Properties of Distributions
The following is an excerpt from The Quality Engineering Handbook by Thomas Pyzdek, © QA Publishing, LLC.
A central concept in statistical process control is that every measurable phenomenon is a statistical distribution. In other words, an observed set of data constitutes a sample of the effects of unknown common causes. It follows that, after we have done everything to eliminate special causes of variations, there will still remain a certain amount of variability exhibiting the state of control. Figure IV.2 illustrates the relationships between common causes, special causes, and distributions.

Figure IV.2.Distributions.
From Continuing Process Control and Process Capability Improvement, p. 4a. Copyright 1983 by Ford Motor Company. Used by permission of the publisher.
There are three basic properties of a distribution: location, spread, and shape. The location refers to the typical value of the distribution, such as the mean. The spread of the distribution is the amount by which smaller values differ from larger ones. The standard deviation and variance are measures of distribution spread. The shape of a distribution is its pattern—peakedness, symmetry, etc. A given phenomenon may have any one of a number of distribution shapes, e.g., the distribution may be bell-shaped, rectangular-shaped, etc.