What Is a Fishbone Diagram?
A fishbone diagram (Ishikawa diagram or cause-and-effect diagram) is a visual root cause analysis tool that maps potential causes of a problem into categories. Named after its shape — the "head" represents the problem, and the "bones" branch out into cause categories. It was developed by Kaoru Ishikawa in the 1960s at Kawasaki shipyards and became a foundational tool of the Toyota Production System.
How Fishbone Fits Into 8D (D4)
In 8D D4 (Root Cause Analysis), the fishbone diagram is typically used FIRST — before 5-Why analysis. The team brainstorms ALL possible causes across categories, then uses 5-Why to drill into the most likely ones.
The 6M Categories
The classic 6M framework for manufacturing:
1. **Man (People)** — Training, fatigue, communication, experience
2. **Machine (Equipment)** — Wear, calibration, maintenance, tooling
3. **Method (Process)** — SOP clarity, work instructions, sequence
4. **Material (Raw Materials)** — Supplier variation, storage, handling
5. **Measurement (Inspection)** — Gauge accuracy, measurement method, sampling
6. **Mother Nature (Environment)** — Temperature, humidity, dust, vibration
Some industries add: **Management** (policies, resources) and **Maintenance** (preventive schedules).
How to Create a Fishbone Diagram
**Step 1:** Write the problem statement at the "head" (right side).
**Step 2:** Draw a horizontal spine line from left to the head.
**Step 3:** Draw 6 main branches (one per M category) angled off the spine.
**Step 4:** Brainstorm specific causes for each category as sub-branches.
**Step 5:** Ask "Why?" for each cause to drill deeper (creates tertiary branches).
**Step 6:** Circle the 3-5 most likely causes based on data and team consensus.
**Step 7:** Use 5-Why on the circled causes to find the true root cause.
Real Example: High Scrap Rate on CNC Line
**Problem (Head):** 12% scrap rate on CNC Line 3 — bearing housing OD oversize
**Man:** Operator A on night shift has 3x scrap rate of Operator B → Training gap?
**Machine:** Spindle bearing vibration 0.08mm at 8000 RPM → Worn bearings?
**Method:** Setup procedure skips warm-up cycle on night shift → Procedure gap?
**Material:** Raw casting from Supplier X has 0.3mm more stock than Supplier Y → Variation?
**Measurement:** CMM probe tip worn — last calibration 8 months ago → False readings?
**Environment:** Night shift ambient temp 5°C lower than day shift → Thermal contraction?
**Root Cause Found (via 5-Why on Machine):** Spindle bearings past replacement interval → 5-Why: Why not replaced? → PM schedule didn't account for 24/7 operation → MRC: PM schedule designed for single-shift operation.
Fishbone vs 5-Why
Use fishbone FIRST to cast a wide net across all categories. Then use 5-Why to drill deep into the 2-3 most likely cause branches. They work together — fishbone provides breadth, 5-Why provides depth.
Key Takeaways
1. Fishbone maps ALL possible causes before narrowing down
2. The 6Ms ensure you don't miss entire categories of causes
3. Always verify with data — don't circle causes based on opinion
4. Combine with 5-Why for the most likely cause branches
5. Update your fishbone as new evidence emerges during investigation