C-Suite (20+ years)

VP of Global Quality

This isn't just a job; it's the ultimate accountability for our entire global quality posture. You're the person the CEO and the Board look to when it comes to product safety, regulatory compliance, and the overall integrity of our brand. You'll define the vision, build the systems, and lead a huge team to make sure everything we do, everywhere we do it, meets the highest possible standards. Frankly, it's a role that carries immense weight and demands a steady hand.

Job ID
JD-QUGL-CVPQ-007
Department
Compliance Quality Health Safety
NOS Level
Strategic Leadership
OFQUAL Level
Level 8
Experience
C-Suite (20+ years)

Role Purpose & Context

Role Summary

The VP of Global Quality sets the enterprise-wide vision and strategy for quality, compliance, and product safety across all our global operations. You'll be the ultimate authority and champion for a culture of quality, ensuring our products and services consistently meet or exceed regulatory requirements and customer expectations. This role sits right at the top, reporting directly to the CEO and engaging regularly with the Board. You're the one who translates market demands, regulatory shifts, and business objectives into a coherent, actionable global quality framework. When this role is done exceptionally well, our brand reputation is unassailable, our regulatory standing is rock-solid, and our operational efficiency is world-leading, all while our customers trust us implicitly. If it's not, we're looking at potential product recalls, regulatory fines, and irreparable damage to our standing in the market. The challenge is immense, balancing global consistency with local nuances and constant pressure to deliver. The reward, however, is knowing you're safeguarding our customers, our colleagues, and our company's future.

Reporting Structure

Key Stakeholders

Internal:

External:

Organisational Impact

Scope: This role directly shapes the company's market position, brand reputation, and long-term financial health by ensuring product integrity, regulatory adherence, and customer trust. You're responsible for preventing catastrophic failures and enabling sustainable growth through a robust quality framework. Essentially, you're protecting the entire enterprise.

Performance Metrics

Quantitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Cost of Poor Quality (CoPQ) as % of Revenue
  2. Desc: The total financial cost of internal and external failures (e.g., scrap, rework, warranty claims, recalls) relative to our total revenue.
  3. Target: Reduce CoPQ from 3% to below 1.5% of revenue annually, aiming for a consistent downward trend.
  4. Freq: Quarterly, reported to the Board.
  5. Example: If our revenue is £500M, reducing CoPQ from 3% (£15M) to 1.5% (£7.5M) means a direct £7.5M saving to the bottom line. You'll need to show how your programmes deliver this.
  6. Metric: Regulatory Audit Findings (Critical/Major)
  7. Desc: The number of significant non-conformances identified by external regulatory bodies during audits.
  8. Target: Zero major or critical findings across all global regulatory audits (e.g., FDA, MHRA, ISO 13485) annually.
  9. Freq: Annually, with real-time tracking of audit outcomes.
  10. Example: Achieving zero 483s from the FDA or zero major non-conformances in an ISO 9001 audit. This is about maintaining our licence to operate, plain and simple.
  11. Metric: Product Reliability / Customer Complaint Rate (PPM)
  12. Desc: The rate of critical product failures or significant customer complaints, often measured in Parts Per Million (PPM).
  13. Target: Improve overall product reliability, reducing critical customer complaint PPM by 10-15% year-on-year.
  14. Freq: Monthly, aggregated quarterly for executive review.
  15. Example: Reducing our field failure rate from 500 PPM to 425 PPM for our flagship product line. This directly impacts customer satisfaction and warranty costs.
  16. Metric: Quality Talent Retention & Development
  17. Desc: The ability to attract, retain, and develop top quality professionals across the global organisation.
  18. Target: Maintain quality team voluntary turnover below 8% annually and achieve 80% internal promotion rate for senior quality roles.
  19. Freq: Annually, reviewed with HR and the CEO.
  20. Example: Ensuring our top 10% of quality talent stays with us and grows into leadership roles, rather than leaving for competitors. This is about building a sustainable quality capability.

Qualitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Board and Executive Confidence in Quality
  2. Desc: The level of trust and confidence the Board and Executive Leadership Team have in the global quality strategy and its execution.
  3. Evidence: Regular invitations to strategic planning sessions, proactive consultation on M&A quality due diligence, positive feedback during Board presentations, the CEO genuinely seeking your counsel on risk. They don't just 'listen' to you; they *rely* on you.
  4. Metric: Proactive Regulatory Engagement
  5. Desc: Our standing with key regulatory bodies, moving from a reactive 'audit defence' posture to a proactive, collaborative relationship.
  6. Evidence: Being invited to participate in industry working groups, regulators seeking our input on proposed guidance, successful pre-submission meetings, consistently positive feedback from inspectors on our QMS maturity. We're seen as a leader, not just a compliant entity.
  7. Metric: Global Quality Culture Maturity
  8. Desc: The extent to which quality is embedded into every employee's daily work and decision-making, not just seen as 'Quality's job'.
  9. Evidence: Quality metrics discussed in all-hands meetings, employees at all levels proactively identifying and addressing quality issues, strong cross-functional collaboration on process improvement, positive results from internal quality culture surveys. It's about everyone owning quality.
  10. Metric: Strategic Influence & Collaboration
  11. Desc: Your ability to influence and align senior leaders across functions (Operations, Product, Supply Chain) to prioritise and invest in quality initiatives.
  12. Evidence: Quality initiatives consistently appearing on functional roadmaps, budget allocation for quality improvements without major debate, other VPs actively seeking your team's input early in project lifecycles, successful resolution of complex cross-functional quality issues that required significant buy-in.

Primary Traits

Supporting Traits

Primary Motivators

  1. Motivator: Protecting Brand & Customer Trust
  2. Daily: You'll spend your days thinking about how to prevent the next big issue, whether it's a product recall or a regulatory fine. This means constantly reviewing risks, challenging assumptions, and making sure our global QMS is robust enough to safeguard our reputation. You're driven by the idea that every product we ship upholds our promise to customers.
  3. Motivator: Driving Enterprise-Wide Cultural Change
  4. Daily: You'll be working to embed quality thinking into every corner of the business, from design to delivery. This isn't just about processes; it's about shifting mindsets. You'll champion initiatives that make everyone feel responsible for quality, not just your team. It's a long game, but the idea of seeing a truly quality-driven organisation is what gets you up.
  5. Motivator: Strategic Business Impact
  6. Daily: You're not just checking boxes; you're looking for ways quality can directly impact the bottom line and enable growth. This involves quantifying the Cost of Poor Quality, making business cases for investment, and showing how robust quality systems can be a competitive advantage. You want to see your work translate into tangible financial and market benefits.

Potential Demotivators

Honestly, this role isn't for everyone. You'll often be the bearer of bad news, the one saying 'no' when everyone else wants to say 'yes'. You'll face immense political pressure to compromise on quality for short-term gains, and you'll have to stand firm. You might inherit legacy quality systems that are more 'wallpaper' than functional, requiring a massive overhaul. There will be constant battles over budget for proactive quality initiatives, as it's always harder to quantify the ROI of problems that *didn't* happen. If you need constant positive reinforcement or struggle with being the unpopular voice in the room, you'll find this incredibly draining.

Common Frustrations

  1. The 'Business Prevention Department' stigma: constantly fighting the perception that your team's only job is to say 'no' and slow things down, rather than being a partner in creating value.
  2. Political pressure to ship: the intense, end-of-quarter pressure from Sales and Finance to release a borderline product to make the numbers, forcing you to be the unpopular gatekeeper.
  3. Inheriting a 'wallpaper' QMS: taking over a quality system where all the documents and procedures exist on paper but have no connection to how work is actually done on the floor, requiring a complete cultural and systemic rebuild.
  4. The global vs. local battle: trying to implement a standardised global process while site managers argue 'we're different here' and resist any change to their local fiefdoms, making true standardisation a constant uphill battle.

