Overview
While outright loss of certification is rare, many companies – especially in the API world – have been placed on probation or suspended. This post breaks down the most common reasons behind these outcomes: lack of management commitment, weak record-keeping habits, and poor root cause analysis.
Lack of Management Commitment
Some organizations pursue certification simply because a contract requires it, without recognizing the underlying value. When managers are not genuinely committed, the people below them tend not to follow either. If completing a form isn’t required to “do the job,” and no one enforces it, the form often doesn’t get filled out – even if the work itself is done well.
For ISO or API purposes, and for any functioning management system, records and proof are essential. It is an extra step, but one made significantly easier with software such as Web QMS, where record-keeping happens naturally as part of doing the work – directly in the software or on a phone – rather than as a separate form-then-software process. Even so, without enforcement, people will stop doing that part of the job, which can ultimately put certification at risk.
Poor Root Cause Analysis
Another major factor is companies failing to take the time to perform good root cause analysis. Root cause analysis is the engine of improvement – every corrective action depends on understanding what actually caused the problem so it can be fixed permanently.
If the root cause isn’t addressed, the problem will reappear. Left unresolved, additional problems build on top of it, and this creates a compounding effect: more and more issues – whether NCRs or other nonconformities – accumulate because their root causes were never properly fixed. Taking the time to resolve issues at the root prevents this snowball effect. New problems may still arise, but they won’t stack on top of unresolved old ones.
Investing in Training and Time
This is why companies need to invest in training their people and allowing them the time to do this work properly. Other contributing factors – such as misconceptions between NCRs, nonconformities, and corrective actions – also play a role, but the points above represent some of the core reasons certification can be put at risk.
Quick Summary
- Management Commitment: Without buy-in from leadership, compliance habits break down at every level.
- Record-Keeping: Software like Web QMS reduces the burden, but enforcement still matters.
- Root Cause Analysis: The key driver of real improvement and prevention of recurring issues.
- Compounding Effect: Unresolved root causes multiply problems over time.
- Training Investment: Time and resources for proper analysis pay off in certification stability.