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Blow Molding & Plastics Discipline Since 1999 |
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Blow Molding Help and Associates |




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Asking "Why?" may be a favorite technique of your three year old child in driving you crazy, but it could teach you a valuable Six Sigma quality lesson. The 5 Whys is a technique used in the Analyze phase of the Six Sigma DMAIC methodology. It's a great Six Sigma tool that doesn't involve data segmentation, hypothesis testing, regression or other advanced statistical tools, and in many cases can be completed without a data collection plan.
By repeatedly asking the question "Why" (five is a good rule of thumb), you can peel away the layers of symptoms which can lead to the root cause of a problem. Very often the ostensible reason for a problem will lead you to another question. Although this technique is called "5 Whys," you may find that you will need to ask the question fewer or more times than five before you find the issue related to a problem.
Benefits Of The 5 Whys · Help identify the root cause of a problem. · Determine the relationship between different root causes of a problem. · One of the simplest tools; easy to complete without statistical analysis.
When Is 5 Whys Most Useful? · When problems involve human factors or interactions. · In day-to-day business life; can be used within or without a Six Sigma project.
How To Complete The 5 Whys 2. Ask Why the problem happens and write the answer down below the problem. 3. If the answer you just provided doesn't identify the root cause of the problem that you wrote down in step 1, ask Why again and write that answer down. 4. Loop back to step 3 until the team is in agreement that the problem's root cause is identified. Again, this may take fewer or more times than five Whys.
5 Whys Examples 1. Why are customers being shipped bad products? 2. Why did manufacturing build the products to a different specification than that of sales? 3. Why does the sales person call the head of manufacturing directly to start work instead of following the procedure established in the company? 4. Why does the form contain an approval for the sales director?
Problem Statement: You are on your way home from work and your car stops in the middle of the road. 2. Why did it run out of gas? 3. Why didn't you buy any gas this morning? 4. Why didn't you have any money? 5. Why did you lose your money in last night's poker game? As you can see, in both examples the final Why leads the team to a statement (root cause) that the team can take action upon. It is much quicker to come up with a system that keeps the sales director updated on recent sales or teach a person to "bluff" a hand than it is to try to directly solve the stated problems above without further investigation.
5 Whys And The Fishbone Diagram Take-Away Quotation
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5 Why’s? |
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Blow Molding Help John Headrick (919) 802-0005 E-mail: john@blowmoldinghelp.com |