FIAT news... only slightly off topic | FerrariChat

FIAT news... only slightly off topic

Discussion in 'Ferrari Discussion (not model specific)' started by spirot, Oct 26, 2006.

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  1. spirot

    spirot F1 World Champ

    Dec 12, 2005
    15,113
    Atlanta
    Full Name:
    Tom Spiro
    This was in todays Wall Street Journal.... thoght it was interesting....Di Montezemolo is Chairman... seems like everything he touches goes golden!!!!


    Auto Outsider Gets Fiat Going

    By GABRIEL KAHN and STEPHEN POWER
    October 26, 2006; Page A1

    TURIN, Italy -- At the headquarters of Fiat SpA here, an auto industry outsider is engineering a turnaround of a company considered the biggest mess in the industry two years ago.

    He's doing it with an in-your-face taunt: The leaders of many of the world's largest auto firms have lost their way, says Chief Executive Sergio Marchionne. If you're going to fix a broken car company, call in an amateur.


    When Fiat hired him in June 2004, the company acknowledged it was just months away from running out of cash. It had lost about $2.4 billion the year before. A four-year-old alliance with General Motors Corp. was on the rocks.

    Mr. Marchionne had never worked in the auto industry. He was running a century-old Swiss company that inspected and certified goods moving in trade. He was Fiat's fifth CEO in three years. Labor leaders and analysts figured there would soon be a sixth.

    Today, Fiat is on a tear. Sales were up 19% in the first nine months of this year. Its auto business is profitable. The stock has doubled since a year ago.

    "All of this sounds like a miracle," Mr. Marchionne said at an industry conference in June. "But it is not. And it is explainable."

    The newcomer mocked the auto-industry dogma that factory closings were the answer to the industry's problems. Instead, he took a knife to the bureaucracy.

    He bucked the standard industry practice of hoarding one's best technology. Mr. Marchionne pushed to sell as many of Fiat's engines and other parts as he could, even to competitors.


    He boasted that Fiat at first would be selling fewer cars, not more, as he stamped out steep discounts. They are a common practice in the industry, particularly in the U.S., where GM and Ford Motor Co. have often pushed cheap financing to keep sales up. Mr. Marchionne figured that though such promotions buoyed Fiat's market share, they widened its losses and cheapened the brand.

    He also insisted that designers and engineers radically speed the process of bringing out a new model, skipping the step of building a working prototype. The result was to shave six months off the standard design-to-market time of 24 months or more.

    Finally, instead of seeking a rescue through a broad alliance -- as Renault SA and Nissan Motor Co. have, and as GM considered doing -- Fiat has pursued smaller, targeted joint ventures.

    Fiat's turnaround isn't finished, and analysts caution against overstating it. Much of its sales surge reflects the success of just one model, a small, sporty sedan called the Grande Punto. Many analysts doubt Fiat can ever fully overcome the hurdle of being a builder of small cars, on which margins are thin, in a high-cost place like Europe. "We believe that Fiat is an overvalued turnaround story in which the market is likely to lose faith," wrote one analyst, Stephen Cheetham of Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., this month.

    Yet it's clear Mr. Marchionne's unconventional approach is producing results so far. He maintains that his overhaul has revolutionized the culture in a way that will keep the company competitive in the long term, even against lean Asian rivals. Besides its main unit, Fiat Auto, the company makes Iveco trucks, Case New Holland farm equipment and two expensive car brands that aren't part of Fiat Auto, Ferrari and Maserati. Although Fiat's flagship brand left the American market years ago, Ferraris and Maseratis continue to be sold in the US.

    The auto industry normally cultivates its executive talent from within. But the bleak conditions in some corners of the industry have lent appeal to the idea of an outsider who can shake things up with new ideas. Ford has also gone outside for a CEO, hiring Boeing Co. executive Alan Mulally.

    When Mr. Marchionne arrived at Fiat, many expected him to use its financial crisis as a lever to force unions to accept a factory shutdown. Fiat's European factories were running at just 60% of capacity, analysts estimate, far below the 80% to 90% thought needed for profitable operation. Other companies, such as GM and Ford, are attacking their woes through extensive plant closings and worker buyouts.

    But Mr. Marchionne pledged not to shut any of Fiat's Italian factories, even a chronically inefficient one in Sicily that was slated for closure under prior management. One special situation made this easier. An Italian law permits an industrial company that's financially on the ropes to send workers home temporarily and pay only a portion of their salary. Still, Mr. Marchionne's decision not to close any factories astonished industry analysts and even fellow Fiat executives.

