Author Topic: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.  (Read 2281 times)

Offline aquadorhj

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Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« on: February 13, 2009, 03:08:49 pm »
http://www.autoobserver.com/2009/02/hyundai-boss-blasts-auto-industry-says-its-viewed-with-contempt.html#more

Cole's note summary:
Auto industry sucks.  time to change.


Hyundai Boss Blasts Auto Industry, Says It's 'Viewed With Contempt'
February 11, 2009

By Bill Visnic

Hyundai John Krafcik - 281.JPGCHICAGO -- Telling an assembled crowd of media and auto-industry representatives here for the Chicago auto show that although the global economic meltdown certainly helped to destruct the auto industry in the U.S., John Krafcik, acting president and CEO of Hyundai Motor America, said the industry itself is largely to blame because of its past bad behavior.

And now the day of reckoning with consumers (and legislators) has arrived.

Avowing the auto industry is "viewed with contempt" in the U.S., Krafcik dealt out a staccato string of candid and hard-hitting tough-love messages in a speech to open the media days of the show.

There was palpable discomfort in the room as Krafcik criticized his own industry for earning a perception of being "slow, dim-witted" and "typically unresponsive to consumer and environmental needs."

Krafcik took to task the auto industry for fighting environmental progress.

"For the most part, our industry has a history of opposing environmental and safety legislation -- sometimes with the force of science and good sense behind us, such as the early California [electric vehicle] mandate, but other times with a much weaker platform of defense."

He also said dealers and their sales force "have an immense image problem with their consumer base. Thanks in great part to manufacturer programs that put more focus on moving the iron than consistently delighting our customers, we have reached the point where, frankly, Americans would rather go to the dentist than visit a car dealer."

Not exactly the happy and upbeat Chamber of Commerce speech typical for the unofficial kickoff of this historically important and dealer-oriented auto show.

Instead, Krafcik continued his expressive, critical and uncompromising speech by saying the auto industry needs to own up to its shortcomings -- and admit there is truth to most of the negative perceptions of the industry.

Saying turning around the industry "will require some revolutionary thinking," Krafcik said the emphasis needs to continue on quality and proving that "we listen to our customers and respond to their needs."

Not new advice, that -- but he followed up with: "Skimping on quality to hit a cost target is a mistake, in my opinion. We'd all be better off as an industry if every manufacturer missed every cost target on every new-vehicle launch by $100. If we took that money and sunk it into terrific interiors with soft touch points and great vehicle dynamics, I promise you we'd all get that money back through customer satisfaction, loyalty and goodwill."

Krafcik also took the fuel-efficiency bull by the horns, tacitly admitting the industry has resisted genuine advance on that front: "Another revolutionary step we can take is to embrace improved fuel economy as an indisputable social good.

"There's really no point in arguing about the veracity of climate change when you stop to consider the finite supply of oil and the turmoil that our present consumption habit is fueling in the Middle East. It's abundantly clear that improved fuel economy makes sense for our industry and our country."

Krafcik launched another volley, this one about executive compensation.

Calling executive compensation "a hot-button issue," he suggests the auto industry get in front of the matter in a kind of libertarian "opportunity for revolutionary thinking."

How? "What if our industry was the first to exercise a more inclusive form of capitalism that voluntarily restrained executive compensation to a reasonable multiple of average employee salary?"

Krafcik also suggested a uniform code of conduct regarding gifts, meals and business entertainment.

"It's clear that we need to be innovative in our responses to these revolutionary times," Krafcik concluded.

"It will be a different industry than it was in the past -- it has to be. It's time to take notice that the world has changed. And now, right now, is our time to change."

Photo by Hyundai Motor America

1 - John Krafcik

Biography

John Krafcik was recently named acting president and chief executive officer of Hyundai Motor America. Previously, he served as vice president of Product Development and Strategic Planning. Krafcik joined Hyundai in April 2004. Prior to holding that position he had worked at Ford Motor Company.

Krafcik holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Mechanical Engineering from Stanford University and a Master of Science degree in Management from the MIT Sloan School of Management. At MIT, he participated in writing the legendary book, The Machine That Changed the World. Krafcik began his career in the auto industry at the GM/Toyota joint-venture NUMMI, and later became an industry consultant on lean production.

