@OP. Agree to disagree. Yes, culture at Ford always su-ked. Mullaly said it best in one of his interviews: he was brought to save the company for bankruptcy, but all dashboard were "green" and there wasn't a single issue. AM realized that it was not possible and asked the managers to bring forward the problems and issues, not hiding them.
Accountability was "meh" at Ford, with some getting blamed and fired, most blamed not getting fired, and the executives tried to stay away from failures or hiding them. The best accountability moment at Ford was when Bill was sacked by his own family. That's it. Then during the AM years, there was a push for accountability, but more on learning from the mistakes, than punishing people for their mistakes.
Yes, the Dearborn culture mixed with the toxic Silicon Valley culture has created something worse. But I don't think the issues we have at Ford are coming just from the culture. Things hasn't truly changed that much, culture wise, in the company. We just "moved" more to the extreme of the hiding issues and letting blame fall on the floor, without assigning it to anyone. There are more backstabbing, more building their own little empires, more silos, more internal competition, but that was already there before, just taken one extra step for worse.
I think the main issue we have at Ford is lack of leadership. There is NO plan. So with no plan, there are no goals to reach. Managers don't know what to do to please the C-suite, so they do nothing, in fear of making a mistake. No one will take a decision in this company, nor give firm directions to the engineers.
We are told to execute the vision, but there isn't one. We are told to deliver projects without business cases or requirements. In fact, some managers told engineers to be "independent", not to wait for directions, but be self starter, find the issues and deal with them without approval or support from management. Engineers try their best, but most of those efforts are spent in vain.
At the same time, the company has been firing employees not based on performance, but on cost reduction (pension, salary, 401K vesting). So no matter how good we do, we end in the streets.
I think those 2 are the main issues, the main differences between the "old" Ford and the "new" Ford. So employees have no motivation, nor a goal to achieve. That's why most of the workforce just go through the motions, and nothing gets done.
I am sure, that with the same culture, but with very simple objectives, the company can improve tremendously. We just need "steady" guidance, even if is not the best, to deliver something, anything. However, engineers have to redo their work constantly, because the C-suite change their minds constantly. Look at the train station, look at the BOC, look at the BEV numbers we were going to produce, look at how many times management change their minds. We cannot follow, and most are not even trying it anymore. SMH.