(A Short Story About the World’s Most Organized Club)
Picture this:
It’s 1946. The world has just survived a massive war. Countries are rebuilding. Machines, tools, and factories everywhere — but everyone’s doing things their own way.
One country measures bolts in inches. Another uses millimeters.
One factory builds parts that fit nowhere else.
Basically — it’s chaos.
The industrial version of “this meeting could have been an email.”
So, a bunch of smart people from 25 countries got together in London and said:
“Let’s stop the madness. Let’s create one global system so everyone talks in the same quality language.”
And that’s how ISO — the International Organization for Standardization — was born in 1947. 🌍
🧩 The Real Mission: Global Harmony, One Process at a Time
ISO’s mission was simple:
Make sure no matter where a product or service comes from — it works the same way, safely, reliably, and predictably.
At first, it was all about machines and manufacturing.
But then came the 1980s and 1990s — the era of computers, networks, and IT.
Suddenly, the digital world needed the same order and consistency that factories once did.
So ISO evolved — from mechanical standards to information technology standards.
And that’s when it entered your world. 💻
💻 The Great ISO Invasion into IT
When IT companies started handling global projects, one question kept popping up from clients:
“Can we trust you with our systems and data?”
That’s when ISO certifications became the golden stamp of trust.
Today, most serious IT firms are certified in at least one (or all four) of these:
- ISO 9001:2015 – Quality Management
- ISO 20000-1:2018 – IT Service Management
- ISO 27001:2022 – Information Security
- ISO 22301:2019 – Business Continuity
Each one is like a badge of honor — proof that the company doesn’t just say it’s professional; it has receipts.
🧠 Why Every IT Fresher Ends Up Hearing About It
Because ISO isn’t just for managers or auditors — it’s for everyone who touches a process.
Whether you log a ticket, push a code, or reset a password —
you’re part of a massive system that ISO helps standardize.
Sooner or later, you’ll hear someone say things like:
“This is not ISO compliant.”
“Document the RCA.”
“Follow the change process.”
When that happens, don’t panic — it’s not corporate sorcery.
It’s just ISO quietly making sure your company doesn’t go up in flames (figuratively).
🌟 Moral of the Story
ISO wasn’t created to make your life difficult.
It was created so your work stays consistent, your clients stay happy, and your company stays trusted.
Think of ISO like the Google Maps of corporate processes —
It tells everyone the same route, no matter who’s driving. 🚗💼
🎬 Coming Up Next
👉 “Meet the Big Four – The ISO Avengers of the IT World”
We’ll introduce the four ISO heroes that rule the IT universe — each with its own powers, personality, and role in keeping companies sane.