Template Guide

Control Chart Project Example

Control Chart Project Example: practical template guide for logistics and distribution centres with worked numbers and FAQs.

Asset
Downloadable .xlsx workbook

What this template helps you do

This page is written for operations managers, CI managers, Lean Six Sigma practitioners, supervisors and team leaders working in logistics and distribution centres. It focuses on a single search intent: project example — control chart: project example, so every section below is shaped around that question rather than offering generic background.

By the end of this guide you will know when to use the Control Chart, how to complete it section by section, the most common mistakes to avoid and the next practical step to take. The intended next action is to download the template and put it to work on a live piece of logistics and distribution centres improvement work.

The Control Chart is a working document, not a deliverable. It belongs at the workplace where the team can update it as decisions are made and evidence is captured, rather than sitting in a folder until a review meeting.

When to use it

When to use this template

Reach for the Control Chart at the point in the work where decisions or evidence need to be captured in one shared place rather than scattered across notes, emails and spreadsheets. The right moment is usually earlier than people think.

  • At the start of a piece of logistics and distribution centres improvement work, to agree scope and ownership before activity begins
  • When the team needs a single source of truth that survives shift handovers and people changes
  • Before a tier or steering review, so the conversation is about the work rather than about the document
  • When a previous attempt drifted because the inputs and decisions were never written down in one place
  • When new team members need to pick the work up without a verbal handover

If none of the situations above apply yet, save the template and come back to it — using it on work that is too small or too informal can make the work feel heavier without making it any clearer.

Method

How to complete the template

Open the Control Chart, work through it section by section with the team, and sign off each step before moving on. Treat the document as a live working tool, not a one-off submission.

What to confirm before you start

  • The scope of work the Control Chart applies to, agreed in writing with the sponsor
  • The owner who will keep the Control Chart up to date between meetings
  • Where the completed Control Chart will be stored and reviewed
  • Which team members are involved in completing each section
  • The cadence at which the Control Chart will be updated — usually weekly during active work

How to work through it

  • Fill in sections in the order they appear; the order is part of the design
  • Capture decisions and the reason for them, not only the outcome
  • Keep entries short enough to be read at the workplace, not only in meetings
  • Mark sections as draft, agreed or done so reviewers can see status at a glance
  • Update the Control Chart as new evidence emerges rather than waiting for the next review
Filled-in scenario

Worked example: a filled-in scenario

Filling in the Control Chart template for project example in logistics and distribution centres, working section by section and signing off each step before moving on.

DetailCaptured in the template
DetailOne Control Chart workbook covering logistics and distribution centres
Detailcompleted by a team of 9 over 8 sessions
Detailwith 10 actions captured and 8 owners assigned.

The point of the example is to show what a healthy first version of the Control Chart looks like — concise, dated, and clearly owned. Adjust the wording for your own work, but keep the level of detail roughly the same.

Download the template
Common mistakes

Common mistakes when using the template

  • Filling in the Control Chart template after the fact rather than during the work
  • Skipping sections of the Control Chart because they look optional
  • Treating the Control Chart as a deliverable rather than a working document
  • Sharing the Control Chart without naming an owner for each row
  • Not reviewing the Control Chart at the next tier meeting, so it goes stale

Each of the points above appears repeatedly in real reviews. Catching them early is much cheaper than catching them after a change has been made on the floor.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How should the Control Chart be filled in for project example in logistics and distribution centres?

Open the Control Chart, work through it section by section with the team, and sign off each step before moving on. In logistics and distribution centres, this keeps the project example work auditable and stops the document drifting out of date.

What is the Control Chart for?

The Control Chart captures the decisions and data that a piece of improvement work depends on, in a format the next person can pick up without you. It is a working document, not a deliverable.

Who should own the Control Chart?

One named person per page, agreed at the start. They do not have to do all the work; they do have to make sure the Control Chart reflects what the team has actually decided.