Saturday, 12 January 2013
Drivel 2022
Sounds like a desktop computer doesn't it? Maybe from the mid-1990s.
It's actually a GM plan for the future prosperity of the Vauxhall Opel Group.
It is outlined in a story in Autocar yesterday. The article tells us that "Under the plan, which was approved six weeks ago by GM's main board,
Vauxhall-Opel will cut fixed costs by $500m by mid-decade, launch 23 new models and 13 new engines between now and 2016 and start building non Opel-Vauxhalls" and it "will also expand and implement the recently announced alliance with PSA." That follows on from my story a few months back in which I voiced my concerns about a possible merger with PSA, the French group behind Citroën and Peugeot.
It appears that this is the latest of many rescue/restructuring plans but there's not too much management-speak - apart from “Vauxhall
is an example of best practice” and “not to include hope as part of the strategy" which are not too bad really when you think about it. I've checked out the photos of GM Europe
president Steve Girsky and vice CEO Thomas Sedran and neither of them look like this manager:or, if you happen to be American...so there's a bit of hope there to go with the strategy.
The new car sales situation is very mixed at the moment - looking at the BBC Global Car Industry News page today is showing Ford taking on 2200 workers in America because of increased sales with BMW and Rolls Royce reporting record sales. There are also reports of increased car sales in both Japan and the UK.
However, they also report Honda laying of 800 UK staff blaming weak demand across Europe and that Ferrari sales slump in Italy. Perhaps more significantly for this item, Peugeot Citroen hit by 'crisis' in European car sales.
I live quite close to a Vauxhall factory and know people who work there. The GM management-speak here does seem positive and they do seem to have a 10-year plan which is unusually forward thinking these days.
Oh, my eyesight! It says "DRIVE! 2022"
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