    Labor is only 6% to 7% of the cost of making a car, Mr. Marchionne told a group of industry insiders in June. "Therefore," he said, "the real reason for large operating losses at Fiat Auto must be found elsewhere." He figured that the industry's constant focus cutting factory payrolls was an excuse to avoid tackling tougher problems.

    He looked to the management ranks. Fiat's controlling shareholders are the Agnelli family, known for style and formality. This sensibility was mirrored, to some degree, in the Fiat hierarchy. Executives who worked in the same hall would schedule appointments to speak to each other through their secretaries.

    That wasn't Mr. Marchionne's style. An intense man who rarely wears a tie, he spends much of the day when in his Turin office in nonstop meetings, smoking a steady stream of Kents, often with Bach playing in the background. At his first major outing as CEO, in July 2004, Mr. Marchionne was blunt about Fiat's management. It was "inward looking," he told analysts and journalists, and its approach to business "needs to change and change drastically."

    He said Fiat, which was selling 30% fewer cars than a few years earlier, no longer needed the same number of managers. Of more than 700 at the car unit, 30% were sent packing, for an annual saving of about $160 million. At the corporate level, he dismantled a 300-person management layer that monitored the company's truck, tractor and car units.


    Fiat's Grande Punto
    "It showed we've taken responsibility from the top for the problems," says the head of human resources, Francesco Garello. "We haven't put the blame on the factory workers but on the decision makers. That had an enormous cultural impact."

    While laying managers off, Mr. Marchionne promoted others. Soon after arriving, he knocked on the door of Luca De Meo, director of Fiat's Lancia car brand. "He walked into my office and said, 'Who are you?'" says Mr. De Meo. The two talked for 90 minutes about the company's problems.

    Weeks later, Mr. De Meo was put in charge of the core Fiat brand, even though the 39-year-old had been at Fiat less than three years. "He hadn't been with the organization long enough to pick up any bad habits," Mr. Marchionne says.

    Mr. De Meo espoused the unorthodox approach. He hired consultants from Swedish retailer Ikea to give stodgy dealerships an airy, consumer-friendly feel.

    But Fiat faced a roadblock. An alliance it had made with GM in 2000, as a way to catapult itself into the orbit of the world's largest car maker, had turned acrimonious, with both sides threatening lawsuits.

    In the deal, GM had taken a 20% equity stake in Fiat Auto and agreed that if things went badly, Fiat Auto could sell the rest of itself to GM. At the time, with Fiat healthy, no one expected this clause to matter much. But by 2004, with Fiat on the ropes, GM worried that the Italian company might exercise the clause and force GM to absorb some $8.8 billion of Fiat debt. Mr. Marchionne, at a meeting with GM CEO Richard Wagoner in January 2005, insisted that GM pay to get out of what was in effect a put option. Mr. Wagoner agreed to pay $2 billion.

    The cash gave Fiat some breathing room, but the end of the alliance left it a pint-size player in the global auto game. Mr. Marchionne gave the manager who had overseen the GM relationship a new mission: Find some new alliances, but narrower ones that would plug Fiat's weaknesses and leverage its strengths. He told the executive, Alfredo Altavilla, to steer clear of equity investments, for a simple reason: "We had no money."

    They also didn't have much respect. Mr. Altavilla recalls that as he talked with industry executives, they kept asking, "Will you still be around in six months? Will you be able to supply spare parts in three years?"

    But Fiat had some strong technology to offer, including a highly efficient 1.3-liter diesel engine. Mr. Altavilla signed a deal to produce small cars jointly with Ford, at a Fiat plant in Poland. Ford would get a small car powered by Fiat's engine and built on a Fiat platform. Fiat, in effect, would get to sell the use of some of its technology and facilities, collecting more revenue from its plants.

    Most car makers hoard their best technology rather than let rivals have access to it. Mr. Marchionne thought that was "crazy," says Mr. Altavilla, figuring that "your competitor will just go to somebody else to buy" something equivalent.

    Mr. Altavilla has signed nine deals, helping Fiat both to widen its model lineup and enter new markets. One arrangement is with the car division of Russian steelmaker OAO Severstal, which will sell Fiats through its dealership network in Russia. Another is with Turkish auto maker Tofas and France's PSA Peugeot Citroën SA to make a small cargo vehicle. By next year, the fast-growing Indian car market will include two brands equipped with Fiat's small diesel engine: cars from Fiat and Tata Motors Ltd. in Mumbai.

    Mr. Marchionne was baffled by what he says is the industry's tendency to be "capital happy" -- rolling the dice on costly new models without first doing lots of market research. He says this habit was especially bad at Fiat: "We only listened to the customers after the cars were launched."