What Role Doesn't Offer

  1. A quiet, predictable life where everyone agrees with you.
  2. The ability to directly control all resources needed to fix quality issues (you'll always rely on influence).
  3. Instant gratification from your efforts; cultural change takes years, not months.
  4. A role where you can avoid tough conversations or difficult decisions.

ADHD Positives

  1. The need for rapid, decisive action in crises can be a strong suit, leveraging hyperfocus when the stakes are highest.
  2. Excellent ability to connect disparate ideas and see systemic patterns, which is critical for global quality strategy.
  3. High energy and drive to push through complex, multi-year transformation programmes.

ADHD Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Managing a vast scope and numerous concurrent initiatives can be challenging; strong executive assistants and structured project management support are essential.
  2. Maintaining focus during long, formal board meetings might require strategies like active note-taking or short breaks.
  3. Delegation and follow-up on a global scale need robust systems and clear communication protocols to avoid dropped balls.

Dyslexia Positives

  1. Often possess strong spatial reasoning and 'big picture' strategic thinking, which is invaluable for designing global QMS architectures.
  2. Excellent verbal communication skills for presenting complex ideas to the Board and influencing diverse stakeholders.
  3. Strong problem-solving abilities, often finding creative solutions that others miss.

Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Extensive written documentation for policies, board reports, and regulatory submissions can be demanding; access to high-quality proofreading, dictation software, and AI-powered writing assistants is crucial.
  2. Careful review of detailed regulatory text might require a dedicated support team or specific tools to highlight key changes.
  3. Structured templates for reports and presentations can help streamline the creation of formal documents.

Autism Positives

  1. Exceptional ability to identify logical inconsistencies and systemic flaws in processes and data, which is paramount for quality assurance.
  2. Strong adherence to rules and standards, ensuring rigorous compliance with regulatory requirements.
  3. Deep, focused expertise in specific quality methodologies and regulatory frameworks, making you an authoritative voice.

Autism Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Navigating complex organisational politics and unspoken social cues in executive meetings can be draining; clear, direct communication is appreciated by all.
  2. Managing a large, diverse global team requires explicit communication of expectations and structured feedback mechanisms.
  3. Sensory considerations: a private office space with control over lighting and noise can be beneficial for deep strategic work. Social events might be optional or structured.

Sensory Considerations

The role primarily involves executive office environments, boardrooms, and occasional site visits to manufacturing facilities (which can be noisy or visually stimulating). Most of your time will be in a professional, typically quiet setting, but expect periods of intense social interaction, public speaking, and high-pressure situations. We can discuss specific needs for office setup or meeting arrangements.

Flexibility Notes

We understand that C-suite roles demand significant time and commitment, but we're committed to supporting our leaders. While global travel and irregular hours for urgent issues are part of the job, we offer flexibility where possible for deep work, personal appointments, and family commitments. It's about delivering outcomes, not just clocking hours.

