Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Toyota Announces reforms to get back in track: Are they going to be able to do it? Sources: AdAge & Jaffe Juice TV

Toyota President Announces Reforms to Get Back on Track

Car Maker Will Appoint Chief Quality Officers, Rely More on Onboard Data Event Recorders

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TOKYO (AdAge.com) -- Conceding that breakneck expansion led to Toyota Motor Corp.'s recall crisis, company President Akio Toyoda outlined reforms meant to get quality back on track, including more active use of the car's so-called black box crash data recorder, Automotive News reports today.

Akio Toyoda
Toyota
Akio Toyoda
Mr. Toyoda, grandson of the car maker's founder, also indicated he won't sit before congressional hearings into the quality lapses that have triggered recalls of more than 8.5 million vehicles since last fall. Yoshimi Inaba, the head of Toyota's U.S. operations, is best suited to testify before the lawmakers because he is most familiar with the local U.S. market, Mr. Toyoda said.

"Mr. Inaba and our executives in North America have my highest level of trust, and I am sure they are well equipped to respond," Mr. Toyoda, 53, said at a news conference today. "I will focus on internal reform to improve quality and support Inaba from our headquarters." Mr. Toyoda said that he still plans to visit the U.S. to rally workers, dealers and suppliers. The details and timing of the trip are still being worked out, he said.

Mr. Toyoda is under pressure to visit the U.S., historically Toyota's most-profitable market, in the wake of a recall emergency that began there last fall and has snowballed to a global level. Among the recalls were two massive actions to address unintended acceleration in Toyota and Lexus cars and another to fix an antilock braking glitch in the Prius.

Mr. Inaba is to testify Feb. 24 before the House Oversight Committee. The hearing comes amid a fresh investigation by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration into whether Toyota acted too slowly in announcing its recalls or if it failed to include enough vehicles.

A congressional Republican spokesman said today that the House Oversight Committee will ask "all the right questions" of Toyota.

"I would think given the tremendous scrutiny Mr. Toyoda and his company are under, he would have seized the opportunity to personally appear and use the hearing as a forum to move forward," Kurt Bardella, spokesman for U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., the ranking member of the House Oversight Committee, said in an e-mail.

"Obviously, Mr. Toyoda is not as eager to give Congress and the American people answers as we first thought. It's telling that the only way he'll come before the Oversight Committee is by formal invitation."

In Tokyo, Toyoda outlined several new measures meant to improve quality. The automaker will:

  • Appoint a chief quality officer for each geographic region.
  • Expand the network of local technical offices to conduct on-site troubleshooting.
  • Install brake-override systems on all future models worldwide.
  • Make better use of the onboard data event recorders to analyze accidents.

The overhaul builds on more general improvements outlined by Mr. Toyoda earlier this month. Mr. Toyoda said he would chair a newly created Special Committee for Global Quality.

The regional chief quality officers will sit on that committee and be responsible for rounding up customer feedback so the company can react more quickly when problems arise.

The global committee will hold its first meeting March 30. Toyota will also equip all models worldwide with a brake-override system that will cut power to the engine if there is a conflicting signal between the gas pedal and brake. It had already announced that all new cars in North America would be getting the technology.

Finally, Toyota said it will more actively use the data collected in vehicle event data recorders. These devices are similar to the black boxes on aircraft and record information, such as vehicle and engine speed, in the seconds immediately before a crash. "By reading the data, we will be able to identify causes more quickly," Shinichi Sasaki, exec VP in charge of quality, said at the press conference. "I think this will result in substantial improvement in our analytical capability."

Mr. Toyoda said setting up new technical offices, beginning with the U.S., will enable field engineers to assess customer complaints quickly and nip problems in the bud. The goal is to be able to conduct on-site inspections within 24 hours of any reported malfunction.

Also on tap: "Customer First" training centers to inculcate local workers in "The Toyota Way."

Mr. Toyoda said human resource training hasn't kept pace with the car maker's explosive growth over the past decade. The world's largest automaker lost sight of matching production to actual demand, a keystone tenet of the company's business strategy, he said.

"With the rapid expansion of production, perhaps we weren't able to develop appropriate engineering skills and human resources," Mr. Toyoda said. "The basic rule of the Toyota Production System is build only as many cars as can match demand, and we ourselves broke that rule."


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1 Comment
Subscribe to comments on: Toyota President Announces Reforms to Get Back on Track
By jfgoodsman | Gardiner, ME February 17, 2010 04:02:41 pm:
Have you seen the zombie ads they are running? I wrote about that today and some of their others misplays:http://www.cargurus.com/blog/2010/02/17/the-toyotathon-continues. Incredible how inept at PR these guys are.

Toyota Announces


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JJTV #75 - Toyota Recall Redux

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1 comment:

Unknown said...

Hola, Buenos días: tengo que reconocer que estuvo excelente la presentación y su contenido muy completo.

Gracias y saludos.