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Fishbone Diagram Guide
Learn how to build a cause-and-effect diagram in 5 steps. Organize potential root causes visually using industry-standard templates.
Start Fishbone DiagramWhat Is a Fishbone Diagram?
A Fishbone Diagram (also called an Ishikawa or cause-and-effect diagram) is a visual tool for organizing potential causes of a quality problem. The problem (effect) sits at the head of the fish, and branches represent categories of causes. It helps teams brainstorm systematically instead of guessing.
When Should I Use This Tool?
- During a team brainstorming session to identify all possible causes of a defect or failure
- When an SPC chart shows an out-of-control signal and you need to investigate why
- As part of a corrective action process (8D, CAPA) to document the cause analysis
Before You Start
Have the following ready:
- A clear, specific problem statement (the "effect" you are investigating)
- Input from the team -- fishbone diagrams work best as a group exercise
1 Define the Problem
Start by naming your diagram and describing the problem (effect) you are investigating. Be specific -- "bearing failure on CNC lathe #3" is better than "machine broke."
- Diagram Title (required)
- A short name for this analysis. Example: "Bearing Failure Investigation - Jan 2025"
- Effect / Problem Statement (required)
- Describe the problem clearly. This text appears at the head of the fishbone diagram.
- Company Name (optional)
- Appears on the report for identification purposes.
Click to view screenshot

2 Choose Categories
Select a template to pre-populate categories, or start from scratch with custom categories. Each category becomes a main branch on the fishbone diagram.
Available Templates
- 6M (Manufacturing)
- Machine, Method, Material, Measurement, Man, Environment. The most common template for manufacturing root cause analysis.
- 4P (Service)
- Policies, Procedures, People, Plant. Designed for service industry investigations.
- 4S (Skills)
- Surroundings, Suppliers, Systems, Skills. Useful when investigating process or competency issues.
- Custom
- Start with a blank slate and add your own categories. You need at least 2 categories to proceed.
The 6M template is the most popular choice for manufacturing teams

Click to view screenshot

3 Add Causes
For each category, brainstorm potential causes (secondary causes). You can also add sub-causes (tertiary causes) to drill deeper. At least one category must have at least one cause to proceed.
Click to view screenshot

4 Preview Your Diagram
See your complete fishbone diagram rendered visually. You can adjust the diagram size and font to fit your needs. The diagram updates in real time as you make changes.
Click to view screenshot

5 Save or Download Your Report
Your fishbone report includes the rendered diagram, all categories and causes in text form, and the problem statement. Save it to your dashboard, download it as a PDF, or share it with your team.
Click to view screenshot

How to Read the Diagram
The problem (effect) is at the right side of the diagram. Each main branch represents a category. Secondary causes branch off each category, and tertiary causes branch off those. Start by reviewing which categories have the most causes, then prioritize the most likely contributors for further investigation.
Structure of a fishbone diagram: effect at head, categories as main branches, causes as sub-branches

Tips & Best Practices
- Involve people from different roles (operators, engineers, supervisors) to get diverse perspectives on potential causes.
- Keep cause descriptions short and specific. "Worn cutting tool" is better than "tooling issues."
- After completing the diagram, use the 5 Whys RCA tool to drill deeper into the top 2-3 most likely causes.
- Save your diagram even if incomplete. You can resume the draft later when you have more input from the team.