Driving thrills makes my wallet lighter.. and therefore makes me faster because i'm shedding weight... :D

Offline DockMan

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Re: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« Reply #1 on: February 13, 2009, 04:41:03 pm »
 O0 Well Said.....that guy deserves kudos for telling it like it is.
Political extremism involves two prime ingredients: an excessively simple diagnosis of the world's ills, and a conviction that there are identifiable villains back of it all. - John W. Gardner

Offline Rupert

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Re: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« Reply #2 on: February 13, 2009, 04:44:39 pm »
How does the amount of money in executive wage compare to the amount of money in all other wages in total.
It's a pretty small percentage is it not.

Offline DockMan

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Re: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« Reply #3 on: February 13, 2009, 05:02:59 pm »
How does the amount of money in executive wage compare to the amount of money in all other wages in total.
It's a pretty small percentage is it not.

You may have missed the point. ???

Offline johngenx

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Re: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« Reply #4 on: February 13, 2009, 05:24:45 pm »
When you have a massive range between the line employees and management, people feel that they're not sharing in the fortunes of the firm.  Management today are not owners and have not risked their own capital in the firm.

Ben & Jerry's had a policy (when it was owned by Ben and Jerry) that no one could earn more than 7 times any one else.  That policy and many other employee-friendly policies helped to create a highly successful firm with no turn-over costs thanks to high loyalty.  People also felt truly appreciated by the company and were very productive.

That's what this guy is talking about.  His words seem like "common sense" but they are brilliant.  They do fly in the face on "conventional" wisdom that is short-sighted and focused on quarterly performance thanks to share option pay...
No place I'd rather be...

Offline dr_spock

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Re: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« Reply #5 on: February 13, 2009, 05:27:25 pm »
The guy is from engineering stock.  :) 


Offline Zombie

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Re: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« Reply #6 on: February 13, 2009, 05:30:41 pm »
Now I want to buy a Hyundai.
In a world where the dead are returning to life, the word "trouble" loses much of its meaning.


Offline DockMan

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Re: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« Reply #7 on: February 13, 2009, 06:01:19 pm »
Now I want to buy a Hyundai.
:iagree: That kind of "testicular fortidude" earns my business.

Of course we have to make sure it's not all :censor: first. :rofl2:

Offline Rupert

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Re: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« Reply #8 on: February 13, 2009, 10:18:57 pm »
I could relate to the dentist part of the speech...if dentistry practices were rolled back 60 yrs. Dislike for visiting a showroom though strikes a chord. Placing emphasis on executive compensation excesses may be popular but hardly relevant to making the N.A. industry profitable. It will take more redistribution than that possibly.

Offline blur911

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Re: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« Reply #9 on: February 13, 2009, 10:45:36 pm »
I could relate to the dentist part of the speech...if dentistry practices were rolled back 60 yrs. Dislike for visiting a showroom though strikes a chord. Placing emphasis on executive compensation excesses may be popular but hardly relevant to making the N.A. industry profitable. It will take more redistribution than that possibly.

Maybe if they pumped nitrous oxide into new car showrooms we would blissfully buy more cars. :-X

The actual amount the executives pay themselves isn't what's going to break them, it's how much it pi$$es off the average person who doesn't make $20million a year that is going to make them lose sales.

Offline Ice

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Re: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« Reply #10 on: February 13, 2009, 11:38:13 pm »
Well said...that guy has some serious balls and all the power to him for saying it.  Now...I hope he's practicing what he's preaching but if he is then he may be on to something.

Offline articsteve

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Re: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« Reply #11 on: February 14, 2009, 12:00:49 am »
Now...I hope he's practicing what he's preaching but if he is then he may be on to something.

The dude is full of :censor:.  He's just attempting to pitch Hyundai as the next Toyota.  He started out with Toyota and learned their system then went to Ford for 14 years obviously doing screw all to help better prepare them.  He's an MIT PHD grad.

In 1990, Krafcik joined the Ford Motor Co. Despite having no product development experience, he gained it during his 14 years at Ford, during which time he held a number of positions, including that of being chief engineer for the Ford Expedition and Lincoln Navigator (from ‘98-’02). He describes the chief engineer position on a vehicle as being “very rewarding.”

Dumping on the Big Three is what he was doing.  Bashing the Big 3 for making gas guzzling polluting dinosaurs was exactly what his greatest auto achievement was to date; the Navigator  :bang:.

Now he's flying high with a car company that can only sell vehicles if they're offered at sub-prime rates.
“Frankly, we are not going to ever defeat the insurgency,”     Billions for jets and pennies for vets; Harponi is MAGNIFICENT.

