Discussion Assignment 2
Posted on September 23, 2015 (https://thethirdroad.com/?p=280) by ggerondeau
(https://thethirdroad.com/?author=1)
Starting in 2009, Toyota was hit by one of the biggest series of recalls in the
automotive history. Even though it was later proven that there was no intention from
Toyota to hide anything and that eventually it was established no defect affected the
electronics of the car, the damage to the company’s reputation and business was huge.
In 2007, Toyota had become the number one automotive maker in the world. This
fantastic continued growth was the result of its reputation on superior quality and
safety. A lot of literature had described the recipes of Toyota. It had become the
benchmark for almost every company in the world and a symbol of quality and
operational efficiency.
All of a sudden, particularly early 2010, everywhere in the world, the headline of the
news was about Toyota cars having become unreliable and Toyota having lost its way.
The impact was huge for Toyota in terms of sales loss that could be counted in
hundred thousands. But more importantly, the essence of Toyota, its reputation was
hit in what was the most important for customers, safety. As measured by Interbrand,
the brand value of Toyota decreased from 2008 to 2010, in just 2 years, by an
impressive 25% globally and lost 8 billions from 34 to 26 billions US$.
In 2014, Toyota brand value, still according to Interbrand, had more that recovered
from its pre-crisis level and achieved more than 42 billion dollars up 62% or 16 billions
US$ from 4 years before in a comfortable first position among automotive brands.
What made Toyota come back in the race?
I would like to bring here a perspective from inside as I experienced it of how, under
Akio Toyoda’s leadership, the company recovered.
How Toyota recovered from a huge crisis. What can be learned from it
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In 2010, I was in charge of marketing and product planning of Toyota in Europe at
TME (Toyota Motor Europe). In 2011, I was called to Japan to take the responsibility
of the global “brand project” which eventually became “brand strategy” in the
marketing arm of Toyota in Japan. I could witness the rebound from a privileged
position.
There were 3 phases of the recovery.
1) Go back to basic and communicate with customers and dealers:
What struck me during the crisis was that everybody stayed relatively calm. We knew
that the foundations and values of the company were still here. Toyota was about
contribution to society as I could witness everyday.
The first thing we did was to communicate a lot with our customers and dealers. We
had to explain in all transparency that some things had gone wrong in the company
but that the base, what had made Toyota so successful, had not disappeared. After the
peak of the crisis, we communicated using our real people to show that Toyota was
made of people really dedicated to quality. In Europe this campaign was called: “Your
Toyota Is My Toyota” (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0tuXDB-i7sU)
Akio Toyoda who had been appointed a year earlier at the helm of the company, went
in front of the congress to apologize and explain that Toyota was fully committing to
work transparently to reestablish its reputation.
What was very important is the reaction we got from our customers and dealers. They
fully supported the company during that period. Customers appreciated that we made
the effort to contact each of them individually. In fact if our ability to conquest new
customers was impacted, we did not lose any sales to our loyal customers at all.
Dealers remained very supportive and loyal too. Akio Toyoda likes recalling how he
was moved to tears during a long standing-ovation in front of the American dealers.
The famous internal motto, “customer first, dealer second, Toyota third” proved very
precious in this time.
2) Empower the regions:
Akio Toyoda had the feeling that the company had grown too big too fast and lost its
way in chasing volume and profit. He established a new organization to pilot quality
improvements. The base of this organization was to empower the regions and make
sure that once detected, any defect could be solved in the region and get the support of
headquarters if necessary. The function of regional Chief Quality Officer (CQO) was
established. Like-wise, regular organization to identify and cure the quality issues was
created. In a few months, the time to find and bring solutions to quality issues was
reduced dramatically. Rather than increasing the level of control, Akio Toyoda made
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the bet that trusting people would be more efficient and it worked. On a regular basis,
Akio gathered the CQO to make sure that they had the necessary support from HQ’s.
Akio Toyoda decided to stop the increase of manufacturing capacity and froze all new
projects of plants. He decided to dedicate temporally a big part of engineers to quality
issues with the impact that some projects of new cars would be delayed. By doing so,
he clearly showed where the priority of the company was. Restoring quality and
confidence was more important than growth or profit.
3) Improve the brand:
A very important move that is less known partly because of when it was
announced was the clarification of the company vision. Akio Toyoda considered this
was a key milestone of the company recovery. We needed to go to basic and define a
guidepost so that everyone at Toyota could make decisions according to the company
vision. It was unveiled on the 9 of March of 2011 two days before the terrible
earthquake and following tsunami that struck the north east part of Japan. The link is
here. (http://www2.toyota.co.jp/en/news/11/03/0309_1.html) The company vision
reemphasized the values and foundations of the brand: quality and safety first,
contribution to society and continuous improvement. But it brought what Akio Toyoda
likes calling his personal seasoning: exceeding customers’ expectation and bring a
smile on their face. In short, he brought a customer driven spice of emotion in the
company policy. It was later summarized in the Japanese onomatopoeia: “Waku-Doki”
or the feeling of excitement when you anticipate a great experience. It is on this base
that, in 2011, we started establishing a brand architecture with the regions, under the
initiative of Hiroshi Takada, head of Toyota Sales and Marketing after the proposal of
Bob Peterson. The goal was to define our own brand journey. The first 18 months, we
received the support of Jim Stengel, a marketing champion well known for his
conviction that companies need a purpose. We, collectively with the head of regional
marketing functions, defined our brand promise, which KPI’s we wanted to focus on,
which common methods and rituals were to be established, which actions we wanted
to collaborate on and what our ideal situation should be. This idea of “freedom within
a frame” was of upmost importance. We defined the frame collectively, the role of the
leader was to listen, understand, analyze, suggest and inspire rather than to decide.
Each region would decide to implement its own plans following the common frame
freely. Transparency in the group, not control, had become the rule and the level of
emulation and communication became very high. All the elements of the
communication, from digital to motor-show, from each region’s tagline to hybrid
communication, Toyota was fighting to bring more emotion and eventually a smile on
customers’ face.
What I learned from those five years had a huge impact on my life and on how I think
big companies should be managed. It will be a big part of my book.
I would like to summarize in three key points:
th
Page 3 of 7How Toyota recovered from a huge crisis. What can be learned from it | The Third Road
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• All organisations should have a purpose that is beyond profit and growth but
contribute to improve the world
• Company need to have a clear strategy and this strategy cannot be centrally
defined only
• Management should be left to operations in the frame of the strategy.
Transparency is more important than control
The model of pure consensual bottom-up approach relying on operational efficiency to
outperform competition has gone, especially when competition is becoming multi
form. The model of top-down approach relying on control to ensure implementation
does not work either. Ideas come from everywhere and speed has become key. It is
time for companies to embrace the “Third Road” of management.
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