Our Story
InspectoQMS wasn't designed in a boardroom. It was built by a quality professional who spent years on the floor — and got tired of watching great companies fail their audits because of spreadsheets.
The Founder
After serving in the United States Army, Christopher Pinkney entered the manufacturing industry in 2015 as a Quality Inspector. Over the next decade, he built experience across nearly every function of a quality-driven operation, serving as a QC/QA Inspector, Engineering Technician III, Logistics professional, Quality Engineer, and ultimately a Certified Lead AS9100D Auditor.
Throughout his career, Christopher was repeatedly tasked with rebuilding and improving Quality Management Systems. While every company was different, the problems were often the same: disconnected spreadsheets, fragmented processes, inconsistent data, and quality teams forced to spend more time managing information than improving quality.
Rather than accepting those limitations, he decided to build the solution he wished existed.
Today, Christopher holds a Bachelor of Science in Information Technologies with a concentration in Software Development — combining hands-on manufacturing experience with software engineering expertise to create tools designed specifically for the realities of modern quality management.
InspectoQMS was built from firsthand experience — not assumptions. Every workflow, module, and feature reflects lessons learned from years spent on manufacturing floors, preparing for audits, investigating non-conformances, managing corrective actions, and helping organizations strengthen their quality systems.
That's the philosophy behind every module, every workflow, and every signal the QME Engine generates. InspectoQMS is the blueprint Chris spent a decade building in his head — and then built in code.
Help manufacturers replace quality management chaos with clarity, structure, and actionable intelligence.
— The mission behind InspectoQMS
Every other QMS tool on the market stores your quality records. InspectoQMS reads them, analyzes them, and tells you what they mean. That's not a feature. That's a fundamentally different kind of software.