February 06, 2010
Toyota:Why, Oh Why?
Toyota Motor Corp’s president finally appeared in public to apologised yesterday ( 6 February 2010) for safety problems saying the automaker would bring in outside experts to review quality controls, a highly unusual action for a company that has epitomized world-beating industrial standards.
Let us read Reuters report.
“I would like to take this opportunity to apologize from the bottom of my heart for causing many of our customers concern after the recalls across several models in several regions,” Akio Toyoda, the grandson of Toyota’s founder.
Toyoda’s comments were his most extensive since the latest recall began in January. Toyota has issued two recalls since last November.
Investors were relieved that Toyota finally announced concrete steps to deal with the quality crisis. The company’s shares, which have taken a beating recently, ended 4.1 per cent higher at US$74.71 on the New York Stock Exchange yesterday. Since Jan 21, Toyota has lost US$30 billion (RM102 billion) or a fifth of its market value.
But in a sign the carmaker still faces serious problems, credit ratings agency Standard & Poor’s put Toyota and some of its suppliers on watch for a possible downgrade. S&P cited “increased concern over the potential negative impact on Toyota’s business profile of unfolding developments related to recent quality issues.”
Toyoda apologized for safety problems that have left the Japanese carmaker “in crisis”.
He said Toyota would strengthen its inspection process, respond faster to customer complaints and seek input from outside experts.
Toyoda also pledged to set up and oversee a quality improvement task force involving external experts monitoring quality management. It was not clear how the global quality management committee would function.
Turning to independent experts is “about as good as you can expect,” said UBS analyst Philippe Houchois.
“I’ve seen a lot of recalls, but I don’t remember seeing that step of getting an outside expert. That’s quite an innovative or aggressive approach to try to solve the problem,” he said.
Toyota, the world’s largest automaker, has recalled more than 8 million vehicles around the world for problems with accelerators. Episodes of unintended acceleration in Toyota vehicles have been linked to up to 19 crash deaths in the United States over the past decade.
Toyota is also mulling a recall of Prius, its top-selling hybrid, for a braking problem.
The company has estimated that lost production, lost sales, parts to fix problems, staff training and repairs to recalled vehicles will cost Toyota US$2 billion from January to the end of March.
The news conference came after US competitor Ford Motor Co readied a solution for braking problems on two of its hybrid models, the hybrid Fusion and Mercury Milan.
Until recently, the 77-year-old Toyota was considered the paragon of lean production, quality control and continuous improvement. But the crisis generated by the recalls and the way the company has handled itself publicly have led to widespread criticism. Toyoda, 53, bowed in apology after addressing the news conference and answered other questions, some in English, after an official tried to end the late-night session.
Toyoda became the company’s president last year, promising to steer it out of its worst downturn in history and bring greater transparency to its corporate culture.
The current crisis, surrounding accelerators produced by an American supplier, highlights a possible flaw in the company’s vaunted lean production system, analysts have said.
By reducing complexity from their products — for instance by cutting the number of suppliers and using common parts across different products — manufacturers who have followed the Toyota Way have cut costs and increased profitability — but left themselves terribly exposed to the unexpected.
“One of the ways Toyota has reduced costs in their lean program was commonality of parts,” said Alex Blanton, an analyst at Ingalls & Snyder.
“Well, if that part has a problem, then it affects many more models. If they’d been using a lot of different gas pedals for these models and they had problems with one, they wouldn’t have to shut down the company.”
In January, Toyota temporarily suspended US sales of eight models and halted production of the vehicles at five facilities in the United States and Canada.
Safety regulators in the United States and Japan are investigating a braking problem with Toyota’s latest version of the Prius, Japan’s top-selling car last year and an icon of green design that has lifted the public image of the whole company.
Japan’s transport minister said he had heard from ministry officials that Toyota would recall or voluntarily fix the automobiles affected, including those shipped overseas.
“Toyota’s response came up short from the perspective of its customers,” Transport Minister Seiji Maehara said.
Since its launch last May, Toyota has sold more than 300,000 of the newest version of the Prius worldwide, including around 200,000 in Japan, 103,200 in the United States and 29,000 in Europe.
Toyota’s and Ford’s hybrids capture the energy from braking to recharge an on-board battery to boost mileage from its gasoline engine.
Toyota Prius owners have complained that on bumpy roads and on ice, the regenerative brakes of the vehicle appear to slip and it lurches forward before the traditional brakes engage.
The US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said it has received 124 complaints from drivers of the third-generation Prius. The agency said that motorists have blamed four crashes on this problem.
Toyota and Ford have said that they have come up with software fixes for the problems.
Quality is everything when yuor are competing globally. Screw up once and you love goodwill and market share.
Will Toyota regain its position as numero uno automaker again? They have to work doubly hard, I guess.
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