Knowledge base

WECO Rules (Control Charts)

Introduction: WECO Rules

The WECO Rules, also known as the Western Electric Company Rules, are a set of statistical guidelines used in control charts within Statistical Process Control (SPC). They help distinguish between common-cause variation (natural process fluctuation) and special-cause variation (unexpected or assignable causes) that indicate process instability. By applying these rules, organisations can detect abnormal patterns early and maintain consistent quality performance.

Background

The WECO Rules were developed by the Western Electric Company in the mid-20th century to enhance the sensitivity of Shewhart control charts. While traditional 3-sigma limits identify major process shifts, smaller but significant changes can go unnoticed. The WECO Rules address this by introducing additional criteria that signal subtle but real variations. These rules remain standard practice in quality management, Lean Six Sigma, and regulated industries that require proactive process monitoring.

Key Elements/Features

The four classic WECO Rules are:

  1. One point beyond control limits: A single data point falls outside the upper or lower 3-sigma control limits, suggesting a likely special cause.
  2. Two of three points beyond 2-sigma (same side): Indicates a potential process drift or moderate shift in performance.
  3. Four of five points beyond 1-sigma (same side): Suggests a sustained movement away from the process mean.
  4. Eight consecutive points on one side of the mean: Reveals a consistent deviation that points to process bias or a fundamental change.

Applications/Examples

  • Manufacturing: Detecting abnormal variation in product dimensions, weights, or assembly precision.
  • Healthcare: Monitoring patient safety indicators or lab measurements for early warning signs.
  • Service Industries: Tracking process times or customer error rates to identify performance shifts.

Relevance/Impact

Using WECO Rules enhances the responsiveness of control charts, allowing earlier detection of emerging issues before they result in defects or failures. This increases process stability, reduces waste, and supports continuous improvement. By integrating WECO Rules into SPC systems, organisations improve their decision-making accuracy and long-term process reliability.

See also

Anend Harkhoe
Lean Consultant & Trainer | MBA in Lean & Six Sigma | Founder of Dmaic.com & Lean.nl
With extensive experience in healthcare (hospitals, elderly care, mental health, GP practices), banking and insurance, manufacturing, the food industry, consulting, IT services, and government, Anend is eager to guide you into the world of Lean and Six Sigma. He believes in the power of people, action, and experimentation. At Dmaic.com and Lean.nl, everything revolves around practical knowledge and hands-on training. Lean is not just a theory—it’s a way of life that you need to experience. From Tokyo’s karaoke bars to Toyota’s lessons—Anend makes Lean tangible and applicable. Lean.nl organises inspiring training sessions and study trips to Lean companies in Japan, such as Toyota. Contact: info@dmaic.com

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