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(Automobile Magazine)2010 Man of the Year: Alan Mulally, CEO Ford Motor Company
Automobile Magazine ^ | November 10, 2009 | By Joe DeMatio

Posted on 11/14/2009 9:55:39 AM PST by Son House

A year ago, when the heads of Detroit's Big Three - GM's Rick Wagoner, Ford's Alan Mulally, and Chrysler's Bob Nardelli - appeared in the infamous Capitol Hill bailout hearings, many lawmakers, and many Americans, decided that this trio from the industrial heartland could all be tarred with the bad-CEO brush. There was a telling moment, during a discussion about executive compensation, when the three CEOs were asked if they were willing to work for a dollar a year.

Mulally's polite reply, "I think I'm OK where I am," was a juicy piece of red meat for the national media, who were as one in their downright contempt for these three men and the industry they represented. CNN's Anderson Cooper literally sneered in disgust.

The truth of the matter was hard to ascertain in that politically charged Senate hearing room, but it's now obvious: Alan Mulally was, and is, worth whatever Ford is paying him, because he has almost single-handedly saved the automaker. The Ford Motor Company, unlike its two Detroit rivals, has not declared bankruptcy and has not dipped its hand into the TARP trough. (In fact, Mulally took a 30 percent pay cut and declared that he would indeed reduce his salary to $1 per year if Ford took government funds. "I'll do well when Ford does well," he tells us.) Ford stands alone as the sole Big Three automaker that is still an independent entity. For this achievement, and for steering Ford onto a clearly defined road toward success, Alan Mulally is Automobile Magazine's 2010 Man of the Year.

Mulally is living proof that a single, extraordinary leader with vision and determination really can make all the difference in an organization. In 2006, when Bill Ford, Jr., went shopping for someone to take over the role of Ford CEO, he was looking for not just a talented executive but for someone who had demonstrated the ability to reinvent and reimagine an entire corporate culture. Candidates were thin on the ground, but Mr. Ford found his man, the father of the Boeing 777 airliner, in the number-two chair at the aircraft manufacturer. Industry observers were shocked: never had someone with absolutely no car experience been appointed to such a high position.

But Mulally wasted little time proving his worth as he sensed, long before crosstown rivals, that the automotive business was about to get extremely difficult. His first task was to ensure that Ford had enough cash on hand to weather a recessionary storm, so he mortgaged all of Ford's assets, including the blue-oval brand itself, on Wall Street and netted $23.5 billion. "I spoke to a room with over 500 bankers," he recalls. "Why did they give us the money? Because we had a plan." At the time, though, Ford seemed desperate, especially since its product portfolio was in disarray compared with GM's. In fact, Mulally was dismayed to discover that the company's famous nameplate, Taurus, had been thrown on the scrap heap. One of his first and best-known decisions was to resurrect it. ...next page >>

http://www.automobilemag.com/features/awards/1001_2010_man_of_the_year_alan_mulally_ceo_ford_motor_company/glamorous_acquisitions.html

Mulally, a Kansas native who eschews tailored suits for khakis and blue blazers, has also brought what he calls a "laser focus" to the Ford brand. The company's core operations had been neglected for years by FoMoCo executives in favor of Ford's seemingly more glamorous acquisitions, Jaguar, Land Rover, Aston Martin, Volvo, and Mazda. Mulally reduced Ford's stake in the latter and has sold off all of the other expensive baubles except Volvo, which might have a new owner by the time you read this. The Ford brand is now king in Dearborn, and Lincoln, also long neglected, is the crown prince.

Ford suffered for years from an insular, back-stabbing executive culture with fiefdoms spread around the globe that paralyzed the company's decision-making. Mulally has managed to unite (or send packing) these competing factions and establish an executive team - composed largely of Ford veterans - whose members actually work together for a common purpose. Sounds simple, but this wasn't always the case at FoMoCo. Ford is also fully leveraging its worldwide capabilities, finally answering the pleas of American enthusiasts who long have coveted the cool Fords sold in Europe. To Mulally, the Boeing veteran, this only makes sense: "We didn't have one 737 for the United States and another one we made for the rest of the world," he remarks wryly. Next summer, we'll get the Fiesta, a world-class small car that was designed and engineered in Germany and Belgium, and we'll also get the new global Focus.

