Business Week caught up with the Ford Circus road trip to Washington for a telephone interview. Having presumably learned some lessons on that last trip, Alan is re-engaging with the wonders of road food and claims to like it! “We stopped at a dynamite service plaza and we bought a little boxed lunch.” Wow, after putting up with the crap food served on the Boeing and Ford corporate jets old Alan must be in heaven to finally get some good old fashioned Service Plaza Boxed Lunch. Somebody tell him not to eat the box, even if it does taste just like the sandwich. You have to hand it to the guy for being able to spin with the best of ’em though.When asked about the previous Washington spanking session he said: “I was surprised. But going through it and reflecting on it, I really learned a lot. The enormous issues we have in the country, the economy, the financial crisis and the credit crisis, and unemployment, consumer confidence. And all these things where everyone is trying to figure out the most important thing to stabilize the economy. So my appreciation for the frustration, and my compassion for the thoughtfulness that many of the Congress people had, really went up. It also brought home for me the sense of history that is in people’s minds about the auto industry. To be able to hear firsthand the thoughts about the industry and lack of consistency of purpose and improving the automobile year after year, and letting our quality go up and down and letting our fuel economy go up and down, and the labor agreements that our managements made that really hurt our competitiveness-this is real-life stuff. To hear all that over two days was the best thing that could have happened to me. It made me even more committed to the plan we have to focus totally on the Ford brand, sizing our production to the real demand for our products, and to balance our offerings with cars as well as trucks. Boy, did I ever learn about ‘getting it,’ and communicating that I ‘get it.'” Werner Erhard must be proud of the central role “getting it” has taken in modern America.
On the question of cost competitiveness visa-vis transplants, Mulally gives the toss to Gettlefinger: “UAW President Ron Gettelfinger will be with us, and you can imagine that will be part of the conversation.” Partly to make that medicine go down, Mulally has committed to reducing his own salary to $1/year IF Ford avails itself of the requested $9 billion federal line of credit. Mulally’s big job this week is to distinguish Ford from its hometown competitors while still getting as much food out of the pig trough as possible. A tough act to pull off after a long drive in an Escape hybrid and dinner at a truck stop.
Check the spelling of Mulally in the headline.
Money get back.
I’m alright Jack keep your hands off my stack.
Money it’s a hit.
Don’t give me that do goody good bullshit.
I’m in the hi-fidelity first class travelling set.
And I think I need a Lear jet.
Wow the fact that he has to get his ass handed to him by congress really explains how ‘out of touch’ he is to ‘not get it’. He should just read this site to ‘get it’ on a daily basis. Unbelievable.
@jayparry: he has
“To be able to hear firsthand the thoughts about the industry… and the labor agreements that our managements made that really hurt our competitiveness-this is real-life stuff. To hear all that over two days was the best thing that could have happened to me.”
It’s very encouraging to know that it took two days of a Congressional hearing for the CEO of the subject company to finally realize what brought him to that very same Congressional hearing.
Is there anyone else as encouraged as I am?
When asking on the phone if he was driving he said:
“We are rotating driving, but they tell me I shouldn’t talk to you while driving, so, no.”
Didn’t they pick an Escape with SYNC???
Sounds like he stopped at one of the fine plazas on the Ohio Turnpike. More like the food court at an upscale mall than stereotypical roadside rest furburgers… However, if he waited until the PA pike…Nathan’s dogs is the highlight of the menu….
I’ve made the Detroit-DC run a few dozen times and the Ohio Turnpikes plazas now have a few Au Bon Pains and Panera Breads which ain’t toooooo bad for road-food.
As for PA…well that’s another story unless you are willing to seek out the finer restaurants in the Pittsburgh area. One very bright spot in PA is that Frank Lloyd Wright’s ‘Fallingwater’ house is not too far off the beaten path and worthy of a visit for art, architecture and design fans.
Once you get into MD the cuisine options improve significantly.
Can his Escape Hybrid make the Detroit-DC run in less then 12 parsecs?
jayparry and tony-e30,
I think it’s pretty obvious he already knew these things. This little speech was not for us. It was to butter up the insane egos of members of Congress.
“Wow, Congress has it so hard. Their work is so hard, and it must be hard to have all that responsibility. They’re such great people, I just hope they’ll be able to take time from their super busy schedules to listen to little old us.”
Obvious BS to most people, but I have a feeling Congress ate it up.
MattVA: I think it’s pretty obvious he already knew these things. This little speech was not for us. It was to butter up the insane egos of members of Congress.
Bingo! He’s not stupid.
What was he supposed to do – parrot various automotive websites (cheersandgears.com, blueovalnews.com, etc.) and whine about how mean those legislators, reporters and members of the Saturday Night Live cast were to him…?
THAT would have gone over well…