Some of the first software to digitise document and quality management made for clunky user experiences. They often seemed divorced from the real-world problems they were intended to solve and the way people actually wanted to work.
When long-standing Cognidox client Chris Hill first arrived at the British Antarctic Survey as a project manager in the 1990s, he was tasked with managing some of the world’s toughest engineering challenges.
Spoiler: it didn't. As the software was released, a familiar story unfolded:
“There was a lot of publicity and communication about this. We all had training. We all tried it once. We all went back to using shared drives.”
Chris Hill, Pragmatic - keynote speaker at Cognicon 24
Following all the hype, the team in the Antarctic found it made their admin more complicated and gave it the cold shoulder (if you'll excuse the pun).
There’s a moral to this story.
It’s all very well developing a single digital repository for your technical and quality documentation, but getting people to actually use it, is another challenge altogether.
Trying to improve governance with digital systems can end up simply as box-ticking exercises for compliance that don’t actually change behaviour.
At worst it can end up adding layers of bureaucracy that cost your company tens of thousands of pounds, while actively disrupting your business momentum
With eQMS that could take months to install while siloing quality management functions, the men and women tasked with enforcing governance could just be seen as nagging jobsworths, sniping from the sidelines, spoiling everyone's fun.
This was the unglamorous, sharp end of project and quality management:
These were the tensions that plagued dedicated quality teams intent on imposing order in large organisations.
But the age of digital spawned a new breed of agile, start-ups working in the high-tech and life-science sectors. The fail-fast, iterate-hard values of the dotcom boom gripped many companies, but for some, the risk and cost of poor governance became all too obvious.
Rupert Baines, founder and CEO of numerous semiconductor companies, describes the dawning realisation in tech start-ups during the 2000s that chaotic documentation was impacting quality performance and client satisfaction
But, luckily, a new breed of quality management tools were being developed. These were platforms that were cloud-based, faster and more configurable than their predecessors. They were specifically designed to connect the everyday digital collaboration of agile developers, with the business and quality management tools that could accelerate their process and control business risk.
This software was easier to handle and configure compared to the clunky on-premise platforms that went before.
Developers with unique products and ways of working could be given the flexibility to set up their own phase gates, approval sequences, and validation procedures. They could do precisely what they needed to ensure compliance while avoiding over-processing.
In doing so, whole businesses were able to make their governance fast and LEAN, while collecting all the compliance documentation they needed to share with regulators.
And everyone could see the business effect take hold in terms of faster process, less waste and less stressful audits.
The Cognidox eQMS was designed to deliver precisely this level of support. Providing a robust framework for digital document control, it still equips businesses with the essential tools needed for governance in high-risk industries like medical device development.
At the same time, it offers the flexibility to adapt to existing workflows, ensuring that teams don’t need to overhaul their processes just to fit in with the software.
Chris Hill who (after leaving the Antarctic) began working in biotech and then in semiconductor development, found just this kind of freedom with the Cognidox tool.
It was a revelation to him that digital, quality management could be so frictionless:
Across different sectors the experience of Cognidox users has been the same. The sense of freedom and control that comes from its configurability - answers the governance challenges that face many organisations attempting to handle compliance.
For example, the Newcastle Cancer Centre Pharmacology Group used Cognidox to digitise sign off regulated documentation - and the whole organisation immediately felt their processes accelerate:
For others, like Jonathan Wyn Beer of medical device developers Sandoz, the Cognidox eQMS was different from anything he’d experienced before in the sector.
At Sandoz he found ISO 13485 auditing no longer needed to be a stage-managed process with a ‘war room’ in the background, but could be conducted in real-time just with the available Cognidox tools:
For other companies, Cognidox has become a driving force behind successful exits.
Rupert Baines argues much of the discipline in governance that underpinned his multi-million dollar sale of Ultrasoc to Siemens, was the organising influence of the Cognidox platform:
Quality management and document control were never the ’sexiest’ part of a corporate offering.
But as eQMS platforms like Cognidox have enabled faster ways of working and less onerous governance - many businesses have begun to take notice of how they can transform a business from plodding workhorse to powerful thoroughbred.
eQMS platfoms that were once seen as cost centres or just a nerdy necessity by many, have now become visible within companies as real engines for commercial success.
For Chris Hill, Cognidox has become more than 'just another platform', it's become the lifeblood for managed innovation within successive companies he's worked for. So, let's leave the last work to him.
“I can't ever recall in my life being excited about a piece of software until I came across Cognidox."
Chris Hill, Pragmatic