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Toyota: The Accelerator Crisis
內容大綱
Toyota, the world's leading automotive company and a global benchmark for quality and continuous improvement stumbled seriously. They faced a recall crisis unlike any they had seen before. Mr. Akio Toyoda, Toyota's president and grandson of the founder, was called to testify before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Oversight and Government Reform about the company's response to the recall. Through the lens of the accelerator crisis, the case documents trade-offs Toyota made while pursuing a marketing strategy based on quality and customer experience, while simultaneously pursing an operational generic cost leadership strategy. Historic information tracks the evolution of the company's early focus on lean manufacturing, quality, and the customer to the contemporary focus on aggressive cost control and rapid globalization; it also traces the factors that shaped the context in which the product failures occurred; and documents the failure of Toyota to respond appropriately and with sufficient speed. The case discusses Toyota's evolution from a small entrepreneurial family firm to global industry giant status; their role in driving industry-wide lean manufacturing, continuous improvement, and quality, known as the Toyota Way; their responses to a series of highly visible product failures; and the resultant erosion of Toyota's reputation. The case concludes with Akio Toyoda exhausted from his testimony, considering which combination of strategic, structural, or cultural challenges led to the current recall crisis. Had the company lost sight of its long-term philosophy, a key principle behind the Toyota Way? Had Toyota sacrificed quality and their historic customer focus at the expense of extreme cost reductions? Were nonfamily managers truly to blame for "hijacking" Toyota? What role did Toyota's supply chain and keiretsu structure play in the recalls? Or was Toyota simply subject to the latest media witch hunt in the wake of the global economic crisis?