Thread regarding Ford layoffs

Desperate times? Yet another management shuffle at Ford as Farley looks for the "right people."

When poor leadership doesn't get results, they have to shuffle management to provide scapegoats to the stockholders. Activities like this never provide results (as Ford should have learned by now). Look for an outsider to fill the Purchasing roll (coming from Tesla, Google, or Apple). Tailspin continues.

DETROIT -- Ford is restructuring its vehicle development and supply chain operations, shuffling multiple executives just days after announcing that it would build up to 45,000 vehicles with parts missing due to shortages.

The Dearborn, Michigan, automaker gave some executives new roles and said that its chief financial officer will begin reworking supply chain operations until a new global purchasing chief is hired.

The changes arrive at a time of profound change for Ford and the auto industry, which for more than a century have made a living by selling petroleum-powered vehicles. The company has plans for half of its global production to be electric vehicles by 2030, but like its main competitors, Ford will need to keep selling gas-burning vehicles to fund the massive transition.

Earlier this year CEO Jim Farley split the company into two units, Ford Model e to develop electric vehicles, and Ford Blue to handle internal combustion cars, trucks and SUVs.

Early Thursday, Ford announced that CFO John Lawler would run a makeover of its supply chain operations until the company finds a new supply chain chief.

Doug Field, who was hired from Apple Inc., will now become chief advanced product development and technology officer. He'll lead vehicle design and hardware engineering, and continue duties overseeing electric vehicles, software and digital systems, and driver assistance systems.

Former Chief Operating Officer Lisa Drake, now vice president of EV industrialization, takes on manufacturing engineering as Ford plans to produce EVs at a rate of 2 million per year by the end of 2026.

The company also announced two new hires from Hewlett-Packard and Google to develop vehicle software and driver assistance systems.

“Developing and scaling the next generation of electric and software-defined vehicles requires a different focus and mix of talent from the accomplished Ford team, Farley said in a statement.

Ford previously announced that Hau Thai-Ta-g, former head of product development and purchasing, will retire Oct. 1 after more than 34 years with the company. It announced Thursday that Dave Filipe, vice president of vehicle hardware, will retire.

Guidehouse Research Principal E-Mobility Analyst Sam Abuelsamid said Farley is changing the people Ford hires as it joins other automakers in developing new vehicles that can be changed over time with software updates. “Customers like to get new features added over the life of a car,” he said. “The industry likes it because they see potential for new revenue streams.”

But that change takes a different mindset than people who are used to developing vehicles that aren't changed for years until the next version comes out, he said.

Ford, he said, will probably experience instability for a while as large changes happen. “They need to hire a lot of people with different skill sets,” he said.

On Monday, Ford revealed that a parts shortage would keep many of its most profitable vehicles sitting on lots waiting to be fully assembled. The issue forced the automaker to slash its third-quarter earnings forecast. The company also has been hobbled by problems with manufacturing launches of new vehicles and high warranty claims.

Last month the company let go of 3,000 white collar workers to cut costs and help make the long transition from internal combustion vehicles to those powered by batteries.

Governments across the globe are pushing to eliminate combustion automobiles to mitigate the impact of climate change. Companies like Ford are orchestrating the wind-down of their combustion businesses over multiple years, even though they are still generating the cash to fund electric vehicle development.

Shares of Ford fell 1% Thursday as the broader markets dipped. The shares are down about 38% for the year.

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Post ID: @OP+1iQPqtkJ

12 replies (most recent on top)

I am tired of how d-mb American companies have become in general. It's way too greed controlled. At the end, nothing will be left to pass on to the generation after us. It will be all sold out. Work-lives wasted "building" sh---y companies that were never meant to last anyway. At retirement, you will see how screwed over you got (unless you're a boomer).

Maybe we do need that world war that's ahead of us, that great reset?

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Post ID: @1ckq+1iQPqtkJ

Ford is probably paying top dollar for these Silicon Valley executives, while simultaneously cutting the experienced US working level engineers to the bare bones, depleting all motivation and loyalty, and moving their work to Mexico, Brazil, and India.

This strategy can’t fail, right?

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Post ID: @1kbu+1iQPqtkJ

Ford replaced bad leaders with worse leaders. I worked directly with Jim BaumRichard in Powertrain. Not impressed. He has the pedigree and looks but is short on substance.

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Post ID: @wzf+1iQPqtkJ

Wall Street investors were not impressed by today’s announcement, nor should Ford employees be.

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Post ID: @cub+1iQPqtkJ

It is wise to attempt to leave the automotive industry. much too turbulent. Ford pretends now you can just swap an entire country from ICE to EV. How d-mb... and how politically ideological.

I angers me thjat next to everything that is already going on in the world we now have to work in an industry that is politically extreme and "requires" change on top of the world essentially falling apart. How much luck we are having, it's amazing.

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Post ID: @paa+1iQPqtkJ

What would andre say?
Besides, I'm a manu... expert.
Just axe him.

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Post ID: @uyf+1iQPqtkJ

So we hire a bunch of new highly paid executives, none of whom did anything notable at their previous employment, rearrange their deck chairs, and cross our fingers and hope something solves our abysmal quality vehicles and poor employee morale…the cost of each new hire is about ten times that of any of the recently terminated workers.

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Post ID: @dox+1iQPqtkJ

If Roz Ho had anything to do with the HP OTA update program, Ford is going to regret her involvement.

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Post ID: @ujh+1iQPqtkJ

More changing of the guards? Retired 2 years ago. For every person that knew what they were doing there were two that did not, and complete bass hats at that. Ford stock (investors) not liking what they're doing. Hiring these people with a passion for software and electrons is not going to make Ford better. So they can't design without recalls, cannot manufacture, cannot purchase properly, cannot launch. Henry Ford would not stand for any of this nonsense.

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Post ID: @jug+1iQPqtkJ

Ford family still has preferred shares? Check.

Bill still President?
Check.

Farley still CEO?
Check.

Result, Ford is still screwed.

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Post ID: @ohk+1iQPqtkJ

Hello ,
Will it fix my exploding expedition?

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Post ID: @gej+1iQPqtkJ

These changes will not fix any of our issues.

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Post ID: @gey+1iQPqtkJ

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