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Toyota appoints non-Japanese managers

TOKYO, JAPAN: A management shake-up at Toyota heralds a new era which will force the firm to look beyond the narrow confines of corporate life in Japan and help it in the global marketplace, analysts said last week.
Toyota appoints non-Japanese managers

The world's largest car manufacturer said it had appointed three outside board members for the first time and would appoint non-Japanese chief executives in the US, Africa and Latin America, in addition to Europe.

It marks a huge shift for Toyota which had always followed traditional Japanese management practices, with most of its executives and senior managers picked from people who had risen through the ranks.

But its management style had come in for criticism in recent years for being "too parochial" for a global business, and its shortcomings were highlighted by a slow response to the recall of millions of vehicles since 2009 over safety defects.

Analysts said they hoped the changes would lead to a new management approach.

"Toyota's leadership changes portend a new era," said James Post, an expert on corporate governance at Boston University School of Management. New directors, drawn from beyond Japan's shores, will help develop a truly global view at the top," he added.

Criticised

The overhaul includes the appointment of Mark Hogan, an American who used to work for arch-rival General Motors, who will become the first foreign businessman to sit on the Toyota board without having come from the ranks of the company.

The two others appointed to the board are Japanese -- Ikuo Uno, executive adviser for Nippon Life Insurance, and Haruhiko Kato, president of Japan Securities Depository Center. The leadership shuffle came after a few difficult years for Toyota, which included the huge recalls that were both expensive and embarrassing.

"Toyota has always been criticised on its quality of corporate governance," Koichi Sugimoto, a senior analyst at BNP Paribas said. "We expect something positive to come out of this new system."

Critics have also said the traditional Japanese management style practised by Toyota focused on team spirit and consensus, and produced bosses who tried to avoid making waves and were unprepared to take risks.

However, previous attempts to bring international members onto Toyota's board have not gone well. The first foreigner promoted onto the board was American Jim Press, who was given a seat in 2007 after nearly four decades with the company.

However, he resigned from the post after just five months and went to rival car manufacturer Chrysler. President Akio Toyoda said he hoped the shake-up would cement Toyota's recovery from the earthquake and tsunami in 2011, which hammered production and sales.

"As the company recovers and increases its sales, I want to build a corporation with a good feeling for what is happening," Toyoda, the grandson of the company's founder, told the Nikkei business daily. Toyota posted record sales in 2012, buoyed by key Asian and US markets, and regained the global sales crown it lost to US rival General Motors the previous year.

Source: AFP via I-Net Bridge

Source: I-Net Bridge

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