Management and planning tool used to show cause-and-effect relationships among complex factors.
Definition
Interrelationship Diagram is an established Body of Knowledge topic for SixSigmaKaizen.com. This entry is structured so the full reference article can be expanded with precise definitions, usage guidance, examples, and links.
History
This section will capture the origin, development, and practical role of Interrelationship Diagram within Lean, Six Sigma, quality management, operational excellence, or change leadership.
When to Use
Use this section to define the conditions, process signals, business needs, and decision points that make Interrelationship Diagram relevant.
Step-by-Step
- Define the problem, purpose, or decision connected to Interrelationship Diagram.
- Identify required inputs, data, people, process scope, and operating context.
- Apply the method or concept with the right level of rigor for risk and complexity.
- Translate the result into action, ownership, verification, and sustainment.
Examples
- Manufacturing example connected to safety, quality, flow, cost, delivery, or equipment performance.
- Service or office-process example connected to handoffs, cycle time, accuracy, customer experience, or rework.
- Leadership or deployment example connected to adoption, coaching, daily management, or sustainment.
Common Pitfalls
- Using Interrelationship Diagram as terminology without linking it to evidence, process behavior, or customer impact.
- Skipping operational definitions, ownership, context, or follow-up.
- Applying the concept mechanically when another tool, metric, or method would better fit the decision.
Related Tools
Related tools and connected BoK entries will be mapped as this topic is expanded. Keywords: interrelationship diagram.
Further Reading
Further reading will connect this entry to relevant SixSigmaKaizen.com guides, tools, templates, calculators, videos, and implementation resources.
