Cause and Effect Diagram Training Video (aka Fishbone Diagram & Ishikawa Diagram)
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- Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024
- The Cause and Effect Diagram, (academy.velact...) Fishbone Diagram, or Ishikawa Diagram will help you organize your problem solving efforts. Lean Video created by Jeff Hajek of Velaction Continuous Improvement.
The comment on 'human error' is very true. Maybe even slightly understated. In a lot of cases, if your process does not eliminate the possibility of human error, you're doing it wrong! Whenever you find something being caused by 'human error' there's almost always a root cause of one of the other types, unless someone's maliciously doing things wrong.
Nicely stated regarding methods - "cause is mostly bad process".
Hi Jeff, just wanted to say you did a great job on your video. Very succinct!
Thanks! Always appreciate comments like that.
Great perspective beyond the technical instructions. Thank you
very informative - crisp and clear
Thanks! I need this for my college exam :)
helped alot!
Thank you! You made it very easy to understand!
Wonderful video. Thanks for your time to do this.
She's fictional, but still historical and commonly recognized. Because it is an individual with an assigned gender, it carries less bias than, say, referring to a ship as a 'she'. The original author of the 6 'M's was clearly reaching when looking for an 'M' term to describe environmental conditions. The bottom line, though, is that I have heard people replace 'man' in salesman, etc. I have yet to hear for a call to refer to 'Mother Nature' as 'Parent Nature'.
Great, thanks a lot for the explanation.
Awesome video! Great examples!
Thank you . It is very clear and easy to understand
thanks for your effort
My assignment want me to do a fishbone diagram to analyse and evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of my project. Am I right in saying that I cant use a fishbone diagram unless I don't have a problem?
Good explanation!
This helps a lot!, great job, more power
Thanks great video!!
Nice job. Thanks for sharing.
what do you mean i got to be lean ?
Good training
Not necessarily. You can look at the effects of any situation. For me, I might assess traffic to my website to look for the factors that affect it, thought the underlying implication is that there is a problem (lower traffic than desired.). There is an old saying, though, that is often attributed to Taiichi Ohno: "No problem IS a problem." I have yet to see a process without a problem, even though they might be small.
Funny observation. I never noticed that before. Though I could argue that Mother Nature is actually a historical figure. But still pretty funny.
the author of what was the name of the book?
awesome dude
Very Helpfull
Thanks.
very helpful :)