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Posts Tagged ‘change’

Toyota and the Fish

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

There is an old saying that ”A fish rots from the head down.” This saying gets to the heart of why and where many organizations fail. This of course being leadership. As the Toyota story continues to unfold, I’ve been pondering from where is the Toyota fish rotting? From the head (corporate & leadership), from the tail (dealers), or from the midsection (manufacturing & engineering)? Let’s take a brief look at some of these areas.

  • Without a doubt, Toyota’s manufacturing system has been untouched. It continues to be the crown jewel.
  • In most respects, even engineering hasn’t been implicated. Granted, Toyota’s problems have ties to engineering, but engineering doesn’t appear to be at fault. The reason being, engineering is dependent on continuous and timely feedback so it can adjust, refine and improve the system. It’s apparent that engineering has been every bit as much in the dark about Toyota’s problems as is the customer.
  • And what about Toyota’s dealers? Although there have been stories of arrogance (Toyota is the best…), it doesn’t appear that dealers have been at the source of the problem. Maybe somewhat complacent, but not the source.

So where does the root of Toyota’s problems lie? Here I started to compress every news article I’ve read over the past couple of months (and believe me, it is a long list). After a few days of pondering the answer, problem identification is becoming clear, it’s the corporate mothership and its leadership. Yes, a fish rots from the head down seems to apply. Let me present a few of the scenarios at play here.

  1.  In today’s Wall Street Journal, they have a story titled “Toyota Woes Put Focus On Black Box.” The story delves into the black box (similar to the black box of an airplane) that sits inside every car and how Toyota defies releasing the information that lies within. The WSJ goes on to state, “U.S. auto makers General Motors Co., Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Group LLC have provided their black-box data formats to Bosch Diagnostics, a unit of German auto supplier Robert Bosch GmbH that makes tools that download crash logs from vehicles made by those auto makers. Those tools are widely used by police, crash investigators and attorneys, and the auto makers don’t question the accuracy of the data retrieved with them.”
  2. Toyota has been dragging their feet. “Toyota’s relationship with industry regulators, as The New York Times, was a “kabuki dance” that even involved an unprecedented trip to Japan by National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Secretary Ray LaHood. Toyota execs were reportedly “dragging things out” and “offering excuses that didn’t make any sense.”
  3. Another WSJ article discusses the Japanese culture and its relation to the problem. “In Japan there is a proverb, “If it stinks, put a lid on it.” Alas, this seems to have been Toyota’s approach to its burgeoning safety crisis, initially denying, minimizing and mitigating the problems involving brakes that don’t brake and accelerators that have a mind of their own. President Akio Toyoda, grandson of the founder, was MIA for two weeks and the company has appeared less than forthcoming about critical safety issues, risking the trust of its customers world-wide.”

As stated earlier, the where does the fish rot scenario is an important question to answer, because it is the starting point from which change must occur. My analysis points to Toyota corporate and its leadership team as the problem, since they’ve been the willing agents that have embraced silent problems along the way. And this creates a significant challenge to Toyota, and their recovery. How can an organization change, now that the rules of the game are quickly changing. How can a culture or secrecy be transformed to one of transparency overnight? How can an organization of complexity be transformed into one of simplicity? How can an organization that conforms evolve into an organization that is agile and willing to speak up?

These are the issues facing Toyota and is why Toyota’s future is so uncertain.

GM’s a Changin?

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

If you were to look up the term Silent Problem, the iconic symbol for GM would be there. Over the past 30+ years, GM has been a company where culture trumped everything. Well last week, GM finally took a couple baby steps to shake up the team, and hopefully begin to change the culture.  A report over at Bloomberg titled, Whitacre’s GM Culture Fix Moves Up Younger Executives, Women  provides a few insights from various analysts and consultants.  Here they are:

  • “It’s a signal they are serious about getting younger people in and running the place right,” said Thomas Stallkamp, 63, industrial partner at buyout firm Ripplewood Holdings LLC and a member of the team that helped restructure Chrysler Corp. in the 1990s. “This is a culture that was so inbred, so genteel, people were afraid to speak up.”
  • “Most of what has occurred this week at General Motors is about speeding things up and making people more accountable for the decisions they make,” John Wolkonowicz, an analyst at consultant IHS Global Insight in Lexington, Massachusetts.”
  • “Almost by definition, any change is probably good for the company because GM has resisted change so heavily in the past,” said John Casesa, managing partner of consultant Casesa Shapiro Group LLC in New York. “GM’s resistance to change is one of the key reasons for its decline.”
  • “The speed these changes were made with shows this is not the lumbering GM we’ve known in the past,” Michelle Krebs, senior analyst at Santa Monica, California-based researcher Edmunds.com, said in a telephone interview. “It shows that they’re truly trying to transform the company.”

In my book Without Warning, I include a list of seven warning signs that a silent problem is present. Guess what? GM has been continuously inflicted with all seven warning signs. GMs been a place where silence was practiced and Without Warning Events occurred with predictable regularity. The first step for GM in changing the culture is stupidly simple.

         Give every employee a voice!

And then listen. Only then can an organization like GM create and sustain an environement for change.

Bottom Line: GM is an excellent example of what happens when silent problems go unresolved and begin to take over the organization. In a previous blog pose titled “Do Silent Problems Impact Business Performance” I illustrate how silent problems have a direct correlation to business performance.

Access To The Best

Monday, October 26th, 2009

Do you have an inquisitive mind? If you do, I’m certain that from time to time you look at a business experiencing economic hardship and wonder, “How could that happen? They have access to the best talent the world has to offer. They have access to the top consultants… the top financial analysts… the top bankers… the most efficient suppliers…  The list goes on and on.  And then you realize, none of this matters. Simply having “access to the best” is not enough. Because culture has the ability and capacity to trump change. In effect, culture can just about kill anything it wants to, if it so chooses. This is why leaders must build cultures that embrace change, rather than killing it.

 A case in point is illustrated by Steve Rattner, the ex-car czar who helped orchestrate the bailout for the Detroit automakers. Here are a few of the comments from a Huffington Post article.

Everyone knew Detroit’s reputation for insular, slow-moving cultures. Even by that low standard, I was shocked by the stunningly poor management that we found, particularly at GM, where we encountered, among other things, perhaps the weakest finance operation any of us had ever seen in a major company. GM’s board of directors was “utterly docile in the face of mounting evidence of a looming disaster” and former GM chairman and chief executive Rick Wagoner set a tone of “friendly arrogance” that permeated the company, Rattner wrote. “Certainly Rick and his team seemed to believe that virtually all of their problems could be laid at the feet of some combination of the financial crisis, oil prices, the yen-dollar exchange rate and the UAW,” Rattner wrote. “We were shocked, even beyond our low expectations, by the poor state of both GM and Chrysler.

Although Rattner’s comments are recent, one doesn’t need to search too far to find further evidence leading to GMs demise.

“We have vastly underestimated how deeply ingrained are the organizational and cultural rigidities that hamper our ability to execute.” Elmer Johnson

What’s interesting about Johnson’s comment, it was made in 1987.

Bottom Line: Having “access to the best” is not a competitive advantage, nor is it a winning strategy. At times, it can even be a silent problem. Developing an organization that works efficiently, effectively and can leverage the talents within will win in the long run.

What are you doing to leverage your talent resources?

Be the one to see it coming!

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Without Warning - Rondey Johnson

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