because otherwise you'll get sacked for shoddy work!
2006-11-27 01:34:45
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answer #1
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answered by demnity 3
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In the world of big business, everything everyone does is a step of a larger process. If one deliverable is late, it delays the start of the next step. A delay in that step will impact unrelated projects that the people that need your documents are also working on.
Poor quality makes the deliverable harder to use, and casts doubts on the accuracy. Say the table of contents is missing on a 500 page manual. A user that needs a single paragraph may take an extra two hours trying to find it, which, again, delays everything behind it.
2006-11-27 09:48:07
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answer #2
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answered by open4one 7
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the company receives a quality standard when it proves to a quality auditor that the process of producing a product is done the same way with the same standard every single time, so that it produces the same quality product each time. each step of the process is documented on paper and an auditor can check that is carried out as stated. does this help? i worked as a quality auditor and as quality administrator so you can em if you need more details.
2006-11-27 09:37:24
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answer #3
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answered by sharon f 3
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You will look crap, you will lose work, you will lose your job and you will not be treated with the respect you may deserve.
Customers rely on this info at a certain time and if they do not get it, YOU will make THEM look bad as it creates a knock on effect through out the Company.
2006-11-27 09:46:47
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answer #4
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answered by ROBSTER 4
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Think of it this way -- what happens when important documents are not delivered on time? And even if they are, what happens when they are full of errors and inconsistencies?
2006-11-27 09:36:30
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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