After dieselgate,
Volkswagen loosens reins on empire
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[July 12, 2017]
By Andreas Cremer
WOLFSBURG, Germany (Reuters) - When
Volkswagen boss Matthias Mueller vowed to reform the carmaker after its
emissions scandal, decentralizing power from its Wolfsburg headquarters
in Germany was a top priority.
That commitment is now being put to the test in one of the company's
most important international projects: building a low-cost car for
India.
Mueller said in March he was giving the job to the group's Czech brand
Skoda, which is now leading partnership talks with India's Tata Motors <TAMO.NS>.
Skoda has been authorized to take "incremental" decisions, while keeping
Wolfsburg informed, a source at the brand said.
The move, the first major international project led by Skoda since
Volkswagen (VW) took full control of it in 2000, is a sign of how the
different divisions and regions within the 12-brand VW <VOWG_p.DE>
empire are gaining influence, the source added.
Mueller's nine-member management team has also started to hold regular
meetings outside of its northern German home, with the first one abroad
held in Shanghai in April.
Sharing out power is important because many people both inside and
outside VW believe the company's traditional authoritarian management
structure created the environment that led to engineers installing
illegal software to cheat diesel emissions tests in millions of cars
worldwide.
With staff focused on meeting targets set by remote bosses and too
fearful to highlight problems, VW was plunged into the biggest business
crisis in its 80-year history when the cheating was exposed in September
2015 - a crisis that has so far cost it more than $25 billion in fines,
compensation and vehicle refits.
Some VW investors say there were other causes of the crisis - in
particular that the company was not open enough to outside scrutiny.
They want it to appoint more independent directors to oversee
executives, and hire more managers from outside the group, rather than
filling top jobs with company veterans.
So far Mueller, who has been at VW for 40 years and became CEO a week
after the emissions scandal erupted, has rejected calls to overhaul its
supervisory and management boards.
VW has also not, as originally promised, published the report it
commissioned from a U.S. law firm into the emissions scandal, saying
there are no written findings and it is unable to do so under the terms
of a settlement with U.S. authorities.
But Mueller's decentralization drive may help to win over some investors
- particularly if it boosts financial results.
THE REWARDS OF CHANGE
Analysts say Wolfsburg's grip over the world's biggest carmaker has been
responsible for some of its failings in key markets. These include the
United States, where VW has struggled to adapt to local tastes, and also
building a budget car for emerging markets, where Wolfsburg engineers
steeped in technical excellence missed cost targets, VW sources have
said.
VW's low-cost Lupo model was dropped from production after less than a
decade due to weak demand worldwide, while a small car partnership with
Suzuki Motor Corp. <7269.T> collapsed.
Skoda, which built cheap runabouts during the Czech Republic's Communist
era, is studying whether it can adapt a low-cost production platform
developed by Tata Motors, the Skoda source said. The firms are also
looking at potential joint development of components, he added.
A Tata Motors spokesperson said the companies were "evaluating the
potential cooperation," without elaborating.
If it can succeed, a budget car for India would tap into a lucrative
part of one of the world's fastest growing auto markets, and would be a
big boost in VW's battle for global industry leadership with Japan's
Toyota <7203.T>.
But it's early days, and the project won't be easy. Rival General Motors
(GM) <GM.N> has decided to stop selling cars altogether in India due to
cut-throat competition.
There are also question marks over whether VW has entirely cast off its
old centralizing habits.
For example, when the company's factory in Tennessee had problems
ramping up production of its new U.S. SUV, the Atlas, Wolfsburg vetoed a
contract extension for the head of the plant, according to one VW
source. VW last month said only that he was returning to Germany after
completing his assignment.
The biggest brake on Mueller's decentralization drive may come from VW's
home state of Lower Saxony and powerful labor unions, which together
dominate the supervisory board that decides on plant closures, asset
sales and executive posts.