    The result was sales projections that could be badly off the mark. Five years ago, Fiat launched its Stilo model, expecting it to sell as many as 360,000 a year. It peaked at 160,000 in 2002. The result was huge excess production capacity and parking lots full of unsold cars. Moving them required steep discounts that cannibalized sales of other models.

    Mr. Marchionne told product-development people to sharply understate sales projections. Instead of designing a model that could make money only if it sold 300,000 a year, they had to design it to be profitable if it sold half that many. It was up to the designers and engineers to figure out a way.

    At the same time, he required more market-testing, even of car interiors. On the Grande Punto, he approved a bright orange interior even though he hated it, because consumer focus groups liked it.

    When Mr. Marchionne arrived, Fiat Auto's engineering and design department had five independent units and two international divisions, each developing products on its own. There was little communication or synergy, and morale was abysmal, says Harald Wester, a new product-development chief the CEO hired.

    Fiat was preparing to replace the Stilo with a model called the Bravo, of a size similar to compacts in the U.S. Mr. Wester says the Bravo was "mediocre," had no "wow factor." He ordered it redesigned, a move that engineers said would mean a six-month delay in its launch. No delays, Mr. Wester retorted. In fact, he demanded, the Bravo must be launched six months earlier than planned.

    To do so meant adopting an entirely new engineering process that skipped the step of building prototypes. "A healthy company would never have thought about doing it like this," says Mr. Wester, but "extraordinary situations lead to extraordinary solutions." He says Mr. Marchionne approved the plan, except for one change: "He asked us to deliver it one month earlier." The Bravo is set to go into production next month.

    Labor unions at Fiat have a history of strikes and even violent confrontation with management, but Mr. Marchionne's openness appears to have softened attitudes a bit. Recently, he stood before hundreds of union officials to answer their questions. "We had never seen anything like that before at Fiat," says Giorgio Airaudo, secretary of the Turin section of a left-wing union, FIOM-CGIL.

    The company and unions operated for years with no contract after the last one expired. For 10 years, unions had been pushing for a new one. They were astounded when Mr. Marchionne proposed a new one, with a clear formula for bonuses, which would be based on quality, productivity and financial results. It was signed in June.

    Mr. Marchionne concedes that Fiat isn't out of the woods. But its progress so far has led to a surge of self-confidence and a change in how the company is regarded. "We were considered the biggest losers in Europe," says Mr. Wester. Now, "my people don't get teased at the bar anymore for being from Fiat."
     
  2. No Doubt

    No Doubt Seven Time F1 World Champ

    May 21, 2005
    72,740
    Vegas+Alabama
    Full Name:
    Mr. Sideways

    Whenever Management loses Billions, you can bet that it hasn't been Managing...
     
  3. bushwhacker

    bushwhacker In Memoriam

    May 25, 2006
    8,883
    Phoenix Az.
    Full Name:
    Dennis
    Spirot, ND........
    What do you think? Will Fiat make a run at the American market again anytime soon or wait until they're a little more solvent if ever?
    Who knows, the return of Fiat to the U.S market with a Dino/Lancia Stratos type sports car could be interesting, especially with all the brand heritage and recognition they have. A successful performance flagship with entry into a world racing venue could cause alot of interest in the brand, but, of course a global marketing/racing effort costs $$$$$, which could be well spent to make the brand visible again...who knows?
    Remember when there were a ca-zillion 124's around? It was a good entry level sports car, kind of a utility, frills free sports car for it's time if you didn't have the $$$$ for a 911, Jag or Alpha.
    It might be refreshing to see an entry level Italian based sports car on the market again or for that matter as previously mentioned a high end racing based breed for brand recognition.i.e. Lancia Stratos?
    Either way, they would have to commit to resolving any quality issues to compete with the existing market.
    Maybe they will wait on the sidelines and see what happens with Alpha's re-entry into the market here?
     
  4. No Doubt

    No Doubt Seven Time F1 World Champ

    May 21, 2005
    72,740
    Vegas+Alabama
    Full Name:
    Mr. Sideways
    I don't know what Fiat will do, but their new Director pointed out in the article above that their steep discounts on their slow-selling models were canibalizing sales from their other offerings.

    Well, a clever man in that situation would say that if you have to offer such steep discounts to move that much excess inventory, why not dump those cars into a market where those sales wouldn't canibalize your other car sales.

    He might say, "Hey! We aren't in the U.S. market, so lets ship all of these models over to the U.S. and let them go at fire-sale prices. We don't have to be in the U.S. full-time, just there in waves when we have excess inventory."

    Or the same might be said about India or China or South America.

    Discounting their excess inventory to sell them soley in Europe is a lazy strategy thought up by tired, old Management...and it cost them at least $2.4 Billion in one year alone.

