Toyota
Japanese automaker Toyota, headquartered in the city of the same name, is the world's leading automaker by sales, moving over 10 million vehicles per year (Statista, 2016). However, being the industry leader means one thing -- everybody is trying to take share away from you. As such, Toyota faces many competitive threats. The American automakers are performing better after a very difficult period leading into the dual bankruptcies of GM and Chrysler. The Korean automakers, particularly Hyundai, are becoming more powerful. . Emerging economy companies like Geely and Tata loom on the horizon as new competitors in all markets, and they are already challenging Toyota in their home markets.
Furthermore, Toyota faces internal challenges as well. It suffered a major blow to its supply chain management strategy in the wake of the 2011 tsunami. The company had clustered its supply chain around its major manufacturing facilities, but this left the entire supply chain vulnerable to earthquakes, of which Japan is naturally prone. The company scrambled in the aftermath to add much-needed geographic diversity to its supply chain, but learned a lesson about the need for constant change in an organization, and the value of not simply assuming away risks (Sugiyama, 2011). Technological change, such as the evolution of the electric car, is another factor in why Toyota needs to continue to change.
Origins of Change
Typically, the origins of change are in crisis. In 2011, Toyota made several changes to its supply chain. These changes were brought about by the crisis of the earthquake, and would not have been made otherwise. If Toyota faced another crisis -- losing market share, or being leapfrogged in electric car technology -- then it would have further motivation for change. But part of remaining on top of the industry is that the company needs to change in anticipation of the need to change. By the time it loses its dominance in a certain area, it might be too late to make changes. Thus, the origin of change is ideally before the change is truly needed. Waiting until the crisis is not recommended.
The case study, however, will focus on the supply chain issue. Toyota has built its supply chain in a cluster, where suppliers were located in one geographic area. Clustering has significant economic benefits, and is common in the automobile industry. However, Japan is one of the most seismically-active countries in the world. There was always risk with respect to earthquakes disrupting the supply chain of Toyota, should enough damage be done to the region in which most of its suppliers were located. It can be difficult to build redundancy into its supply chain, because there is little motivation for suppliers who are not receiving orders to be able to produce the products that Toyota needs. As such, Toyota simply chose not to worry about the risks that it faced. The earthquake and subsequent tsunami, however, caused substantial disruption in the company's supply chain. The origin of change was a combination of natural disaster and a poorly-designed supply chain.
Process Undertaken
For Toyota, there were two stages to this process. The first is that the company had to scramble quickly for stop gaps. Production on many of its lines had ceased because of a lack of available parts. Toyota very quickly had to find alternative suppliers for those parts, in order to bring its own production back online. This was the first step in the plan - to mitigate the damage. Once the company stopped the bleeding, it was time for it to create and implement a long-term plan for improving supply chain diversification and building in some redundancy, so that such incidents could not occur again, no matter how strong an earthquake would hit.
The company's global procurement chief first needed to build a catalog of its at-risk parts. The company has over 500 Tier 1 suppliers in Japan alone, so this task of identifying suppliers at reasonable risk from tsunami would not be simple. The final list came in at over 1000 parts and there were a further 300 suppliers located in areas that were also deemed to be at risk (Griemel, 2012). This part of the change process is identifying the areas most in need of change, and understanding what the consequences of not changing are, to help the company put together a cost-benefit analysis of its proposed changes. However, the information gathering process did not go smoothly, as some suppliers refused to share critical information with Toyota.
The second stage of the process was to determine how best to address the at-risk elements in the supply chain. The company had identified...
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