Your organization has decided it needs a compliance software tool—now what? Well, conducting a search is a good place to start. However, your search for a new tool needs to be well-informed and methodical. Otherwise, you might wind up with a tool that’s not mature enough or inappropriate for your needs. To avoid these issues and streamline your search, here are some tips that can help.
Why are you looking to adopt a compliance software tool in the first place? This should be the first question you ask when you begin your search. Understanding why a tool is needed on both the team and organizational levels and what impacts you want it to bring can focus your efforts.
Planning is the key to success. Once your needs have been classified, determine who to involve in the search, how much time to give to it, the budgetary constraints, and other factors integral to the process. These parameters keep you from spinning off in unwanted directions.
Your personnel are inevitably the ones using the compliance software you decide to purchase, so having their input is key to the search process. By understanding and anticipating their needs, you can prioritize the features you’re looking for and where your teams can be flexible in adoption.
This tip should go without saying, but being meticulous in your research is key to a streamlined search for new tools. The more knowledge and understanding you have around all of your options, the easier it is to choose the tool that works best for you.
Many vendors of compliance software tools offer demos and evaluations of their products for prospective customers. You want to engage in these thoroughly, and document your results for review later. Then, you can devise meaningful comparisons from which you can base improved decision-making.
Vendors really appreciate feedback from customers both potential and current. If the software isn’t meeting a need or you’re experiencing issues as you evaluate it, bring these concerns to them. The vendor can offer support and clarification, as well as discuss any avenues that could make the tool better suit your organization’s needs.
Adopting a new compliance software tool into your quality system has a ripple effect you have to manage. Recognizing what effects may result earlier rather than later can prepare you for the adoption and implementation phases.
Doing a gap analysis between a software tool’s features and capabilities and your organization’s needs can be insightful. Seeing where distances may lie between what you want and what the tool can give you provides more valuable context and helps you forecast how to overcome them, should you choose that software.
There might be pressure from your upper management to incorporate a tool quickly, but that doesn’t mean you can’t still be iterative in your approach. Experimenting, refining your needs and research, and eliminating prospects as you go lets you find the best solution rather than the first one to cross your path.