Simply telling them to do it, saying that your way is the right way is guaranteed to fail. Pretty much 100% guarantee that it will fail. I have seen no exceptions. (you can quote as many books and websites and experts on the subject, the outcome is the same)
Depending on the age of the company the momentum of the engineers is what made that company what it is, so if they are following the momentum they are the ones doing it the right way.
If you want to succeed
1) you must have significant buy in, which means the group has to work on the solution and not be dictated to
2) big changes will fail, if the company has been around long enough you have to work on polishing, not starting over. Make small tweaks, one or two tweaks only at first. If you succeed then you can try for another, if you fail then give up...when in rome...
If it is bothering you this much then perhaps you are either in the wrong job or in the right job at the wrong company.
Standards, process, etc are generally as touchy as abortion and religion, the more you push the more they dig in and the less likely you are to make any progress.
Using or quoting fads like tqm, cmm, 5s, iso, six sigma, etc are a recipe for failure. Now being a contractor going from company to company TEACHING those fads, that will make you wealthy, perhaps you should look into that.
There is no I in team if you are doing this without the team then you are going to fail. Getting management buy in but not the teams buy in results in mutiny then failure or layoffs and failure or walkouts and failure, losing your key staff members and failure. You have to join them not fight them, at this point you have to undo the fights you have already had, it will be an up hill battle.