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Cause and Effect Diagram

Introduction: Cause and Effect Diagram (Ishikawa Diagram)

The Cause and Effect Diagram, also known as the Ishikawa or Fishbone Diagram, is a visual problem-solving tool used to identify, categorise, and analyse the potential causes of a specific problem. Developed by quality expert Kaoru Ishikawa in the 1960s, it remains a cornerstone of continuous improvement.

Background

Originating in Japan’s manufacturing sector, the diagram was designed to improve quality control through structured thinking. The fishbone shape highlights the main problem at the head, while potential causes branch off like bones along a spine. Over time, it has been adapted across industries, from healthcare to services, to systematically analyse root causes.

Key Elements/Features

  • Central Spine: Represents the problem or effect being studied.
  • Cause Categories: Traditionally based on Ishikawa’s 6Ms:
    • Material: Quality of inputs.
    • Machines: Equipment or technology issues.
    • Man (People): Skills, training, or human error.
    • Methods: Procedures and processes.
    • Measurement: Data, standards, or monitoring accuracy.
    • Mother Nature: Environmental or external factors.

Flexibility: Categories can be adapted to fit specific industries.

Applications/Examples

The Ishikawa Diagram is widely used in:

  • Quality control to trace defects.
  • Process improvement to identify inefficiencies.
  • Risk management to highlight vulnerabilities.
  • Training and education to teach structured problem-solving.

Relevance/Impact

By visually organising possible causes, the diagram helps teams avoid overlooking hidden factors. It promotes collaboration, sparks discussion, and supports deeper analysis. In Lean Six Sigma, it is often used in the Analyse phase of DMAIC to uncover root causes and prioritise improvements.

See also

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