    Same for running factories at 60% capacity. A clever director will ramp production up to 100% while lowering prices and entering the new markets required to move the inventory.

    The opposite approach, that of closing factories and shrinking your firm, is not a sustainable strategy long-term.

    We are in an Age of productivity gains where annual price increases are anachronistic. Look at computers, watches, clothes, and telephone service...all are seeing annual declines or at least steady pricing.

    Exceptions should be in areas (pun intended) such as real estate where new inventory simply can't be created cheaply (i.e. we aren't making more land).

    Productivity also means that it now requires far fewer managers to oversee production. Upper and Middle management at firm after firm must be slashed...then slashed again. Management is now the bloat, not labor.
     
  5. dretceterini

    dretceterini F1 Veteran

    Apr 28, 2004
    7,289
    Etceterini Land
    Full Name:
    Dr.Stuart Schaller
    will actually come back (other than the handfull of 8Cs), as they are too small to compete. Alfa now only makes about 150,000 cars a year. How can they compete with the likes of Audi or even MazdaSpeed?
     
  6. pastmaster

    pastmaster Formula Junior

    Feb 5, 2006
    890
    Alma, Michigan USA
    Hello,

    Just an opinion from an old geezer who has seen the growth and decline of the automobile market.

    Fiat has no heritage among the modern new buyer. They know the Asian Makers and their fine products and reputations. I don't think Fiat can support a modern Dealer Network to play with the Asian, including Chinese presence, when it fully develops.

    I think the Spot Marketing of cars may work for a short term, but then what do you do? It's a tough nut to crack.

    Ciao...Paolo
     
  7. alfa190

    alfa190 Rookie

    Feb 16, 2004
    25
    Warrenton, MO
    Full Name:
    Philip Dean, MD
    The MAIN reason FIAT cannot bring cars to USA is due to Liberal environmental NAZIS, remember?
    Jill Clayburg or Claybrook..what ever..the fat nanny lady who makes us do exhaust emissions on lawnmowers next!
    Remember the nanny state-DEMS are reason no FIATs here!

    be careful WHO you vote for..how about vote for FREEDOM?
     
  8. Bullfighter

    Bullfighter Two Time F1 World Champ
    Lifetime Rossa Owner

    Jan 26, 2005
    22,596
    Gates Mills, Ohio
    Full Name:
    Jon
    Former Fiat X1/9 owner here, and a young geezer:

    Fiat has a horrid reputation in the U.S. and would have a hard time coming back here, especially with everyone's love of the Asian brands. The Strada, Brava, X1/9 and Spider all rusted in morning dew, leaked and dropped flimsy trim pieces regularly (ask me how I know...)

    Even if quality is 75% of what Toyota can do, perception counts for a lot. Just ask GM and Ford, who sold Vegas, Citations, Pintos and Fairmounts here and can't figure out why people think foreign marques are still better...

    The fact is there really is no Italian car industry here (sorry, Ferrari's are magnificent but a few thousand cars a year is a footnote.) There is no dealer network, as mentioned, and that is enough to dissuade most people from considering a Fiat.

    Not sure what Joan Claybrook has to with keeping Fiat out. If a huge company like Fiat can't figure out how to install airbags and decent crash protection, and produce an economy car that doesn't spew smog, while Daewoo, Kia and Hyundai can do it in $10K cars, then there's the problem.
     
  9. No Doubt

    No Doubt Seven Time F1 World Champ

    May 21, 2005
    72,740
    Vegas+Alabama
    Full Name:
    Mr. Sideways

    I agree. The rules are the same for everyone, so blaming the rules rather than Management makes no sense...it's right out of Who Moved My Cheese.
     
  10. Artvonne

    Artvonne F1 Veteran

    Oct 29, 2004
    5,379
    NWA
    Full Name:
    Paul
    Could you imagine a new old Fiat Spyder? Not a retro POS like everyone is clamoring onto, but a "real" Spyder? Same exact chassis of yesterday, but modernised, strengthened, and reinforced and given new technology suspension, brakes and wheels as well as uprated safety features with a modernised and potent twin cam??? A paddle shift version might even sell to Females.

    They would sell millions. Especially if they bought up Abarth and sold aftermarket goodies like you now find for ricers and Miatas.
     
  11. No Doubt

    No Doubt Seven Time F1 World Champ

    May 21, 2005
    72,740
    Vegas+Alabama
    Full Name:
    Mr. Sideways
    In 10 years there will be specialty companies out the wazoo taking either old car bodies or molding new ones and having the whole thing run on electrics...and that will be considered cool then.
     

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