1.Define Verification Scope Objectives

  Blog    |     March 02, 2026

Verifying supplier development records is crucial for ensuring your supplier development program is effective, compliant, and delivering tangible results. Here's a structured approach to verification:

  • Scope: Identify which suppliers, development activities, and time periods are covered.
  • Objectives: What are you verifying? (e.g., compliance with procedures, achievement of goals, documentation accuracy, risk mitigation).
  • Standards: Reference relevant standards (ISO 9001, IATF 16949, FDA QSR, or internal policies).

Gather Required Documentation

Collect key records from both your organization and the supplier:

  • Supplier Agreements: Contracts, SLAs, development plans.
  • Development Plans: Goals, timelines, responsibilities, KPIs.
  • Communication Records: Meeting minutes, emails, audit reports.
  • Evidence of Actions: Training records, process changes, tool implementations.
  • Performance Data: Quality metrics (PPM, defect rates), delivery performance, cost savings.
  • Corrective Actions: Root cause analyses, CAPAs, improvement reports.
  • Audits/Assessments: Internal/external audit findings and supplier responses.

Verify Accuracy & Completeness

  • Cross-Check: Compare records against multiple sources (e.g., development plans vs. meeting minutes vs. performance data).
  • Consistency: Ensure dates, names, and metrics align across documents.
  • Gaps: Identify missing records or incomplete information. Ask: "Is there evidence for every claimed action?"
  • Timeliness: Verify activities occurred within planned timelines.

Assess Effectiveness & Results

  • KPI Achievement: Did the supplier meet agreed-upon targets? (e.g., reduce defects by 20%, improve on-time delivery to 98%).
  • Trend Analysis: Review historical data to confirm sustained improvement.
  • Impact on Business: Link development activities to outcomes (e.g., cost savings, reduced risk, innovation).
  • Problem Resolution: Verify root causes were addressed and recurrences prevented.

Conduct On-Site Verification (When Needed)

  • Audits: Perform announced or unannounced supplier audits.
  • Interviews: Talk to supplier personnel involved in development activities.
  • Physical Evidence: Observe processes, check implemented tools, review training records on-site.
  • Sampling: Audit samples of products/services to verify quality improvements.

Analyze Gaps & Non-Conformities

  • Identify Discrepancies: Document where records are inaccurate, incomplete, or ineffective.
  • Root Cause Analysis: Determine why gaps exist (e.g., poor communication, lack of resources, unclear goals).
  • Risk Assessment: Evaluate potential impacts (e.g., quality failures, supply chain disruption).

Report Findings & Drive Improvement

  • Create a Verification Report: Summarize findings, evidence, gaps, and recommendations.
  • Supplier Feedback: Share results with the supplier. Collaborate on corrective actions.
  • Update Processes: Refine supplier development procedures based on lessons learned.
  • Track Actions: Monitor implementation of corrective actions and their effectiveness.

Maintain Records & Ensure Traceability

  • Store verification reports, evidence, and action plans in a centralized system (e.g., ERP, QMS).
  • Ensure records are accessible for audits and reviews.

Key Verification Principles

  • Risk-Based Approach: Prioritize high-risk/suppliers with critical development needs.
  • Objectivity: Use unbiased criteria and multiple data sources.
  • Continuous Improvement: Treat verification as a cycle, not a one-time task.
  • Supplier Collaboration: Engage suppliers transparently to foster partnership.

Common Pitfalls to Avoid

  • Rubber-Stamping: Accepting records without evidence.
  • Ignoring Soft Data: Focusing only on metrics vs. qualitative improvements (e.g., culture change).
  • Lack of Follow-Up: Not verifying corrective actions.
  • Poor Documentation: Inconsistent or illegible records.

Tools to Support Verification

  • QMS Software: e.g., Qualio, MasterControl for document control.
  • Data Analytics: Use dashboards to track KPIs (Power BI, Tableau).
  • Audit Management Tools: e.g., EtQ Reliance, Intelex.

By systematically verifying supplier development records, you ensure accountability, validate ROI, and build a resilient supply chain. Verification isn’t about finding fault—it’s about confirming progress and driving mutual success.


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