Five Whys in Manufacturing (2026 guide): Find the Real Cause Fast and Fix It for Good

Gregor Obreza, Co-founder and CEO

Woman and man finding a root cause using five whys in front of a whiteboard in conference room.

A practical guide to using the Five Whys in manufacturing. Learn how to avoid shallow answers, run it on the shop floor, and turn root causes into work instructions that prevent repeat issues.

30-second summary

The Five Whys is a fast root cause analysis method used in manufacturing to understand why problems happen. It works only if the result leads to a process change — not a reminder to “be more careful.” This guide shows how to apply Five Whys correctly and how to turn findings into standard work that actually prevents repeat problems.

What are the Five Whys?

The Five Whys is a problem-solving method where you repeatedly ask “Why?” to trace a problem back to its root cause.

The number five is not a rule. You stop when the answer points to something you can fix in the process.


When Five Whys works best

Use it when:

  • A problem keeps repeating
  • Human interaction is involved
  • The process should be simple, but errors still occur
  • You need a fast, shared understanding across the team

Avoid it for highly complex, multi-system failures where deeper analysis is required.


How to run Five Whys on the shop floor

1. Define the problem as a fact

Describe what happened, not who caused it.

Example: “Wrong label applied during packaging.”


2. Ask why the process allowed it

Do not ask “why did the operator do this?” Ask “why was this possible?”

This keeps the discussion objective and useful.


3. Follow decisions, not people

At each “why,” look for:

  • Missing instructions
  • Unclear sequence
  • No visual reference
  • No verification step

Stop when the answer points to a missing or weak control.


A simple, realistic example

Problem: Products from one shift fail final inspection.

  • Why? Assembly torque varies between operators.
  • Why? The torque setting is adjusted manually.
  • Why? The correct value is written on a whiteboard.
  • Why? Setup instructions don’t specify the exact setting.
  • Root cause: The setup step is not clearly defined or standardized.

Fix: Make the correct torque a mandatory, visible step in the setup instructions.


Where teams usually fail

Five Whys fails when:

  • The result is “retrain the operator”
  • Findings stay in meeting notes
  • Instructions are never updated
  • New hires learn by shadowing again

Root cause analysis without standard work does not last.


Turn Five Whys into lasting improvement

Most Five Whys analyses end with the same conclusion:

“The right way of doing this isn’t clear enough.”

That means the fix must live in standard work instructions, not in people’s heads.

Modern teams:

  • Capture the correct process once
  • Turn it into clear, step-by-step instructions
  • Keep it updated as the process changes

When the standard is clear, problems stop repeating.


Frequently Asked Questions

Do I always need five “whys”?

No. Stop when the cause points to a fixable process issue.

Is Five Whys about blaming people?

No. It only works when you analyze the process, not the person.

How long should it take?

Most shop-floor problems can be analyzed in 15–30 minutes.

What should happen after Five Whys?

The fix must be reflected in updated standard work instructions.

Why do problems still return after analysis?

Because the improved process was never standardized.

What helps fixes survive turnover?

Clear, accessible instructions that match real execution.


From root cause to standard work — without rewriting documents

If your team runs Five Whys but still sees the same issues come back, the missing step is execution.

TagPlan AI turns real process videos into clear, step-by-step work instructions — so root cause fixes actually stick.

Apply for early access: https://tagplan.app/ai-training/early-access