Business Proposal Part 1
Running Head: AFFINITY DIAGRAM 1
AFFINITY DIAGRAM 5
Use an Affinity Diagram to Brainstorm
Lakisha Trammel
GCU – PSC - 450
October 20, 2019
Assumption: Organizational Problem is missing the delivery date
Affinity diagram: this diagram paves the way for the quality team to creatively and effectively generate a large number of problems, ideas, and then logically them for issue understanding and possible breakthrough solutions. In this method, it helps in gathering massive quantities of information and organizing them into teams or themes based on their relationships. The affinity process is vast for grouping data collected during research or ideas generated during brainstorms. In several cases this tool is very useful in the face-to-face come together However, with improvement of technology and shared desktop spaces.
The steps are:
1. To state issue in the full sentences
What are the problems involved in the missing shipping date? The question, in this case, is about the organizational challenge of missing delivery data. This is a widespread problem that makes many firms fail to get the ordered items, which will, in turn, cripples the operations of the organization. This makes some of the activities unable to take place as planned, and hence, failure witnessed in the various areas (Venier, 2015).
2. Brainstorm using short sentences
Since there are fewer fork trucks, no place for return, computer crashes, insufficient training, overcrowding team nit utilized, inexperienced manager, engineering changes shipping turnover, error on the bill of lading. These problems are causing the issue of the organizational missing of the delivery date.
3. Post them for the team
Posting the above-brainstormed ideas for the team to see and update with the new one. The themes resulted from the organizing missing delivery data are, lack of employee training, low compensation, lack of performance feedback and lack of career path.
4. Sort ideas into a logical group
Group 1: Overcrowded Training, no pace for return, not enough for trucks, Seasonal demand
Group 2: Insufficient training, teams not used, shipping turnover, and inexperienced manager.
Group 3: Computer crashes, engineering changes, error on bills of lading.
5. Create a concise, descriptive heading for each group
System: Computer crashes, engineering changes, failure on laws of landing.
Facilities: Overcrowded Training, no pace for return, not enough for trucks, Limited storage space
People: Insufficient training, teams not used, shipping turnover, and inexperienced manager.
6. Why for riot causes analysis for:
Why did we miss the delivery date?
It wasn't scheduled in time
Why is that? There were lots of engineering changes?
Why is that? Client requested them
Why is that? Customer agreements weren’t taken on finalizing the design document
Why is that? There is no formal process of the baseline of the client requirement document.
In the same way, we can perform five why analysis for other identified problems as well. This will bar very important in making sure that all process and issue so if the company are solved. Again, this will be dealing with the right channel of the solving the problems (Kung et al. 2016). Through setting place the required measures to the company to ensure that they curb the problem which is being witnessed in the whole of the organization crisis resolving department.
|
Staff |
Distribution |
Quality |
Capacity |
|
Lack of training |
Not enough trucks |
Variable ingredient quality |
Insufficient ovens |
|
Difficulties recruiting |
Colling system in trucks unreliable |
Packaging not strong enough |
Limited storage space |
|
High overtime |
Product damaged in transit |
|
Seasonal demand |
Reference
Kung, J. W., Brook, O. R., Eisenberg, R. L., & Slanetz, P. J. (2016). How-I-do-it: Teaching root cause analysis. Academic radiology, 23(7), 881-884.
Venier, A. G. (2015). Root cause analysis to support infection control in healthcare premises. Journal of Hospital Infection, 89(4), 331-334.