Business Transformation
Visualize your strategy with ease
outline icons for fishbone diagrams
from deck
Cause & Effect Fishbone Diagrams (PPT graphics)
Outline Icons for Fishbone Diagrams (extendable)
Slide Content
The PowerPoint slide provides a collection of outline icons specifically designed for fishbone diagrams, which are tools often used for identifying cause and effect relationships. The icons depict various elements that could be causes in such analyses. These include: - A pair of linked individuals which can represent collaboration or team dynamics. - A gear cog which often symbolizes processes or mechanics. - A 3D box might refer to products, goods, or tangible assets. - Two opposing arrows for depicting opposing forces or change dynamics. - A looping arrow for processes or cycles. - A flowchart icon for organization or systematic breakdown. - A football which may represent goals, recreation, or health factors. - Leaves representing growth, nature, or environmental factors. - Fish skeletons which traditionally relate to the fishbone diagram itself.
Graphical Look
- The slide background is white with a dark teal header and footer bars.
- Eight outline icons are evenly distributed in two rows on the left side of the slide, featuring a monochrome light gray color.
- On the right side of the slide, there is a dark teal side panel with the text "Fully editable icons" in white.
- One icon is highlighted within a bright teal circle, showing that the icon is editable and emphasizing its significance.
- The highlighted icon features two additional versions beside it with a color variation, showing the editability.
- The text "More icons available. Check our website" is placed at the bottom right, with the website's URL.
The slide sports a clean and professional look with a contrast between the simple monochrome icons and the vibrant teal accents which draw attention to the editability feature. Its design is minimalist, focusing on the clarity of iconography and ease of understanding.
Use Cases
- Illustrating different components of an issue during a problem-solving meeting.
- Visualizing the factors contributing to a situation in a process improvement workshop.
- Enhancing a business or educational presentation with clear visual elements to depict the causes in a root cause analysis.
- Accompanying a training session about quality management or continuous improvement techniques like Six Sigma or Lean, using the fishbone (Ishikawa) diagram concept.