To be sure, Ford is hardly out of the woods. The carmaker is still hemorrhaging cash and is buried under an avalanche of debt, and Mulally admits that Ford won't make a profit until at least 2011. And although Mulally has brought clarity to Ford's product lineup, his efforts there are only a first step. Ford is still relying too heavily on reworked versions of aged platforms from Volvo and Mazda, and the Dearborn engineering crew's knowledge base is still skewed too heavily toward trucks and SUVs. The Fusion Hybrid is great, but the handsome new Taurus falls short of world-class status.

Despite these challenges, the Ford Motor Company is in a position to succeed and to capitalize on the public goodwill generated by saying "no, thanks" to the Feds. The company is just beginning to find its way, but with Alan Mulally at the wheel, we're confident it will soon not simply survive, but prosper.


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KEYWORDS: ceo; ford; man; mulally
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the public goodwill generated by saying "no, thanks" to the Feds


Yep, now if a few million citizens would get a clue it would also be
in their best interest to say "no, thanks" to the Feds


1 posted on 11/14/2009 9:55:41 AM PST by Son House
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To: Son House

Tell Zer0 NO by saying yes to Ford.


2 posted on 11/14/2009 10:01:17 AM PST by Paladin2
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To: Son House
Read my tagline...

Been following his career for years and may have met him in the early 90's.

He is the real deal.

IMHO Mulally is the out of the box VP Candidate for Sarah.

One of my auto gnomes tells me the H20 cooler talk w/in the blue oval is does this guy have a career in politics. Even Ford folks I know that have been let go do not hold any I'll feelings, against him. Now Nasser and Trotman, that maybe a different story.

3 posted on 11/14/2009 10:01:56 AM PST by taildragger (Palin/Mulally 2012)
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To: Son House

After being a lifelong Chevy guy- I am looking at my first Ford Truck


4 posted on 11/14/2009 10:04:42 AM PST by Mr. K (Deathly afraid one of my typos becomes a freeper catchphrase...I'm series!)
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To: Son House

And Obama will use his friends in the UAW to do all he can to screw Ford and force them into accepting money.


5 posted on 11/14/2009 10:07:04 AM PST by ReneeLynn (Socialism is SO yesterday. Fascism, it*s the new black. Mmm Mmm Mmm.)
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To: Mr. K
K....

Find a Ford employee to sponsor you, for "X" plan for dramatic savings. or....

Join "EAA" @ www.eaa.org EAA has one year wait period however, great airplane magazine to boot with the membership.

6 posted on 11/14/2009 10:08:14 AM PST by taildragger (Palin/Mulally 2012)
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To: ReneeLynn

Like by voting down a contract because it ain’t costing Ford enough money? Money they could get from the Government instead of profits?(Rhetorical)


7 posted on 11/14/2009 10:10:51 AM PST by Son House (The penalty for Conservatism will be high.)
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To: Mr. K

Me too. My immediate family always Chevy guys, dad and brother drive Chevy half-tons. I am eligible for the “Z plan” with Ford, actually thinking about looking today. Keep up the good work Mr Mulally and FoMoCo.


8 posted on 11/14/2009 10:11:42 AM PST by FreetheMarkets
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To: Paladin2

From;
Comfort Zone Investing: The unmighty dollar

http://www.bloggingstocks.com/2009/11/14/comfort-zone-investing-the-unmighty-dollar/

Speaking of jobs, here’s an interesting fact about the auto industry, taken from the latest edition of Automobile magazine. The list contains the manufacturer, the output, number of jobs and where they’re located.

