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Fishbone Diagrams

Fishbone Diagrams. The Fishbone Diagram (sometimes called the Ishikawa diagram) is used to identify and list all the factors that are conditioning the problem at hand. Objectives. To identify the scale and scope of issues and problem areas in any change process.

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Fishbone Diagrams

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  1. Fishbone Diagrams The Fishbone Diagram (sometimes called the Ishikawa diagram) is used to identify and list all the factors that are conditioning the problem at hand

  2. Objectives • To identify the scale and scope of issues and problem areas in any change process.

  3. Identify the key factors first factor factor factor Implementing the Cloud in aneducation organisation factor factor factor

  4. Analyze each of the key factors (main bones) in turn Access Finance Clarity offuture budgetprovisions Training Special Needsaccess needed Need forspecial equipment& materials Reliance onexternalagencies Unreliableestimates ofcosts Need totrain upmainstreamstaff Access totools Promoting inclusionof children withspecial needs inmainstream extendedservices High costs ofspecial support Limited No.of speciallyqualified staff XXXXrequired Uncertain legal issues Too few tablets Depends onYYY Limited support staff Data backup Need toadjust ZZZ Factor Security Capacity

  5. Why Would You Use It? • The Fishbone Diagram captures and collates all the different perspectives in the room that relate to the issue at hand. • It is ideal when the group comprises people from different backgrounds or professional disciplines. Everyone is then able to bring their perspective into focus and the team is better informed on what is involved. • Without such analysis, teams can often move into “fix it” mode before they really understand the scope or scale of a problem or issue. Often this means they end up addressing only part of the problem and either the problem remains or it reappears in another guise.

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