QA Vs QC
QA Vs QC
Quality assurance is the establishment of standards for processes, materials and finished
products that meet applicable regulatory requirements. Quality assurance covers all
aspects of product development and manufacturing from raw material control to process
validation and final product release
Quality control is the inspection phase of quality assurance. It’s a series of test procedures
used to verify that a product is safe and effective after mass production. Both QA and QC
are necessary. You can’t “test quality into” a product by relying on QC alone.
There are different methodologies for both QA and QC, like Agile, Six Sigma, and other
project management or process improvement strategies. They’re designed to save time
while managing your quality and project development.
QA Processes:
Documentation
Audits
Supplier management
Personnel training
Change control
Investigation procedures
QC Procedures:
Batch inspection
Product sampling
Validation testing
Laboratory testing
Software testing
QC is generally the responsibility of certain personnel within the organization whose duties
include following SOPs for product testing.
Quality Control (QC) refers to quality-related activities associated with the creation of
project deliverables. Quality control is used to verify that deliverables are of acceptable
quality and that they are complete and correct.
Examples of quality control activities include inspection, deliverable peer reviews and
the testing process.