A new edition of ISO 9001, the world’s most widely used quality management system standard, is being submitted for voting as a Final Draft International Standard and, subject to formal approval by the ISO membership, the publication of the revised version should be in the October-November 2008 time frame.
The proposed ISO 9001:2008 does not introduce additional requirements compared to the last edition in 2000 and does not change the intent of ISO 9001:2000.
The draft International Standard was approved at the 19-23 May 2008 meeting of the ISO technical committee ISO/TC 176, Quality Management and Quality Assurance, held in Novi Sad, Serbia, and hosted by the Serbian national standards body, ISS.  ISO 9001 has been circulated as a Final Draft International Standard, on which ISO’s national member bodies as a whole may vote.
ISO 9001 provides the requirements for a quality management system (QMS), which is a framework for an organisation to control its processes in order to achieve objectives including customer satisfaction, regulatory compliance and continual improvement. Organisations that implement the standard can choose to have their QMS independently certified as conforming to the requirements of ISO 9001, as a means of increasing the confidence of their business partners, customers and regulators in their products and services.
Although certification is not compulsory, it is estimated that over one million ISO 9001 certificates have been issued to organisations in the private and public sectors, in manufacturing and services, and in 170 countries. The new edition, however, will not require any specific reassessment for certification.
ISO 9001:2008 will be the fourth edition of the standard which was first published in 1987. The third edition, published in 2000, represented a thorough revision, including new requirements and a sharpened customer focus, reflecting developments in quality management and experience gained since the publication of the initial version.
ISO’s rules for the development of standards require their periodic review to decide if they need revising, maintaining or withdrawing. Compared to the 2000 revision, ISO 9001:2008 represents fine-tuning, rather than a thorough overhaul. It introduces clarifications to the requirements existing in ISO 9001:2000, based on user experience over the last eight years, and changes that are intended to improve further compatibility with the ISO 14001:2004 standard for environmental management systems.
To accompany the publication of the new versions, ISO is now working on implementation guidance for ISO 9001:2008, a reference table comparing and contrasting ISO 9001:2000 and ISO 9001:2008 and answers to Frequently Asked Questions. ISO is collaborating with the International Accreditation Forum (IAF) concerning accredited certification.
ISO 9001 is one of 17 standards (plus a corrigendum) developed by ISO/TC 176 on quality management supporting tools. These include “ISO 9004:2000, Quality management systems – Guidelines for performance improvements,” which is undergoing revision and expected to be published as a new edition in 2009.