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Affinity Diagram
The affinity diagram, or KJ method (after its author, Kawakita
Jiro), wasn't originally intended for quality management.
Nonetheless, it has become one of the most widely used of the
Japanese management and planning tools. The affinity diagram was
developed to discovering meaningful groups of ideas within a raw
list. In doing so, it is important to let the groupings emerge
naturally, using the right side of the brain, rather than
according to preordained categories.
Usually, an affinity diagram is used to refine a brainstorm
into something that makes sense and can be dealt with more
easily. In Seven New QC Tools, Ishikawa recommends using the
affinity diagram when facts or thoughts are uncertain and need to
be organized, when preexisting ideas or paradigms need to be
overcome, when ideas need to be clarified, and when unity within
a team needs to be created.
A sample affinity diagram is show below. On the left side of
the window is a brainstormed list of ideas. On the right side is
the affinity diagram, in which ideas have been grouped into
affinity sets. In this case, the sorting is in an advanced state,
and affinity sets have already been given titles. It's important
not to add the titles early in the sorting process.
Affinity Diagramming: Steps
To create an affinity diagram, you sort the brainstormed list,
moving ideas from the brainstorm into affinity sets, and creating
groups of related ideas.
As you sort ideas:
- Rapidly group ideas that seem to belong together.
- It isn't important to define why they belong together.
- Clarify any ideas in question.
- Copy an idea into in more than one affinity set if
appropriate.
- Look for small sets. Should they belong in a larger
group?
- Do large sets need to be broken down more precisely?
- When most of the ideas have been sorted, you can start to
enter titles for each affinity set.
Use PathMaker to generate Affinity Diagrams from brainstorm sessions.
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