Offline PMREdmonton

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Re: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« Reply #12 on: February 14, 2009, 02:07:12 am »
None other than Warren Buffett has been a big critic of excessive executive compensation - for the most part very few are actually worth it.  These executives are handed big paycheques by the "board members" who are nothing more than their friends.  Buffett always believe that if the executives were too excessively compensated it would lead to a culture of waste and excess that would eventually poison the organization in the long run.  He has always had his focus on "value" and paying exorbitant salaries to executives is not concordant with offering value to the shareholders, in general.


Offline safristi

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Re: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« Reply #13 on: February 14, 2009, 08:58:35 am »
wotta load of Kraficapalooza...ONLY thing he said worth repeating is  the "$100??" maybe $300 to $500 extra be put into the car to make it Exeed MY EXPECTATIONS and create a new Paradigm :D..................all the rest is caterwauling and self inflation... :thumbdown: :banghead:
THERE IS NO CURE FOR "LOTUS"......ONLY TREATMENT.....

Offline Wetson

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Re: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« Reply #14 on: February 14, 2009, 11:36:34 am »
It is about time an automotive exec. took the opportunity and used their authority in a constructive manner to tell it like it is.  Looks good on him.  It even makes me want to go into a Hyundai showroom.

Offline initial_D

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Re: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« Reply #15 on: February 14, 2009, 03:33:43 pm »
I look at it just as a speech ... a very good and true-ful speech. Actions speak way louder, will just wait and see.

Offline rrocket

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Re: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« Reply #16 on: February 14, 2009, 05:08:55 pm »
It seems as though his view not to skimp as much on product cost is carrying over into Hyundais line-up.  Their products and interiors have been getting better and better and seem to be some of the best in the industry....

Refreshing to hear a CEO tell it like it is instead of hearing all kinds of excuses..
How fast is my Supra?  I sh*t on Cessnas from a roll....

Offline Ice

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Re: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« Reply #17 on: February 15, 2009, 11:43:57 pm »
Now...I hope he's practicing what he's preaching but if he is then he may be on to something.

The dude is full of :censor:.  He's just attempting to pitch Hyundai as the next Toyota.  He started out with Toyota and learned their system then went to Ford for 14 years obviously doing screw all to help better prepare them.  He's an MIT PHD grad.

In 1990, Krafcik joined the Ford Motor Co. Despite having no product development experience, he gained it during his 14 years at Ford, during which time he held a number of positions, including that of being chief engineer for the Ford Expedition and Lincoln Navigator (from ‘98-’02). He describes the chief engineer position on a vehicle as being “very rewarding.”

Dumping on the Big Three is what he was doing.  Bashing the Big 3 for making gas guzzling polluting dinosaurs was exactly what his greatest auto achievement was to date; the Navigator  :bang:.

Now he's flying high with a car company that can only sell vehicles if they're offered at sub-prime rates.
Not too surprising.  Oh well!

Offline silverpontiac

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Re: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« Reply #18 on: February 16, 2009, 11:29:43 am »
Is he willing to make up for past Hyundai lemons?? (eg. Stellar/Pony), my dad would never touch a Hyundai again, also GM, Ford, Chrysler, Mazda. All he'll drive is Toyota or Honda (currently drives 2006 VW Jetta TDI since he doesn't pay for it.... workplace fleet car).

Offline toolatecrew

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Re: Hyundai Boss scolds Auto industry - hits home for me at least.
« Reply #19 on: February 16, 2009, 12:31:06 pm »
Is he willing to make up for past Hyundai lemons?? (eg. Stellar/Pony), my dad would never touch a Hyundai again, also GM, Ford, Chrysler, Mazda. All he'll drive is Toyota or Honda (currently drives 2006 VW Jetta TDI since he doesn't pay for it.... workplace fleet car).

How would you suggest he make up for this? Was he acting President and CEO of Hyundia when they imported the pony?

There really is nothing to gain by trying to go after people who want to hold onto a boas from products made 30 years ago. Honda and Toyotas when they first came to NA were runstbuckets. Are they still making up for that?

Fortunatley not many Pony's or Stellars were really sold so the number of people in the market who bought one and would have any bias would be incredibly small. I'm sure its a non issue to Hyundai as a company.

I do like his comments about interior material quality. I hope Chrysler is listening. It boggles my mind how they can make such horrible interiors and think that the cost savings will overcome it.