Product Quality Inspection Checklist for Marketing & Digital Agencies
A quality inspection checklist for finished deliverables or completed services, verifying they meet defined quality standards before campaign delivery to the customer.
Includes provisions for Australian Consumer Law (ACL), Privacy Act compliance for customer data, and ACMA spam regulations.
Complete Checklist
- 1Verify the deliverable or service matches the customer brief specificationsCritical
- 2Conduct a visual inspection for any defects, blemishes, or inconsistenciesCritical
- 3Check dimensions, weights, or quantities against the defined tolerances
- 4Test functionality or performance against the quality criteriaCritical
- 5Verify that all components or deliverables are complete and nothing is missing
- 6Check labelling, branding, and packaging for accuracy and presentation
- 7Review any documentation that accompanies the deliverable such as manuals or certificates
- 8Confirm compliance with any applicable regulatory or safety standards
- 9Conduct a final clean or finishing check before packaging
- 10Verify packaging protects the deliverable adequately for transport and handling
- 11Record the batch or serial number for traceability purposes
- 12Compare the deliverable against the reference sample or standard if available
- 13Identify and segregate any non-conforming items for rework or disposal
- 14Sign off the quality inspection as passed or failedCritical
- 15Record the inspection results in the quality log
Frequently Asked Questions
How do we define quality standards for our deliverables or services?
Start with customer requirements and expectations as the baseline. Add any regulatory or industry standards that apply. Define measurable criteria for each quality attribute such as dimensions, appearance, performance, and reliability. Document these standards clearly so all team members can apply them consistently. Review and update standards based on customer feedback and defect trends.
How should non-conforming deliverables be managed?
Immediately segregate non-conforming deliverables from conforming stock to prevent accidental release. Label them clearly as non-conforming. Investigate the cause of the defect. Decide on the disposition: rework to bring to standard, accept with concession if the defect is minor, or reject and dispose. Record all non-conformances to identify trends and drive process improvements.
What is the cost of quality and why should we track it?
The cost of quality includes prevention costs such as training and process design, appraisal costs such as inspection and testing, internal failure costs such as rework and waste, and external failure costs such as returns and warranty claims. Tracking these costs shows where to invest in quality improvement for the greatest return. Preventing defects is always cheaper than fixing them after the fact.
Need help implementing these checks into your daily operations?
Our team can build custom checklists integrated into your daily operations workflow.