A Supplier Corrective Action Request SCAR in Quality Management is a formal document issued to a supplier when a product, service, or process they provide fails to meet specified quality standards. It is part of a quality management system aimed at resolving non-conformances and preventing future occurrences.
Key Elements of a SCAR:
Problem Description: Details about the defect, issue, or non-conformance.
Root Cause Analysis: Investigation into the underlying cause of the issue.
Corrective Action Plan: Specific steps the supplier will take to resolve the issue.
Implementation Timeline: Deadlines for corrective actions to be completed.
Verification and Validation: Process for verifying that corrective actions are effective.
When to Issue a SCAR:
Product quality failures
Delivery delays
Non-compliance with specifications or standards
Repeated issues or performance decline
A Supplier Corrective Action Request (SCAR) helps businesses address and resolve quality issues with their suppliers. Companies use SCARs to correct problems, prevent recurrence, and improve supplier performance.
SCAR Process Steps
Identify the Problem:
Detect and document the quality issue (e.g., defective parts or late deliveries).
Collect relevant evidence, such as inspection reports and product samples.
Issue the SCAR:
Notify the supplier by sending a formal SCAR.
Clearly describe the problem, its severity, and the required response timeframe.
Contain the Issue:
Instruct the supplier to take immediate action to stop the issue from escalating.
Require steps like isolating defective products or pausing shipments.
Analyze the Root Cause:
Ask the supplier to investigate the cause using tools like:
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