auditor's conduct on site, not knowledge or skill. Common failures, according to QSA, are:
However, this new challenge of examining skill and personnel attributes and how they are applied is a difficult one. Sometimes the wrong people are choosing (or being chosen) to become auditors. Competence as defined in ISO 9000 means demonstrated ability to apply knowledge and skills'. Therefore, most learning processes tend to focus students on acquiring the knowledge and skills necessary for them to do a good job. So how can certifiers objectively deny unsuitable auditors accredited certification?
The Registrars Accreditation Board (RAB), a not-for-profit organization based in the US which provides certification for auditors, has recently formed a partnership with QSA, and establishes RABQSA International on 1 January 2005 . The organization aims to ensure that applicants have obtained an objective and standardized verification of their attributes or aptitude to audit before certification. The goal is to avoid the situation in which an incompetent auditor's certification is removed.
To do this, RABQSA is using the personal attribute assessment system (PAAS Master) as part of its new accredited certification process. The software covers the attributes detailed in ISO 19011:2002 that all management system and process auditors should be capable of demonstrating. These are shown in the box below. The online examination comprises 85 psychometric questions to measure personal attributes.
It is not a straight pass/fail evaluation. The software analyzes each answer to determine whether the candidate may demonstrate the required attributes. Attributes beyond those required are included to indicate the potential of the applicant to add value to their performance - most usefully to guide his or her ongoing professional development.
The model tells RABQSA and not the candidate where he or she may not be able to demonstrate the required attributes considered in relation to the other competences of skill and knowledge. Accordingly, RABQSA will invite any applicant to an interview with the scheme examiner where test indicates weakness in one of the required attributes. The examiner will first validate the result and may recommend appropriate professional development or may decline certification.
Psychometric models may not be to everyone's taste and do not, of course, replace training and qualifications. But it could be that they come to increase the value of the audit process for well-informed auditor customers, and in turn make their hard-earned certificate just that little bit more meaningful.
Personal attributes required
of an auditor - as published in ISO 19011
Ethical
Fair, truthful, sincere, honest and discreet
Open-minded
Willing to consider alternative ideas or points of view
Diplomatic
Tactful in dealing with people
Observant
Actively aware of physical surroundings and activities
Perceptive
Instinctively aware of and able to understand situations
Versatile
Adjusts readily to different situations
Tenacious
Persistent, focused on achieving objectives
Decisive
Reaches timely conclusions based on logical reasoning and analysis
Self-reliant
Acts and functions independently while interacting effectively with
others
About the author
John Broomfield is the president
and chief executive of Quality Management International, an RAB-accredited
training provider and firm of management system consultants based
in Pennsylvania, US. He has worked as a management, systems and process
consultant since 1986 to develop process-based management systems
for organizations from a wide variety of industries and government
agencies. He established www.aworldofquality.com
in 1997 as a global open resource
for system development teams.