The roles of different types of auditors and the responsibilities of certified businesses
What to do in this situation?
We can answer this very short and to the point by saying you must let them in because giving access to witness auditors, IP auditors, and trainees during the audit is beneficial to you and included in the contract with your certification body.
To create a better understanding, however, we explore the role of the witness auditor and the audit trainee and your responsibilities as a business being audited in this blog. We also address the IFS Integrity Program and its auditors in this context.
Auditors are professionals
The roles of witness auditors and auditor trainees.
Witness auditors and trainees have different roles during an audit:
The witness auditor assesses the IFS Auditor during a full IFS Audit on-site. The IFS Standard specifies that the witness auditor is an experienced IFS Auditor and that he or she is not part of the audit as a team member. The witness auditor focusses on the performance of the IFS Auditor.
Auditor trainees are auditors needing to gain audit experience. Having audit experience is a prerequisite for being approved as an IFS Auditor. A trainee is part of the audit team.
Benefits of the system
Realising their roles also clarifies why working with witness auditors and trainees benefits your company:
We attach great importance to the qualification of auditors so that you, as an audited business, can rely on the competence of the IFS Auditor. It ensures our audits' quality and IFS Certificates' trustworthiness.
The role and responsibilities of the IFS Integrity Program Auditor
Sometimes, you may also encounter an IFS Integrity Program Auditor on your doorstep. You may ask yourself what role he or she plays within the system. In addition to the qualification of auditors, the IFS Integrity Program (IP) is another important pillar to ensure the quality of our certificates. Within the framework of the IP, IFS employs its own integrity auditors or auditors working on our behalf.
Part of the responsibilities of the IP is to check the performance of auditors. Therefore, the IFS Integrity Program Auditors regularly perform witness audits on-site. Here, the IP auditor joins an approved IFS Auditor during a certification audit to observe if he or she acts in line with our expectations.
Verifying if IFS certified companies comply with the IFS Requirements is another IP task. Therefore, we monitor and evaluate the data in the IFS Database. With our risk-based approach, built on the evaluation of specific administrative indicators and empirical values, we identify the companies we want to investigate more closely. IFS IP Auditors will visit the site to perform an on-site check if appropriate. Having received a complaint can be another reason for performing such a check. The focus of the IFS Integrity On-site Check is always on compliance with the IFS Requirements.
Your CB is responsible for informing you about the current version of Annex 4 of the framework agreement with IFS, which sets the responsibilities regarding the IFS Integrity Program.
What are your responsibilities as an audited company?
Having skilled auditors and robust IFS Certification benefits all stakeholders
We at IFS strongly believe that all stakeholders benefit from our company's policy of working with excellently qualified auditors and ensuring the integrity of the IFS Certificates so that everyone can rely on the quality of and put their trust in IFS Certification.
In this blog, we have therefore clarified the different roles and tasks of the auditors who come to you in order to contribute to a better understanding of them. Also, we have pointed out that everyone benefits from having well-trained auditors conducting IFS Audits and being committed to attracting more auditors. Valid product safety certification is a requirement in most supplier contracts and to meet this demand we need trained auditors now and in future. Let's all take our responsibility and work on this together.
Learn more about
Find IFS Requirements for certification bodies and auditors always in Part 3 of the relevant Standard. You can download the standard relevant to you from one of the standard pages.