ISO 9001:2026 DIS Introduction Breakdown
Quality Principles, Process Approach & PDCA Changes
The ISO 9001:2026 Draft International Standard (DIS)
The ISO 9001:2026 Draft International Standard (DIS) continues to evolve the structure and expectations of quality management systems.
In this article, we analyze the remaining sections of the Introduction, focusing on:
- Quality Management Principles
- Process Approach
- Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA)
- Risk-Based and Opportunity-Based Thinking
- Relationship with Other Standards
While no entirely new requirements are introduced, several refinements signal increased maturity expectations and clearer alignment with modern management systems.
Quality Management Principles – Continuity Confirmed
There are no substantial changes in this section between ISO 9001:2015 and ISO 9001:2026 DIS.
The draft confirms that ISO 9001 remains based on the quality management principles described in ISO 9000. That foundation remains unchanged.
ISO continues to explain that ISO 9000 includes:
- A statement of each principle
- A rationale explaining its importance
- Examples of benefits
- Examples of typical actions to improve performance
The seven Quality Management Principles remain exactly the same:
- Customer focus
- Leadership
- Engagement of people
- Process approach
- Improvement
- Evidence-based decision making
- Relationship management
This section confirms continuity. ISO is reinforcing that the foundation of quality management remains stable, even as other areas of the standard evolve.
Process Approach – General Section Refinements
The Process Approach section contains subtle but meaningful wording changes.
From “Develop” to “Establish”
The draft shifts wording from developing a quality management system to establishing one.
This suggests organizations are expected to put a structured system in place, rather than continuously reinvent it.
For organizations already operating effectively, this reinforces a key principle:
ISO certification is often more about formalizing what already works than redesigning everything from scratch
From “Definition” to “Determination” of Processes
Another subtle wording shift replaces the definition of processes with the determination of processes.
This change emphasizes:
- Identifying which processes are necessary
- Determining what already exists
- Formalizing established operational practices
The focus is not on inventing new processes, but on recognizing and structuring those already functioning within the organization.
Risk and Opportunity Now Explicitly Paired
This is one of the most meaningful conceptual shifts.
In ISO 9001:2015, the focus was primarily on risk-based thinking.
In ISO 9001:2026 DIS, ISO explicitly frames risk and opportunity together.
This marks a shift from a purely preventive mindset toward:
- Value creation
- Improvement
- Proactive opportunity identification
Organizations are no longer expected to think only about what could go wrong, but also about what could go right.
Improvement Based on Results of Evaluation
Another refinement clarifies that improvement is based on the results of data evaluation, not merely the evaluation itself.
This strengthens organizational authority by emphasizing that:
- The organization interprets evaluation results
- Improvement actions are based on those determined outcomes
This reduces ambiguity between how organizations and auditors may interpret evaluation activities.
Monitoring and Measurement Clarified
The draft now states that monitoring and measurement vary based on:
- Process steps
- Related risks
Previously, the emphasis leaned primarily on risk.
This reinforces the expectation that organizations must understand processes in depth, not only from a high-level risk perspective.
Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA) – Minor but Intentional Adjustment
The PDCA section remains largely unchanged structurally.
However, in the planning phase, organizations are now expected to determine risks and opportunities, rather than simply identify them.
This aligns with the broader shift toward determination over identification.
The PDCA cycle itself remains intact.
Risk-Based Thinking – Section Removed
The standalone section on risk-based thinking has been removed.
This is likely because:
- Risk is now paired explicitly with opportunity
- Explanatory material has been relocated
- Annex A has been repurposed as a clarification reference
Rather than expanding risk explanations, ISO appears to expect maturity in understanding and application.
Relationship with Other Standards – Stronger Alignment
This section connects ISO 9001 to the broader management system standards family.
From “Framework” to “Harmonized Structure”
The wording now explicitly references a harmonized structure rather than a general framework.
This strengthens alignment with other ISO management system standards.
Opportunity-Based Thinking Added
Previously, ISO 9001 was commonly described as based on three core components:
- Process approach
- PDCA
- Risk-based thinking
Now, opportunity-based thinking joins explicitly, making four conceptual pillars.
Updated References and Clarifications
Additional refinements include:
- Updated reference to ISO 9004
- Clearer positioning of ISO/TS 9002 as application guidance
- Removal of the correlation matrix explanation
- Inclusion of a link to a categorized list of management system standards
The draft also introduces clearer differentiation between:
- Type A standards (certifiable requirement standards)
- Type B standards (guidance standards, not certifiable)
Another small clarification replaces generic references to quality management system standards with explicit reference to ISO quality management system standards.
Sector-specific wording has also been removed, reinforcing that ISO 9001 applies to all organizations.
What These Introduction Changes Mean
While no new requirements are introduced, the ISO 9001:2026 DIS Introduction signals:
- Greater organizational maturity expectations
- Formal pairing of risk and opportunity
- Stronger harmonization with other ISO standards
- Reduced ambiguity in interpretation
- Elevated importance of Annex A
The foundation remains stable, but the framing is more precise and strategically aligned.
What’s Next in the ISO 9001:2026 Review
Next, we will examine:
- Scope
- Normative References
- Clause 4 and the beginning of formal requirements
As the draft evolves toward final publication, early analysis provides a strategic advantage for organizations preparing for transition.