Fishbone Diagram
Fishbone Diagram
Intro
A fishbone diagram (Ishikawa or cause‑and‑effect) visualizes possible causes of a problem. It matters because it structures root cause exploration across categories.
Key points:
- Organizes causes by branches (e.g., methods, machines, people, data).
- Promotes team brainstorming beyond obvious issues.
- Common use cases: defect analysis (BPM), incident reviews (Tech), customer complaints (Apps).
- Pitfall: stopping at symptoms without validating true root causes.
Examples:
- Investigating order errors across process, data, and training factors.
- Analyzing outages by environment, deployment, and monitoring gaps.
- Exploring slow response times by code, infrastructure, and workload.
In practice:
Map causes, test hypotheses with data, and link confirmed causes to corrective actions.
Related terms: root-cause-analysis; continuous-process-improvement; kpi
FAQs:
Q: When should I use a fishbone vs. a 5‑Whys?
A: Use fishbone for broad, categorized brainstorming; 5‑Whys for deep diving one cause chain.
Q: How do I validate identified causes?
A: Test with data and controlled changes.
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