Business, Legal & Accounting Glossary
Pareto principle is a theory that states that 80% of the effects are the result of 20% of the source(s) or participants, of any given event. A few items contribute the most; these are the vital few, as opposed to the trivial majority.
The Pareto principle, also known as the 80-20 rule, states that eighty per cent of the result is obtained due to 20 per cent of actions. In simple terms, most of the results are obtained due to minor actions. The rest of the actions are either wasted or produce little value. The Pareto principle was developed by Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto. He invented a mathematical formula that dealt with the unequal distribution of wealth. Pareto principle is mainly used in determining the extent of unequal distribution of wealth.
The Pareto principle means that 20 per cent of people own 80 per cent of the wealth of the world. This principle can be applied to anything from economics to management and science to the physical world. For any project, it can be obtained that from 80 per cent of resources and time only 20 per cent of work is complete. The Pareto effect is often referred to in discussing wealth distribution.
The Pareto principle can be used in varied ways. If a company realizes that only 20 per cent of workers contribute to completing 80 per cent of work, then the company can take special initiatives to reward these employees so that more work can be expected. If a computer engineer can understand that only 20 per cent of bugs are responsible for 80 per cent crashes then more focus can be put on fixing these bugs. If a seller gets the concept that 20 per cent of customers lead them to earn 80 per cent of revenue then, the sellers can work on satisfying these customers.
The entire concept of the Pareto principle can be related to diminishing marginal benefit. The Law of diminishing returns advocates the Pareto principle. The law states that for each additional man-hour each worker is adding less advantage to the final result.
Pareto chart is one of the statistical tools that are used to measure quality assurance. The Pareto chart is represented by using several bars arranged in descending order. This chart was invented by Vilfredo Pareto and was widely used by Joseph M. Juran and Kaoru Ishikawa.
The Pareto principle is often used in business. Manufacturing, supply chain management, inventory (in particular vendor-managed inventory), sales, and revenue, in general, are areas where the principle is often seen.
The Pareto principle can often be used to solve problems. For example, if an excess inventory of a certain item is tying up capital (funds, space, resources), it is often enough to classify the inventory and then address it. It might look like this:
By keeping tight control on an inventory of class A items, 80% of the problem is solved.
Class A:
Class C:
Six Sigma is a quality management methodology that employs the Pareto principle.
In project management, often the critical path represents the “vital few”. The critical path is the longest, with no slack. The project cannot be completed in less than this time. This path is vital because it is tightly scheduled, and any delays in it will result in delays in the project.
Therefore, focus on these “vital few” the Pareto principle teaches us, and control the effects of the critical path.
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This glossary post was last updated: 29th March, 2020 | 0 Views.