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Root Cause Analysis for Packaging Disciplines

Root Cause Analysis (RCA) is a methodology for identifying the source of a problem, making possible a solution that prevents reoccurrences.

Root Cause Analysis Packaging

Root Cause Analysis (RCA) is a methodology for identifying the source of a problem, making possible a solution that prevents reoccurrences. By analogy, a problem is a weed. Chop off the top and it sprouts anew, unless it’s pulled up by its root.

Packaging is interdisciplinary, affecting and affected not only by other disciplines internally, but others externally throughout the supply chain. Due to that breadth, packaging operations and procedures have a multitude of opportunities to go astray. Packaging-related problems can relate to design, materials, equipment, training, and traceability, just to name a few possibilities. At stake can be customer relations, productivity, costs, profits, and (in the case of a new launch) speed-to-market. Packaging, as much as any other discipline, benefits from an effective problem-solving methodology.

Procedural steps for RCA
1. Define the problem.
Charles Kettering, inventor and General Motors researcher, said, “A problem well-stated is half-solved.” More than a half-century after his death, the maxim remains the starting point in problem solving. The implied challenge in his words should guard against any mistaken notion that problems are self-defining.

“Houston, we have a problem.” Its apocryphal origins notwithstanding, the quote is an example of recognizing a problem’s existence prior to defining it. Recognition and definition, nonetheless, are often contained in the same statement; for example, “We have a problem with (fill in the blank).” Such expediency can be useful, but not as a substitute for exploring alternative ways to best define the problem.

2. Gather data. This step is about deciding informational needs and how they are to be fulfilled. Problems that occur in the field present particular challenges, typically requiring the inputs of external parties. In those scenarios, the investigating company should be straightforward rather than defensive over not being perfect. Customers, clients, supply-chain partners, and regulators have a vested interest in having the problem solved.

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