Dr kaoru ishikawa biography quality management
•
Kaoru Ishikawa
Kaoru Ishikawa (July 13, 1915 - April 16, 1989) was a Japanese university professor and influential quality management innovator best known in North America for the Ishikawa or cause and effect diagram (also known as fishbone diagram) that is used in the analysis of industrial process.
Biography
Born in Tokyo, the oldest of the eight sons of Ichiro Ishikawa. In 1939 he graduated University of Tokyo with an engineering degree in applied chemistry. His first job was as a naval technical officer (1939-1941) then moved on to work at the Nissan Liquid Fuel Company until 1947. Ishikawa would now start his career as an associate professor at the University of Tokyo. He then undertook the presidency of the Musashi Institute of Technology in 1978.
In 1949, Ishikawa joined the Japanese Union of Scientists and Engineers (JUSE) quality control research group. After World War II Japan looked to transform its industrial sector, which in North America was then still perceive
•
Ishikawa
•
Profiles in Quality: Kaoru Ishikawa
Kaoru Ishikawa, considered the father of Japanese quality, is perhaps most famous for his Ishikawa or fishbone diagram.
The fishbone diagram is innovative in its simplicity, helping teams explore quality problems (the fish head) by breaking it down into contributing factors (the fish bones).
While this practical tool is what he’s most remembered for, Ishikawa championed a number of ideas that reshaped quality and manufacturing as a whole in post-WWII Japan.
Working alongside other founding fathers of quality like W. Edwards Deming and Joseph Juran, his work served as the foundation of quality management as we know it today. Even more indicative of his enduring legacy, his ideas continue to hold true even in the face of widespread technological change.
Download your free Root Cause Analysis 101 Guidebook to learn more about how to use a fishbone diagram
A Foundation in Science and Engineering
Ishikawa was born in Tokyo in 1915, the eldes