Carmaker — Location — Output — no. of Jobs
BMW — Greer, SC -150,000 —Jobs: 5,000
HONDA (HMC) — Lincoln, AL — 300,000 — Jobs: 4,500
HYUNDAI — Montgomery, AL — 300,000 — Jobs: 2,700
KIA — West Point, GA — 300,000 — Jobs: 3,000
MERCEDES BENZ — Vance, AL — 174,000 — Jobs: 3,000
NISSAN — Smyrna, TN — 550,000 — Jobs; 3,900
NISSAN — Canton, MS — 400,000 — Jobs: 3,400
TOYOTA (TM) — Georgetown, KY — 500,000 — Jobs: 6,800
TOYOTA — San Antonio, TX — 200,000 — Jobs: 1,700
TOYOTA — Blue Springs, MS 150,000 — Jobs: 2,000
VOLKSWAGEN — Chattanooga, TN — 150,000 — Jobs: 2,000

Why does this tie into a column on the dollar? Because these foreign manufacturers figured out that it’s cheaper to make and sell their cars here in the U.S. due to wage and cost of materials than it is in their own countries. ...

...Notice that most of these plants are located in the South. The land costs and wages are lower there.


9 posted on 11/14/2009 10:14:31 AM PST by Son House (The penalty for Conservatism will be high.)
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To: Son House

Maybe I missed it but I haven’t a word about GM’s sales numbers.


10 posted on 11/14/2009 10:16:23 AM PST by blake6900
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To: Son House

He is leaving Obama and his Czars in the dust.


11 posted on 11/14/2009 10:17:51 AM PST by bmwcyle (When do they collect and jail the homeless when they don't buy their health care?)
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To: bmwcyle
And his team, my gnomes say moral is high...

Just guess what it must be over @ GM not to mention Fiat/Chrysler.

BTW... how long do you think Fiat will last? 2 years is my guess...

12 posted on 11/14/2009 10:22:58 AM PST by taildragger (Palin/Mulally 2012)
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To: Paladin2
Tell Zer0 NO by saying yes to Ford.

I have resisted buying Ford as in the past they have supported Planned Parenthood. I hope they no longer do.

However, because they didn't take bailout cash, I did recently purchase a Ford Escape Hybrid which I love. These are hard to come by, so I guess other people are buying them, too.

13 posted on 11/14/2009 10:24:40 AM PST by sockmonkey
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To: Son House
Notice that most of these plants are located in the South. The land costs and wages are lower there.

I thought it was the Non Union thing that was the draw in the South.

14 posted on 11/14/2009 10:29:00 AM PST by sockmonkey
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To: sockmonkey

I saw the new Taurus yesterday. The car does not suck.


15 posted on 11/14/2009 10:29:41 AM PST by goseminoles
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To: taildragger
I think Fiat will last a long time. I have worked in Italy. I expect they will dump Chrysler as soon as they can. I hope Jeep and Dodge make it back to the United State free of the Government.
16 posted on 11/14/2009 10:30:33 AM PST by bmwcyle (When do they collect and jail the homeless when they don't buy their health care?)
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To: Son House
The Honda plant complex in Marysville, Ohio has been there 30 years and employees about 10,000 people. Why isn't it on the list?
17 posted on 11/14/2009 11:21:08 AM PST by johnandrhonda (have you hugged your banjo today?)
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To: Paladin2

Buy a Ford - support the union. The union supports obama ,reed ,pelosi and more. It’s simple.


18 posted on 11/14/2009 11:55:31 AM PST by rsobin
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To: Son House
Ford suffered for years from an insular, back-stabbing executive culture with fiefdoms spread around the globe that paralyzed the company's decision-making

more likely that Ford's excellent relations with the UAW over the years paralyzed the company's decision making processes. That said Mulally for 2010 Man of the Year has a great message to offer.

19 posted on 11/14/2009 2:16:11 PM PST by CRBDeuce (here, while the internet is still free of the Fairness Doctrine)
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To: Son House

“To be sure, Ford is hardly out of the woods. The carmaker is still hemorrhaging cash and is buried under an avalanche of debt”

Really? They must not have looked at the most recent quarterly statement:

+$2.8 Billion in automotive cash
+$1.3 Billion in automotive operating cash flow

Through the first 9 months, they’ve lost some cash... but at current rates, they’ll nearly eliminate that loss by the end of the year...

Sounds like they wrote this article too soon, or didn’t even look at the most recent quarter.


20 posted on 11/17/2009 12:52:48 PM PST by eraser2005
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