PDCA

What is PDCA?

PDCA is a method for continuous process improvement. The abbreviation stands for Plan, Do, Check and Act. By constantly repeating these four steps, organizations can implement and secure structured improvements. The method is widely used within quality management and is an important principle within ISO 9001, among others.

When do you use the PDCA cycle?

The PDCA cycle is used when you want to improve or better control processes.

Typical applications are:

  • Improving work processes
  • Performing quality checks
  • Implementing process improvements
  • Fixing recurring errors

The cycle is repeatable, creating continuous improvement.

The 4 steps briefly explained

The PDCA cycle consists of four steps. In the Plan phase, you analyze the current situation and draw up an improvement plan. In the Do phase, you implement this improvement, often first on a small scale. Then, in the Check phase, you check whether the change produces the desired result. In the Act phase you secure the improvement or make adjustments, after which the cycle begins again.

PDCA cycle in practice

One organization finds that inspections are not always completed in full.

  • Plan: Investigate where this is going wrong and determine how to clarify the process.
  • Do: Implement a modified inspection procedure.
  • Check: Check that inspections are performed more completely and fewer steps are skipped.
  • Act: Establish the new practice as a standard or further adjust as needed.

Continuous improvement in practice

Digital tools can help apply the PDCA cycle effectively. Recording processes and registrations digitally provides better insight into results and areas for improvement. LeanForms supports organizations with digital forms and workflows that make it easier to improve and secure processes.

FAQ

These are the questions we hear most often about PDCA, with answers.

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