Best Practices

Future-Ready Quality: What High-Performing QA Teams Will Look Like in 2026

The QA/RA teams that succeed in 2026 won’t be the ones with the largest departments. They’ll be the ones built for agility.

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By: Monica Burt

CEO and Founder, MB&A

Photo: Sasint/stock.adobe.com

Quality teams are standing at an inflection point.

Compliance expectations are rising. Technology is accelerating. And medtech organizations are being pushed to deliver more insight, more consistency, and more speed, often without adding staff.

In the first two parts of this series, we explored why the traditional quality model is breaking and how organizations can modernize the systems that support it. But tools and processes are only half the equation.

The real differentiator moving forward will be experience: how teams work, how clearly they see risk, and how confidently they move through high-pressure audit cycles.

The QA/RA teams that succeed in 2026 won’t be the ones with the largest departments. They’ll be the ones built for agility, equipped to interpret complexity, and aligned around a clear mandate: smarter quality that scales. 

The Future Quality Model Starts with Capability, not Capacity

When organizations feel pressure, the instinct is often to hire. But scaling compliance through headcount alone isn’t sustainable, and in many cases, it doesn’t solve the underlying issues.

Our buyer personas make this clear. QA directors and managers are already stretched thin, managing evolving regulations, internal and external audits, and increasing scrutiny with limited resources. CEOs of small to midsize life science companies are balancing growth plans with regulatory risk, often without deep internal compliance infrastructure.

Adding people without changing the model only increases complexity. 

The strongest quality functions are getting more out of the talent they already have. They invest in upskilling. They strengthen risk-based thinking. They create cross-functional visibility so regulatory, quality, and operations are not working in silos.

Teams that grow through capability, not just capacity, are better prepared for shifting requirements, tighter timelines, and more complex supplier networks.

Digital Fluency Is No Longer Optional

Digital tools are reshaping the future of quality, from automated documentation to AI-enabled audit support. But tools alone don’t create transformation; people do.

Quality professionals now need to understand how to work with AI. That includes interpreting outputs, validating recommendations, and knowing where human judgment is still essential.

This isn’t about replacing expertise. It’s about extending it.

When teams are fluent in how digital systems support quality decisions, they gain access to real-time signals, pattern recognition, and data-driven insights that aren’t possible through manual work alone. The organizations that build this fluency early will outpace those who hesitate.

From Reports to Signals: The New Quality Scorecard

Many QA/RA teams spend more time collecting data than using it.

Future-ready teams are shifting from activity-driven metrics to decision-driving signals. The difference is substantial. Traditional reports document what happened. Modern scorecards reveal what matters.

A high-value quality scorecard should highlight upstream indicators, friction points in workflows, early risk markers, or process changes that may impact compliance. More importantly, it should expose the cross-functional connections that manual processes miss—the threads between complaints, CAPAs, design changes, supplier performance, and management review that drive the findings most likely to escalate.

These insights should support operational leaders, not just quality teams, by clarifying where attention is needed and why. In other words, the scorecard becomes a leadership tool, not a retrospective report.

The New Role of QA/RA Leadership

Historically, QA/RA leaders were seen as compliance protectors, critical but often reactive. That’s no longer enough.

Modern QA/RA leaders are strategic operators. They influence product development, supplier strategy, and organizational planning. They address issues before they become findings. And they help shape the systems that regulators will evaluate.

This shift requires a new mindset: from oversight to enablement, from bottleneck to business partner. And when leaders evolve, their teams follow.

What the 2026 QA/RA Team Really Looks Like

High-performing teams in 2026 will share three characteristics:

  • A workforce that’s trained, not just staffed
  • A culture that prioritizes insight over information
  • A leadership mindset that sees quality as a strategic enabler

These teams will be the ones that scale, not because they’re large, but because they’re aligned, equipped, and supported. And that transformation doesn’t start with technology. It starts with intent.

Redesigning the Audit Experience

For most medtech organizations, audits still run on static documents, manual reviews, and biased, incomplete data. Companies make critical compliance decisions based on checkbox activities. And the findings that escalate—the cross-functional connections between complaints, CAPAs, design changes, supplier performance, and management review—are exactly the ones no manual process catches reliably.

The problem is structural. Traditional quality systems were designed around document storage and isolated QMS modules, not the cross-functional, risk-threaded compliance reasoning the industry now demands. No amount of additional headcount solves an architecture problem.

Qualera was built to close that gap.

Qualera is an AI-native intelligence operating system for medical device quality and regulatory compliance. Rather than digitizing the checklist, Qualera deploys an expert audit team—specialized AI agents that work in parallel across every QMS area, trace evidence threads across domains, challenge each other’s findings, and present evidence-grounded conclusions for human review.

Instead of weeks of manual review, teams move from noise to signal. Instead of inconsistent outcomes, they gain precision and cross-functional reasoning. Instead of reacting to findings, they see patterns early and understand risks before they escalate.

The output is not a report. It is evidence-grounded intelligence—with regulatory basis, adversarial challenges, and confidence scoring—delivered for human decision-making. Human-in-command. Always.

For QA leaders navigating supplier inconsistency. For executives protecting reputation and customer trust. For organizations that need to move from reactive audits to proactive, continuous intelligence. This is what future-ready quality looks like in practice.


This article is part of a series. Check out the rest of the series:

Part 1
Smarter Quality: The New Playbook for Scaling Compliance Without Adding Headcount
Part 2
Building a Lean, Compliant, and Audit-Ready Quality System


Monica Burt is a trusted partner to private equity firms, investors, and medical device innovators, providing expert guidance in quality, regulatory, and operations across all stages of investment and product development. As the founder of Monica Burt & Associates (MB&A), she leads a team of seasoned industry experts with deep experience in product commercialization, regulatory and compliance strategy development, due diligence, and operational execution for medtech companies worldwide. MB&A is a boutique recruiting and consulting firm dedicated to serving the medical device manufacturing industry. With over 20 years of experience, MB&A specializes in top talent acquisition, quality system audits, regulatory compliance, and operational consulting. Its team of experts collaborates closely with clients to develop customized solutions that address specific needs and budgets, ensuring compliance and efficiency in a competitive market. By leveraging deep industry expertise and a global footprint, MB&A drives success and growth in the medical device manufacturing sector. To explore the full extent of capabilities, visit burtandassociates.com.

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