Autocar

Ford reboot after CEO goes

Ford is redefining its future aims and reorganisi­ng its top brass in the wake of the departure last week of Mark Fields, who has been replaced as CEO by Jim Hackett

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Ford is overhaulin­g its management and product planning to accelerate the arrival of new models – such as a Nissan Qashqai rival – and self-driving technology after the surprise departure of CEO Mark Fields last week.

Jim Hackett, Fields’ replacemen­t, joined the Ford management board four years ago. He is said to be refocusing the top management ‘Business Plan Review’ (BPR) meeting towards future product and strategy rather than weekly problem solving.

Together with a senior management overhaul and a clearer focus on communicat­ing technology developmen­ts, Hackett will try to arrest Ford’s 40% share price decline, which prompted the end of Fields’ three-year reign as CEO, despite Ford forecastin­g profits this year of $9 billion (£6.95bn).

“You have to look at the share price as the main driving force in this decision,” a source told Autocar. Fields is also said to have, in the eyes of the board, lost focus on the current business while attempting to turn Ford into a ‘mobility services’ company.

The Hackett-led shakeup will put Ford of Europe president Jim Farley in charge of all selling activities as the new head of global markets. The president of Ford’s operations in the Americas, Joe Hinrichs, will take control of product developmen­t and manufactur­ing. Raj Nair will move from chief engineer to become president of Ford North America and Hau Thaitang, who was chief engineer on the 2005 Mustang, will lead global product developmen­t and purchasing. Ford of Europe COO Steven Armstrong will take over Farley’s former position.

Hackett’s move to overhaul its top management BPR meeting will change the focus of one of the major advances in the Fields/alan Mulally era, which has been credited with pulling Ford’s department­al silos into a common direction.

Significan­tly, it will free Ford’s top managers to concentrat­e on introducin­g self-driving technology, electrific­ation and new revenue streams from mobility services alongside new model launches.

Day-to-day operations, it is understood, will be handled by a secondary organisati­onal set-up.

There are no plans for Ford to follow General Motors and sell off its European arm because the division is now a valuable asset. After years in the doldrums, it has been making profits since 2015. It also engineers powertrain­s, platforms and models that are sold globally. “Selling Ford of Europe is not going to happen,” a source told Autocar.

Ford’s product planning process will be freed to better identify global trends, like the emergence of the B-segment SUV and C-segment crossover.

Under Fields and his predecesso­r, Mulally, Ford’s product planning was organised under the ‘One Ford’ banner to deliver individual models engineered to multiple global standards.

Hackett said: “What One Ford doesn’t do as well is deal with a lot of complex strategies, with many elements.”

Mainstream models such as the Fiesta and Focus thrived under the One Ford regime. Both are brilliant to drive and the Fiesta is consistent­ly the UK’S best-seller and recently outsold the Volkswagen Golf as Europe’s number one. One Ford has also delivered compelling performanc­e models such as the Focus RS, Mustang and GT.

But to make production, models had to be viable in all key markets — North America, Europe and Asia Pacific. As a result, developmen­t of spin-off models like B-segment SUVS has been patchy.

One view is that the complexity of global planning for One Ford models hampered decision making and encouraged ‘one size fits all’ vehicles.

Product planning on a global basis has certainly led to some below-par models such as the Ecosport SUV, engineered in Brazil, built in India and not up to European standards. The latest Ecosport is doing better and European sales were up 42% to 9200 in the first quarter of 2017, according to market analysts JATO. But rivals from Peugeot, Renault and Vauxhall-opel each outsell it by up to three to one.

To better match European expectatio­ns, production of the Ecosport will be moved from

 ??  ?? Mark Fields left Ford after three years as its chief executive
Mark Fields left Ford after three years as its chief executive
 ??  ?? Ecosport is regarded as a failure of the ‘One Ford’ product plan
Ecosport is regarded as a failure of the ‘One Ford’ product plan
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Ford intends to have a Level 4 autonomous car on sale by 2021
Ford intends to have a Level 4 autonomous car on sale by 2021

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