Supplier Quality Management Checklist for Insurance
A checklist for managing and improving the quality of goods and services received from suppliers, including performance tracking and corrective action management.
Aligns with ASIC regulatory requirements, General Insurance Code of Practice, and AFSL obligations. Includes audit trail provisions.
Complete Checklist
- 1Review incoming inspection results for all suppliers during the periodCritical
- 2Calculate the defect rate for each key supplierCritical
- 3Assess on-time settlement performance for each supplier
- 4Review any supplier corrective action requests and their status
- 5Evaluate the responsiveness of suppliers to quality issues raised
- 6Check that supplier quality certifications remain current
- 7Review any policy recalls or safety notices from suppliers
- 8Assess whether supplier specifications and quality documentation are up to date
- 9Identify suppliers with declining quality trends and plan interventionCritical
- 10Review the approved supplier list and recommend any additions or removals
- 11Evaluate alternative suppliers for any items with persistent quality issues
- 12Schedule quality review meetings with key suppliers
- 13Update the supplier quality scorecard with current period data
- 14Plan any supplier audits needed based on quality performance
- 15Report supplier quality summary and recommendations to management
Frequently Asked Questions
When should we consider changing suppliers due to quality issues?
Consider changing suppliers when quality issues are persistent despite corrective actions, the supplier is unresponsive to quality concerns, defects are causing significant customer impact, or the cost of managing quality problems exceeds the value of the supply relationship. Always have alternative suppliers qualified and ready before making a switch. Give the current supplier a fair opportunity to improve before changing.
What should be included in a supplier corrective action request?
A corrective action request should describe the quality issue clearly with evidence such as photos or test results, state the impact of the issue on your business, request a root cause analysis from the supplier, require a description of the corrective action to prevent recurrence, and set a deadline for the supplier to respond. Follow up to verify the corrective action has been implemented and is effective.
How do we communicate quality expectations to suppliers effectively?
Provide clear written specifications that define your quality requirements for each policy or service. Include quality standards in your supply agreements. Share your quality scorecard criteria so suppliers know how they are being measured. Hold regular quality review meetings to discuss performance and improvement opportunities. Give specific, timely feedback on quality issues rather than waiting for formal reviews.
Need help implementing these checks into your daily operations?
Our team can build custom checklists integrated into your daily operations workflow.