Free Cycle Diagram Templates
How to Use the Cycle Diagram Templates in Creately
- Choose a template that suits your needs
Pick a cycle diagram template by number of stages. Click “Edit This Template” to open it.
- Sign in or create a free Creately account
Create a free account or sign in. This lets you save your cycle diagram, return to it later, and keep every change synced to your workspace.
- Open the template and customize it
Arrange your stages in a loop with arrows showing the repeating flow, and label each step in the cycle.
- Set the number of stages in the loop
- Label each stage clearly
- Show the direction of the repeating flow with arrows
- Add icons or color to distinguish phases
- Add a center label for the cycle’s theme
- Balanced circular layout
Alignment tools keep stages evenly spaced around the loop, so cycles look clean whether you have three steps or eight.
- Collaborate with your team
Share for feedback. Give others view or edit access to your cycle diagram, gather comments inline, and resolve them without leaving the canvas.
- Save, export, or present
Finish and share. Save to your workspace, export the cycle diagram as PNG, JPEG, SVG or PDF, or present it live — then embed or link it wherever your team works.
FAQs about Cycle Diagram Templates
They are. You can access and edit the majority of cycle diagram templates for free on a basic account, with no download needed. Premium templates and some pro features are available on paid plans if you need them later.
Absolutely. Your cycle diagram exports as PNG, JPEG, PDF or SVG, so you can insert it into Word or PowerPoint, attach it to documentation, or share it as a standalone file.
Cycle diagrams show repeating processes:
- Continuous improvement - PDCA / Deming cycle
- Product or project life cycles -
- Natural cycles - water, carbon, life cycles
- Business cycles - sales, marketing or customer loops
- Learning cycles - recurring stages of a method
Use a cycle diagram when the process repeats with no fixed end—like continuous improvement—so the loop is obvious. Use a flowchart when the process has a clear start, decisions and finish.