Key Responsibilities

Experience Levels Responsibilities

  1. Level: C-Suite (VP of Global Quality)
  2. Responsibilities: Define and articulate the global quality vision, strategy, and policy for the entire enterprise, ensuring alignment with overall business objectives and regulatory landscapes. This means setting the direction for how we approach quality, everywhere.
  3. Own the design, implementation, and continuous improvement of a world-class global Quality Management System (QMS) that is both compliant and efficient, covering all products, services, and regions. Think of it as architecting the backbone of our quality promise.
  4. Serve as the primary interface with global regulatory bodies (e.g., FDA, MHRA, EMA), representing the company during inspections, audits, and critical discussions. You'll manage these relationships strategically, often pre-empting issues.
  5. Provide executive oversight for all major quality incidents, product recalls, and crisis management efforts, ensuring rapid response, thorough investigation, and effective communication to the Board, regulators, and customers. This is where your decisive leadership really counts.
  6. Build, mentor, and develop a high-performing global quality leadership team, fostering a culture of accountability, continuous improvement, and professional growth across all levels of the quality organisation. You're shaping the next generation of quality leaders.
  7. Present comprehensive quality performance reports, risk assessments, and strategic initiatives to the CEO and the Board of Directors, translating complex technical information into clear, actionable insights for top leadership. They'll ask tough questions, and you'll need the answers.
  8. Drive the integration of quality considerations into M&A activities, from due diligence to post-acquisition integration, ensuring acquired entities meet our quality standards and regulatory obligations. This means spotting risks before we buy.
  9. Supervision: Fully autonomous on strategic execution within the agreed-upon enterprise vision. You'll align with the CEO and Board on multi-year objectives and significant strategic shifts, but day-to-day (or quarter-to-quarter) execution is your domain. You lead; they govern.
  10. Decision: Full strategic authority for the global quality function, including budget allocation up to £10M+, organisational design of the global quality team, and final approval on critical product release decisions, recalls, and regulatory submissions. You'll make decisions that directly impact the company's P&L and market reputation. Board-level decisions (e.g., major capital investments for quality infrastructure, M&A quality integration strategy) require Board alignment.
  11. Success: Your success is measured by consistent achievement of enterprise-level quality metrics, zero major regulatory findings, a demonstrably strong global quality culture, and high confidence from the Board and executive team in our quality posture. Ultimately, it's about safeguarding the company's future.

Decision-Making Authority

Reclaim 15-25 hours weekly for strategic leadership with AI

As the VP of Global Quality, your time is precious. You're stretched between board presentations, regulatory strategy, and managing a global team. The good news? Artificial Intelligence isn't just for junior roles; it's a game-changer for executive productivity. Imagine cutting down on routine tasks, getting insights faster, and freeing up more time for the truly strategic work that only you can do. Our AI Productivity Hub is designed to help you do just that.

ID:

Tool: Automated Complaint Triage & Trend Analysis

Benefit: Use Natural Language Processing (NLP) to automatically read, categorise, and route incoming customer complaints from emails, web forms, and call logs to the correct investigation team. Beyond that, AI can identify emerging complaint trends across regions or product lines long before a human could, giving you early warning signals for potential systemic issues. This means you're always ahead of the curve, not playing catch-up.

ID:

Tool: Predictive Quality Analytics & Risk Scoring

Benefit: Deploy machine learning models that analyse real-time sensor data from production lines, supplier performance, and historical non-conformances to predict a quality deviation *before* it results in a non-conforming product or a major recall. AI can also assign risk scores to suppliers or processes, helping you prioritise your global audit schedule and resource allocation. This shifts your focus from detection to prevention at an enterprise scale.

ID:

Tool: Regulatory Intelligence & Impact Synthesis

Benefit: Use an AI agent to constantly monitor global regulatory bodies (e.g., FDA, EMA, ISO) for new guidance documents, standard updates, or enforcement actions. It'll provide concise summaries of the changes, identify which of our products or regions are impacted, and even offer a first-pass analysis of the potential impact on our current QMS. This saves your team hundreds of hours of manual research and ensures you're never caught off guard by a new regulation.

ID: ✍️

Tool: Executive Summary & Board Report Generation

Benefit: Feed raw data from multiple CAPAs, global audit reports, supplier scorecards, and regional performance reviews into a generative AI. It can then create a concise, well-written executive summary for your monthly Quality Management Review meeting or even draft sections of your quarterly Board pack. You'll still add your strategic insights and polish, but the grunt work of consolidation and initial drafting is handled, saving you significant time and effort.

