CA-20 · Reconocimiento · excelencia

EFQM Model

The EFQM model assesses the overall maturity of your organisation across seven criteria — leadership, strategy, people, partnerships, processes, results — and recognises it with a European seal ranging from +200 to +700 points. It is not an ISO certification: it is acknowledgement that your company already operates as a mature, results-driven system.

FrameworkEFQM Model 2025 (current version)
Target seal+200 · +300 · +400 · +500 points
ScopeSMEs and mid-market · public sector · educational bodies

EFQM does not require procedural compliance: it measures results. The European Foundation for Quality Management published the current version of the model in 2024 (EFQM 2025), structured around seven criteria with a weighted score out of 1,000 points. An organisation that exceeds 200 points in an accredited external assessment by the Club de Excelencia en Gestión (CEG) earns the recognised European seal. Unlike ISO standards — accredited by ENAC and certified by bodies such as AENOR, Bureau Veritas or SGS — the EFQM recognition is awarded by the CEG itself following an assessment by trained evaluators. Summum guides the entire process: from the internal self-assessment to the submission of the Candidacy Report for external evaluation; the score and the seal are issued by the CEG.

The EFQM 2025 model is organised in three blocks: Direction (Purpose, vision and strategy; Culture and leadership; Engaging stakeholders), Execution (Creating sustainable value; Driving performance and transformation) and Results (Stakeholder perceptions; Strategic and operational performance). Each block carries its own percentage weight. The RADAR diagnostic tool — EFQM's assessment instrument — produces a score by criterion that precisely identifies where the organisation stands at a high maturity level and where the priority improvement gaps lie. For many clients, this analysis is in itself the most valuable deliverable: a management X-ray that no ISO audit provides.

The +400 seal or above has practical recognition in public procurement in Spain: Royal Decree 951/2005 (general quality framework for the Spanish public administration) and various regional calls value business excellence as an award criterion. Companies competing for public service contracts or seeking to become approved suppliers of large corporations (banks, insurers, utilities) use it as a differentiating argument. The seal is renewed every two years through a follow-up assessment, which requires the maintenance of continuous improvement and turns the recognition into a sustained management asset, not a wall plaque.

The EFQM Model process.

The process · four stages
01

Initial RADAR diagnostic

We apply EFQM's RADAR methodology to assess the seven criteria of the model. We combine interviews with the management team, document review and analysis of performance indicators. The output is a report with an estimated score by criterion, a gap map and an indicative sector benchmark. Within 4-6 weeks the board has an objective picture of the current maturity level.

02

Prioritised improvement plan

With the diagnostic in hand, we work with management to define the action plan: which criteria to strengthen to reach the target score, which processes to document or improve, which performance evidence is needed for the external assessment. We prioritise by point impact and implementation effort, so the path is realistic within the agreed time horizon (typically 6-12 months to the seal).

03

Implementation and Candidacy Report drafting

We accompany the execution of the improvement plan and the drafting of the Excellence Candidacy Report submitted to the Club de Excelencia en Gestión. The report must reflect the organisation's practices according to the EFQM structure with real evidence: performance data, innovation examples, people and customer satisfaction measures. We carry out iterative reviews with the team to ensure the document accurately captures what the company does well.

04

External assessment and CEG seal

The CEG assigns a team of accredited assessors who review the report and conduct a site visit to the organisation. We prepare management for the visit: mock interviews, review of physical evidence, coordination across departments. Following the assessment, the CEG issues the final score and, if the agreed threshold is exceeded, awards the EFQM seal. Summum accompanies the process; the seal is issued exclusively by the CEG.

What is included

What EFQM Model includes.

The operational detail: what we deliver as part of the work and what we keep alive afterwards.

  • Documented RADAR diagnostic

    Score report by criterion using EFQM's RADAR tool, with a gap map and recommendations prioritised by impact.

  • Improvement plan with roadmap

    Planning document with actions, owners, deadlines and estimated EFQM points per action. Reviewable quarterly during the engagement.

  • EFQM Excellence Candidacy Report

    Full drafting of the candidacy document for the Club de Excelencia en Gestión, with evidence, indicators and examples aligned to the 2020 model criteria.

  • Assessment visit preparation

    Mock interviews with executives and managers, review of physical evidence and coordination across departments before the CEG evaluator team's site visit.

  • EFQM indicator scorecard

    Design or adaptation of the performance indicator scorecard (customer, people, society and operational performance perceptions) aligned with criteria 6 and 7 of the model.

  • Biennial renewal support

    Once the seal is obtained, we accompany the follow-up and renewal cycle every two years, maintaining continuous improvement and updating the report with new performance data.

Frequently asked questions about EFQM Model.

Is EFQM an ISO standard? Can a company be certified?

No. EFQM is a European excellence model managed by the European Foundation for Quality Management and, in Spain, by the Club de Excelencia en Gestión (CEG). It is not an ISO standard and is not accredited by ENAC. The recognition is awarded by the CEG itself following an assessment by trained evaluators, not by a certification body such as AENOR or Bureau Veritas. That is why the terms used are 'seal' or 'recognition', not 'certificate'.

How many points does a company need to obtain the EFQM seal?

The model scores out of 1,000 points. CEG recognition seals are awarded from +200 points (Committed to Excellence), +300 (Recognised for Excellence 3★), +400 (Recognised for Excellence 4★), +500 (Recognised for Excellence 5★) and +600/+700 (advanced excellence levels). For public tenders and enterprise client approvals, the +400 seal is the most common threshold. Our engagement begins with a diagnostic that estimates the current score to set a realistic target.

Is EFQM compatible with holding ISO 9001?

Absolutely. In fact, they are complementary: ISO 9001 sets the minimum requirements for the quality management system, while EFQM assesses whether that system is actually producing results and whether the organisation goes beyond compliance towards excellence. Many companies with a consolidated ISO 9001 use EFQM as the natural next step to differentiate themselves. ISO 9001 system documents (procedures, records, indicators) are valid and reusable as evidence in the EFQM Candidacy Report.

How long does it take to obtain the EFQM seal from scratch?

It depends on the starting maturity level and the target seal. A company with an active ISO 9001 and a few years of performance data can reach the +200 seal in 4-6 months. Reaching +400 from a moderate starting point typically requires between 10 and 18 months, including improvement implementation, report drafting and the CEG site visit. Subsequent biennial renewal is faster if the organisation maintains its improvement momentum.

Which types of companies benefit most from the EFQM model?

EFQM is particularly valuable for: (1) companies competing in public tenders where the seal adds points to the scoring; (2) suppliers of large corporations that require management standards beyond ISO 9001; (3) non-profit organisations, educational or healthcare bodies that want to demonstrate management excellence without entering sector-specific certifications; and (4) family businesses undergoing professionalisation that need a comprehensive reference framework for the management team.