Manual 8d Process en Ex
Manual 8d Process en Ex
8 DISCIPLINES OF PROBLEM
SOLVING
Table of Content
Introduction............................................................................................................... 4
Table of figures
Figure 1: problem-solving pyramid ......................................................................... 4
escalation 6σ
8D
Complexity / time
5 Why
Ishikawa
escalation 5 Why 1H
Cause Test / Cause
Customer Investigation 8D-Report
complaints Fault Tree Analysis (Jaggaer)
% of problems
1 1 day or 24 hours after receiving the complaint, the supplier has to define and
communicate containment actions (D1-D3).
5 Five working days after the request, the supplier has to define and communicate
a root cause analysis and corrective actions (D1-D5).
20 Twenty working days after the request, the supplier has to communicate the
implemented corrective actions and actions to prevent recurrence (D1-D8).
Procedure
In this step the best possible problem-solving team is defined.
The problem-solving team should meet the following conditions:
▪ Cross functional
→ Members from various fields are nominated, for example from the areas of
production, quality, development, ...including Production, Quality, Engineering, etc.
▪ Team of experts
→ Members should have knowledge, experience, and Competence to…
… analyze the root cause
… define and implement corrective actions and
… monitor their effectiveness
Results
Problem-solving team is defined.
Moderator defined
Procedure
▪ Short description → working title that has a recognition value for team members
▪ Detailed description includes:
1 description out of customer inspection report
2 failure effect
3 exact, quantified product failure (characteristic that is out of specification,
possible defect type, defect location, …)
4 5W1H method
5 all available other information, e.g.
▪ Production date, shift batch
▪ Measurement results
▪ Rejected quantity
5W1H Method
Results
Complete and explicit description of the product failure that is used as input for the root
cause analysis.
Procedure
1 Containment is to protect the customer
2 Problem must be stopped everywhere (whole supply chain starting backwards from
customer to your internal processes). Suspect parts needs to be segregated and
quarantined.
3 Define interim containment actions in addition the regular process flow (what action:
100% inspection, sorting, rework, … of suspect parts)
▪ Containment actions are only sensible if they ensure that
no further defective parts come to the customer. Not all immediate actions are
measures within the meaning of step D3!
→ For example, it is not enough just to fix the error on your own production line.
Bad parts can then still reach the customer and be assembled. Better: e.g.,
100% inspection, sorting checks, rework of suspicious parts, ...
▪ For each containment action responsibility and planned start date has to be
defined. The current status should be monitored.
4 Do a risk assessment to be careful of unwanted side-effects which can be caused
by the containment actions What could that be?
5 Collect data & monitor the status to verify the effectiveness (typical tools:
monitoring/run chart, MSA / Inspection instruction) using data and facts.
6 Define clean point → when are we sure to deliver good parts to the customer.
4 • Risk assessment
1.1 Application
After doing the problem description in D2 we have to follow up with the root cause
analysis in D4.
Problem description
are the starting points
for the systematic
Product failure
consideration!
Symptom
Root Cause Analysis
Production
Problem
Why not
prevented
?
Figure 4: Root Cause Analysis
Potential
cause 2.1
Procedure
1. Formulate the problem.
2. Brainstorm possible causes for the problem and assign them to different M-
categories (the 6 M`s are: Men, Material, Measurement, Machine, Method and
Milieu). According to the complexity further M`s can be added.
3. For each collected possible cause ask by what it could be caused and connect
it with an additional arrow to build a cause and effect theory.
4. Test all cause and effect theories based by investigations to confirm or eliminate
them.
5. Prioritize the cause and effect theories which fully explain the occurrence of the
problem and try to confirm them in the next step
Result
The possible causes of a problem are systematically determined and visualized.
Product Problem
failure
X
... caused
by ...
... caused
by ... X
... caused
by ... X
... caused
by ...
Potential
causes
... caused
by ... X
... caused
by ...
Potential
causes
X X
... caused ... caused ... caused Potential
by ... by ... by ... causes
X
... caused
... caused by "Root
by ...
Root cause
Cause"
soup failed
X
not taste wrong
well consistency
cooking
X X X
time too too salty too liquid too pasty
short
timer
timer power
X X
setting
defect breakdown
wrong
Verify and confirm each root cause using data and facts
Determine potential corrective actions: verify them and chose the most effective
one(s).
Procedure
1. Identification
▪ List of potential corrective actions to cover all root causes identified in D4.
Result
The most effective potential corrective action(s) is chosen.
Procedure
1.1 Implementation plan
To ensure a correct implementation an action plan with dates and responsibilities is
necessary.
Result
The corrective actions are implemented and validated.
8D approval