Expect to reclaim 15-25 hours weekly across your team, allowing you to focus on high-value strategic leadership. Weekly time savings potential
These capabilities are typically integrated into advanced QMS, GRC, or BI platforms, with an approximate investment of £500-£2000/month for enterprise-level AI features. Typical tool investment
Explore AI Productivity for VP of Global Quality →

12-15 specific tools & techniques with implementation guides

Competency Requirements

Foundation Skills (Transferable)

At this level, we're looking for foundational skills that are deeply ingrained and applied at an enterprise scale. These aren't just 'nice-to-haves'; they're the bedrock of effective C-suite leadership in quality.

Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)

These are the deep functional capabilities that underpin a successful global quality strategy. You'll need to be an expert in these areas, not just conceptually, but in their practical application at an enterprise level.

Technical Competencies

Digital Tools

Industry Knowledge

Regulatory Compliance Regulations

Essential Prerequisites

Career Pathway Context

You won't just 'fall' into this role. It's the culmination of years of dedicated experience, strategic leadership, and a deep, practical understanding of global quality and compliance. We expect you to have a robust history of delivering tangible results and navigating complex challenges in previous senior quality roles.

Qualifications & Credentials

Emerging Foundation Skills

Advancing Technical Skills

Future Skills Closing Note

As VP, you're not expected to be the hands-on expert in every single one of these technologies. However, you absolutely must understand their strategic potential, how they integrate into our overall business, and how to effectively lead your teams and partners in their adoption. Your role is to be the visionary who ensures our quality function remains at the cutting edge, leveraging technology to deliver unparalleled product integrity and customer trust.

Education Requirements

Experience Requirements

You'll need a minimum of 20 years of progressive experience in quality management roles, with at least 10 years at a senior leadership level (e.g., Global Director, Divisional VP). This must include significant experience managing global teams, overseeing multi-site operations, and directly engaging with executive leadership and Board members. We're looking for someone who has successfully navigated complex regulatory environments and led major quality transformations in a large, international organisation. Experience in our specific industry sector (Compliance Quality Health Safety) is absolutely essential, given the unique regulatory challenges.

Preferred Certifications

Recommended Activities

Career Progression Pathways

Entry Paths to This Role

Career Progression From This Role

Long Term Vision Potential Roles

Sector Mobility

Your expertise in global quality, compliance, and risk management is highly transferable across a wide range of industries, especially those that are heavily regulated (e.g., pharmaceuticals, medical devices, automotive, aerospace, food and beverage). The principles of building a robust QMS and fostering a culture of quality are universal, making you a valuable asset in many sectors.

How Zavmo Delivers This Role's Development

DISCOVER Phase: Skills Gap Analysis

Zavmo maps your current competencies against all requirements in this job description through conversational assessment. We evaluate your foundation skills (communication, strategic thinking), functional skills (CRM expertise, negotiation), and readiness for career progression.

Output: Personalised skills gap heat map showing strengths and priorities, estimated time to competency, neurodiversity accommodations.

DISCUSS Phase: Personalised Learning Pathway

Based on your DISCOVER results, Zavmo creates a personalised learning plan prioritised by impact: foundation skills first, then functional skills. We adapt to your learning style, pace, and neurodiversity needs (ADHD, dyslexia, autism).

Output: Week-by-week schedule, each module linked to specific job responsibilities, checkpoints and milestones.

DELIVER Phase: Conversational Learning

Learn through conversation, not boring modules. Zavmo uses 10 conversation types (Socratic dialogue, role-play, coaching, case studies) to build competence. Practice difficult QBR presentations, negotiate tough renewals, and handle churn conversations in a safe AI environment before facing real clients.

Example: "For 'Stakeholder Mapping', Zavmo will guide you through analysing a complex enterprise account, identifying key decision-makers, and building an engagement strategy."

DEMONSTRATE Phase: Competency Assessment

Zavmo automatically builds your evidence portfolio as you learn. Every conversation, practice scenario, and application example is captured and mapped to NOS performance criteria. When ready, your portfolio supports OFQUAL qualification claims and demonstrates competence to employers.

Output: Competency matrix, evidence portfolio (downloadable), qualification readiness, career progression score.

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