Home to six VW plants with over 100,000 workers, Lower Saxony has the
most to lose from a dispersal of power to VW's regions. Its leadership
supports Mueller's reforms, but with reservations, saying employees
should be involved and changes should not be implemented in a top-down
way.
"A culture change can only succeed together with all participants,"
Lower Saxony prime minister Stephan Weil told Reuters.
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People walk past a row
of Volkswagen e-Golf cars during the company's annual news
conference in Berlin, Germany March 13, 2014. Picture taken March
13, 2014. REUTERS/Tobias Schwarz/File Photo
TAKING RESPONSIBILITY
Many of Mueller's reforms are aimed at engaging and empowering staff, while
breaking down barriers with executives.
Some changes have been symbolic, such as selling VW's corporate Airbus jet or
opening up the executive dining room at Wolfsburg to factory workers; others,
more fundamental, such as empowering senior engineers to control budgets and
deadlines, according to company sources.
Mueller is also reducing the number of the group's corporate committees by a
third, and staff have noticed a difference.
"Before the crisis, top management was aloof," said an employee who has worked
in administration at Wolfsburg for 15 years. "Now there is a refreshing sense of
normality."
To encourage innovation and risk-taking, VW is considering raising the pay of
its 20,000 managers worldwide, said group human resources boss Karlheinz
Blessing.
Blessing himself is trying to lead the change in culture by shunning the
executive car park and riding a bicycle on factory grounds.
"We encourage people to take responsibility," he said in an interview. "But that
will take time. First there needs to be confidence that you won't be raked over
the coals if you make a wrong decision."
There are hopes this more hands-off management style will also improve company
performance.
Elmar-Marius Licharz, one of four new model-line chiefs at the VW brand, said
designers and engineers working on the VW Golf 2019 model were about two months
ahead of target, suggesting the pace of product development had picked up with
fewer top managers intervening in the process.
"Involving the CEO in development of each model creates a lot of time
limitations," he said.
"It's all about collaboration and self-reliance now."
HERCULEAN TASK
For all Mueller's reforms within VW, however, corporate governance experts say
there has not been enough progress in opening up the company to outside
scrutiny.
The executive hired for a newly created management board position for integrity
and legal affairs quit in January after only a year in the job, with VW citing
unspecified differences with management. A new appointment has been made.
That compares with GM which, after its own scandal over safety defects,
appointed a vice president for vehicle safety and publicly stated that if there
were any obstacles to solving a safety issue the executive "has the authority to
clear them."
A labor union source said VW's compliance efforts were in their infancy, with
only about 65 compliance officers and 25 or so integrity experts at a new unit
responsible for the group's 620,000 workers. VW declined to comment.
That compares with the several hundred of compliance officers and experts that
German industrial group Siemens has employed since a 2006 corruption scandal.
For Christian Strenger, a supervisory board member at Deutsche Bank's <DBKGn.DE>
retail asset management arm DWS, VW's reforms will fall short until it improves
the oversight of top executives and brings in new leaders to replace the likes
of Mueller and Chairman Hans-Dieter Poetsch, another VW veteran.
He has filed a lawsuit against VW's entire management and supervisory boards to
try to reverse the 2016 appointments of Poetsch and three other supervisory
board members. He wants them replaced with independent directors.
"Without substantial changes, neither customers, investors, the public nor the
media will be convinced by this cultural change," Strenger, a former corporate
governance adviser to the German government, told Reuters.
There is no sign that VW's leadership, backed by the group's Porsche-Piech
founding families which own a controlling stake in the business, is ready to
comply.
"We consider this lawsuit to be completely unfounded," a VW spokesman in
Wolfsburg said.
So the battle over reform at VW looks set to rage on.
"The cultural overhaul is a Herculean task and will take 10-15 years to
materialise," predicted Stefan Bratzel, head of the Center of Automotive
Management think-tank near Cologne.
(Additional reporting by Aditi Shah in New Delhi and Joe White in Detroit;
Editing by Mark Potter)
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