When teams face a standard, certification pathway, or reporting requirement, the words readiness and certification are sometimes used too loosely. They describe different responsibilities.
What readiness can do
Readiness work helps a team understand the landscape before formal assessment. It can identify the applicable questions, organize the available documents, map stakeholders, surface gaps, and create an action register.
This work is valuable because it gives specialists and decision-makers a clearer starting point. It can reduce repeated questions, missing evidence, and unclear ownership.
What readiness cannot do
Readiness is not certification. It does not replace an auditor, certification body, lawyer, engineer, or other qualified authority. It should not make claims that require a formal mandate.
The distinction matters. Good advisory support makes specialist responsibility easier to exercise; it does not blur the line around that responsibility.
Structure before assurance
Before a formal review, a team benefits from a clear evidence register, a gap list, named owners, and a credible sequence of next steps. That is the practical role of readiness work.