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    • Japanese organizational theorist

      • Kaoru Ishikawa (石川 馨, Ishikawa Kaoru, July 13, 1915 – April 16, 1989) was a Japanese organizational theorist and a professor in the engineering faculty at the University of Tokyo who was noted for his quality management innovations.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaoru_Ishikawa
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  2. Kaoru Ishikawa (石川 馨, Ishikawa Kaoru, July 13, 1915 – April 16, 1989) was a Japanese organizational theorist and a professor in the engineering faculty at the University of Tokyo who was noted for his quality management innovations.

    • His Background
    • Developing A Specifically Japanese Quality Strategy
    • Contribution to The Theory of Process Improvement
    • Fishbone Diagram
    • Implementation of Quality Circles

    Kaoru Ishikawa was born in Japan 1915. He studied at the University of Tokyo, and in 1939, he obtained his Master’s degree in applied chemistry and obtained his doctorate from the university in 1960. Kaoru Ishikawa served in the Japanese Navy from 1939-1941, thereafter joining the Nissan Liquid Fuel Company. He returned to science in 1947 when he s...

    When the industrial sector changed after the Second World War in Japan, Kaoru Ishikawa met Deming and Juran. They worked together to develop management concepts that are still in use. Ishikawa invented the concept of ‘quality circles’ in 1960. Quality circles are groups of people who meet to improve organisational performance. Although the only com...

    Ishikawa had a huge input into the development of Total Quality Management and to Process improvement Methodologies. He had a strong belief that you should service your customers even after they have bought your organisation’s products. Ishikawa was also instrumental in creating processes to address customers’ needs which led to better quality and ...

    The Fishbone diagram - also known as the Ishikawa diagram and the cause and effect diagram - was developed and created by Ishikawa and was originally used to analyse the cause of problems within quality management. It's called Fishbone Diagram due its shape – the head stating the ‘problem’, and the bones showing the various causes. It is known as o...

    Ishikawa also invented the concept of quality circles in 1960. Quality Circles are groups of people who meet voluntarily to improve organisational performance. Or they're ‘formal groups of people trained by specialists in human factors and skills of problem identification, data gathering, and analysis and generation of solutions.’ When Ishikawa sta...

  3. Kaoru Ishikawa served as president of the Japanese Society for Quality Control and the Musashi Institute of Technology and co-founded and served as president of the International Academy for Quality. Upon retirement, he was named professor emeritus of the University of Tokyo, Honorary Member of ASQ and an honorary member of the International ...

  4. Today, Kaoru Ishikawa is best known for his diagram which looks like the bones of a fish. His diagram is a practical widely used tool for a group to organise its understanding of the causes of variation in the outcome of their work.

    • M Best, D Neuhauser
    • 2008
  5. Oct 25, 2024 · October 25, 2024. Lean Basics. Ishikawa fishbone diagrams, also known as cause-and-effect diagrams or fishbone charts, are powerful tools for problem-solving and quality management. Developed by Kaoru Ishikawa in the 1960s, these diagrams help teams identify, organize, and analyze potential causes of problems in various processes.

  6. Kaoru Ishikawa. Developing a specifically Japanese quality strategy. The career of Kaoru Ishikawa in some ways parallels the economic history of contemporary Japan. Ishikawa, like Japan as a whole, learned the basics of statistical quality control developed by Americans.

  7. Kaoru Ishikawa significant contributions earned him the title of “Father of Japanese Quality.” He is most known for the development of the cause and effect diagram, and the popularization of quality control circles (QCC) and the seven basic quality tools.