Quality control plan: What you need to know?
A quality control plan refers to the techniques and activities that are used to control that a product or service remains consistent to the requirements and specifications pertaining to quality.
In order to achieve quality it is important that the quality control plan meets the project demand and the specifications of the client.
A sample of a quality control plan for a software company:
Feasibility study
At the stage of preliminary studies quality control will be set around the statement of the objectives of the project and also concern an assessment of the customer expectations. A quality control plan should also make sure that the solution that is being provided is coherent with the overall aspect of the project- whether it is the preliminary study or at the definition of the requirements.
Implementation stage
Quality control will revolve around the methodology used and investigate whether the project is being carried out according to specifications.
Testing stage
The test phase will be all able verifying whether the deliverables, in this case, applications matches the requirements of the customers.
Control
There should be an adequate control system set up to make sure that everything goes smoothly. It is however important that the test is really adapted to the project.
Independent audit
During the test phase, it is important to repeat some tests at random by another person to limit the risk of error.
Control of remedial efforts
Problems detected during the test phases should call for corrections in the process. There should also be some new tests that take place to make sure that the corrections actually work.
Written by Robert Bellarmine for www.visitask.com
An excellent quality control plan will not guarantee that your project will be a success. Download our free project management efficiency evaluator in order to learn more about the success rate of your projects.
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