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Volt Telecom Group is ISO 9001:2000
certified at all of its Network and Enterprise Solutions locations.
ISO is a network
of the national standards institutes of 146 countries, on
the basis of one member per country, with a Central Secretariat
in Geneva, Switzerland, that coordinates the system.
ISO is a non-governmental
organization: its members are not, as is the case in the
United Nations system, delegations of national governments.
Nevertheless, ISO occupies a special position between the
public and private sectors. This is because, on the one
hand, many of its member institutes are part of the governmental
structure of their countries, or are mandated by their government.
On the other hand, other members have their roots uniquely
in the private sector, having been set up by national partnerships
of industry associations.
Therefore, ISO
is able to act as a bridging organization in which a consensus
can be reached on solutions that meet both the requirements
of business and the broader needs of society, such as the
needs of stakeholder groups like consumers and users.
Because "International
Organization for Standardization" would have different
abbreviations in different languages ("IOS" in
English, "OIN" in French for Organisation internationale
de normalisation), it was decided at the outset to use a
word derived from the Greek isos, meaning "equal".
Therefore, whatever the country, whatever the language,
the short form of the organization's name is always ISO.
When the large
majority of products or services in a particular business
or industry sector conform to International Standards, a
state of industry-wide standardization can be said to exist.
This is achieved through consensus agreements between national
delegations representing all the economic stakeholders concerned
- suppliers, users, government regulators and other interest
groups, such as consumers. They agree on specifications
and criteria to be applied consistently in the classification
of materials, in the manufacture and supply of products,
in testing and analysis, in terminology and in the provision
of services. In this way, International Standards provide
a reference framework, or a common technological language,
between suppliers and their customers - which facilitates
trade and the transfer of technology.
For businesses,
the widespread adoption of International Standards means
that suppliers can base the development of their products
and services on specifications that have wide acceptance
in their sectors. This, in turn, means that businesses using
International Standards are increasingly free to compete
on many more markets around the world.
For customers,
the worldwide compatibility of technology which is achieved
when products and services are based on International Standards
brings them an increasingly wide choice of offers, and they
also benefit from the effects of competition among suppliers.
For governments,
International Standards provide the technological and scientific
bases underpinning health, safety and environmental legislation.
For trade officials
negotiating the emergence of regional and global markets,
International Standards create "a level playing field"
for all competitors on those markets. The existence of divergent
national or regional standards can create technical barriers
to trade, even when there is political agreement to do away
with restrictive import quotas and the like. International
Standards are the technical means by which political trade
agreements can be put into practice.
For developing
countries, International Standards that represent an international
consensus on the state of the art constitute an important
source of technological know-how. By defining the characteristics
that products and services will be expected to meet on export
markets, International Standards give developing countries
a basis for making the right decisions when investing their
scarce resources and thus avoid squandering them.
For consumers,
conformity of products and services to International Standards
provides assurance about their quality, safety and reliability.
For everyone,
International Standards can contribute to the quality of
life in general by ensuring that the transport, machinery
and tools we use are safe.
For the planet
we inhabit, International Standards on air, water and soil
quality, and on emissions of gases and radiation, can contribute
to efforts to preserve the environment.
ISO 9000 is among
ISO's most widely known and successful standards ever. ISO
9000 has become an international reference for quality requirements
in business to business dealings.
The vast majority
of ISO standards are highly specific to a particular product,
material, or process. However, the standards that have earned
the ISO 9000 family a worldwide reputation are known as
"generic management system standards". "Generic"
means that the same standards can be applied to any organization,
large or small, whatever its product - including whether
its "product" is actually a service - in any sector
of activity, and whether it is a business enterprise, a
public administration, or a government department. "Management
system" refers to what the organization does to manage
its processes, or activities. "Generic" also signifies
that no matter what the organization is or does, if it wants
to establish a quality management, then such a system has
a number of essential features which are spelled out in
the relevant standards of the ISO 9000.
ISO 9000 is concerned with "quality
management". This means what the organization does
to enhance customer satisfaction by meeting customer and
applicable regulatory requirements and continually to improve
its performance in this regard.
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