Adding lustre to lockdown: preparing for growth with ISO

ISO for growth

  • Background
    After an eleven-year stint as a transcriptionist and PA, plus nine years of delivering fitness training, Sam Wood was ready to throw all her energies into building a transcription business of her own. She founded Transcription City in 2011 from her flat in London and began delivering transcription services, using a network of carefully vetted transcriptionists.
  • ClientTranscription City
  • CategoryISO Standards
  • Tags
  • Start DateApril 2020
  • End DateSeptember 2020
  • Websitetranscriptioncity.co.uk/

The need

Within ten years, Transcription City had a solid reputation for delivering high-quality transcription, subtitling and translation services across a range of sectors, including medical, legal and commercial. Clients included individuals (such as journalists), businesses and even the United Nations and UNICEF.

Keen to win more hotly contested contracts, Transcription City’s MD, Sam Wood, turned to ISO standards for help.

The challenge

After ten years of solid growth, and with plans in place for future expansion, COVID-19 began to threaten the stability of the company. “Transcription and translation always has an element of ‘feast or famine’ to it,” explains Sam. She adds, “So, when lockdown came, I began to feel nervous.” As face-to-face meetings dried up, Sam was faced with a stark choice: find new opportunities or watch her carefully crafted business shrink.

Rather than sitting around worrying about her business, Sam decided to split her time constructively between working in the business, working on the business and looking after her lively one-year-old. With her original growth plans in mind, she realised that she could make the most of the quiet time by strengthening the business in readiness for growth.

Sam had no prior experience of ISO standards but had recognised the demand for ISO as part of government tenders, a market which she had earmarked. She knew that many transcription or translation businesses have ISO9001, the Quality Management Standard, but few have ISO27001, the Information Security Standard. However, both standards are often required by the government. She knew that ISO27001 in particular would also be welcomed by clients with confidential data, such as legal and medical firms. Sam realised that combining the two standards would provide Transcription City with a competitive advantage and became determined to achieve certification during lockdown.

However, Sam’s lack of experience with ISO meant she found the initial implementation hard going. 

It was more work than I’d expected. I soon realised I needed help to fully understand the requirements and embed the standards so they would work for my business. I approached the British Assessment Bureau for help. They recommended Risk Evolves.

Taking a collaborative approach

Following an initial call in late April, we lined up three of our ISO specialists to support Sam: Helen (our MD), Andy and Roger. Although it was impossible to meet Sam in person, due to lockdown, we soon built up a picture of her business and her needs. Working in partnership, we identified the actions that she needed to take and created customised processes and procedures that would work for the business. Whilst doing so, our pragmatic and jargon free approach ensured that Sam understood why we were making recommendations and helped grow her confidence. Our goal is to make ISO accessible, so we further simplified the certification process by liaising with the British Assessment Bureau Ltd (BAB) to ensure that the remote audit would proceed smoothly.

By the end of 12 weeks, Sam had achieved her goal. Not only had Transcription City achieved certification to both ISO9001 and ISO27001, it had also launched a new service. As part of the ISO process, we’d helped Sam identify new opportunities for the business, including the development of a service catering for the growing Zoom market. She explains. “Online audiences are easily distracted. Providing Zoom transcriptions, in English or in another language, helps to keep audiences engaged. Our new service was immediately popular amongst businesses keen to ensure that their online communications continued to hit the mark.”

Now that the return to normality is approaching, Sam is confident that the business is in a position to tender for larger contracts and to scale efficiently, thanks to its ISO certified processes and procedures. As part of the tendering process, she’ll be able to include a statement from her ISO assessors, BAB, who commented,

We were delighted to be able to issue Transcription City with a UKAS-accredited certificate for ISO 9001:2015 & ISO 27001:2013, which demonstrates that that they operate to the Internationally recognised quality standards. Achieving ISO 9001 is a testament to their commitment to ensure their products or services meet the needs of customers through an effective quality management system. Additionally, by achieving ISO 27001 they have demonstrated an IT security management system is in place to safeguard information and data, whether this is online or offline.

Future plans

Delivering a great service is nothing new to Transcription City. Referrals have supported the business’s steady growth since inception. However, Sam reviewed the customer feedback process as part of ISO9001 and now plans to spend more time collating online customer reviews. According to research, 84% of people trust online reviews as much as a personal recommendation and 68% form an opinion after reading between one and six reviews. This combination of online reviews, ISO certifications and referrals will give potential clients the reassurance they need to work with Transcription City for the first time.

Sam's top tips:

Which ISO Standard?

If you are not sure where to begin your ISO journey, here's a good place to start!