Toyota Lean Management Principles Applied to Formula 1

Post here all non technical related topics about Formula One. This includes race results, discussions, testing analysis etc. TV coverage and other personal questions should be in Off topic chat.
Project Four
Project Four
0
Joined: 24 Jan 2008, 23:28

Toyota Lean Management Principles Applied to Formula 1

Post

Any study of business management always refers to Toyota and Lean management. But Toyota have always struggled in F1. I think on other forums Toyota and Honda's management shortcoming have been discussed, but came across this article in the Wall Street Journal, that discuss how Toyota are going to apply what they do and do well in their car plants to the F1 racing team.
Will Toyota's Way Win on the Track?
Car Maker Is Counting On Its Consensus Style to Break Formula One Losing Streak
By JOHN MURPHY

When the Formula One racing season starts on Sunday with the Australian Grand Prix, Toyota Motor Corp., which can practically do no wrong in the factory and the showroom, will be out to prove after years of disappointing finishes that it can finally turn things around in the world's top auto-racing circuit.

Since joining F1 in 2002, Toyota has never won a race or ended a season in better than fourth place despite spending an estimated $2.5 billion the past six years. Last year, it finished sixth out of 11 teams, causing restlessness among Toyota's top executives.

"Money cannot buy success in F1," says Marcel Cordes, executive director of Sport+Markt, a sports-marketing consultancy in Cologne, Germany. "The lack of victories is becoming more and more of a problem. I think 2008 is the key year for them to show that they are not only part of the show but a noteworthy challenger."

Now, Toyota is pinning its hopes on fully implementing its vaunted consensus-management style, which is out of step with the rest of the world of grand-prix racing, to breathe life into its half-billion-dollar-a-year F1 team.

When Tadashi Yamashina took over as Toyota's F1 boss last year, he began teaching his 650-member team of drivers, engineers, designers, mechanics and support staff that the key to winning can be found in the Toyota way, a set of management principles that helped the company grow from an obscure Japanese auto maker into a global auto giant.

"We encourage teamwork and we always have our minds set on kaizen," which in Japanese means continuous improvement, says Mr. Yamashina, who manages the team at its headquarters in Cologne.

While governments, hospitals and manufacturers world-wide have successfully copied Toyota's celebrated philosophy, many racing analysts question whether it is suited to the competitive world of F1. In F1, much of the drama occurs off the racetrack as teams spend millions of dollars researching and building what they hope will be the fastest car. Historically, the most successful teams have been led by strong personalities who function like field generals in battle, calling all the shots not only during the race but also during the design phase.

"To shine in F1, you have to be reactive, very quick in everything," says Patrick Camus, an F1 analyst and commentator for the French motor-sport magazine Auto Hebdo. The Toyota team, by comparison, is "very heavy to drive, like a boat that's too large."

Toyota adopted the traditional F1 management style when it joined the circuit six years ago, as part of the company's strategy to enhance its brand image as its car sales expanded globally.

But Mr. Yamashina says he was struck by the limitations of this traditional management style, which he says relied too much on the experience and skills of one individual. A 30-year Toyota veteran with little F1 experience, Mr. Yamashina, 56 years old, switched to the system he knew best.

He redesigned the team so there is one manager in charge of the chassis and a second in charge of the engine. Then he tried to open up lines of communication so all team members can share their expertise, much in the way Toyota has made its auto plants successful. At the plants, even low-level employees are encouraged to recommend improvements and empowered to stop production if a problem is suspected.

While all F1 teams rely on teamwork -- involving hundreds of people from aerodynamicists to materials engineers to test drivers -- the Toyota philosophy takes it to a new level. For example, when someone encounters a problem on the team's F1 racing car -- such as the electrical system, the tires or engine -- the entire team is brought together to discuss the problem and reach a solution. Under traditional F1 leadership, the team manager would make a decision alone or with a small group of advisers to remedy the problem.

Many Toyota team members, accustomed to the faster-paced decision-making process of traditional F1 teams, resisted the changes at first, says Mr. Yamashina. But over time, he adds, they realized that the Toyota way, while not necessarily the quickest way to manage, is the most effective because everyone knows the background of a decision.

Still, it wasn't enough to avert another lackluster 2007 season.

Critics say Toyota performed best under the leadership of British technical director Mike Gascoyne, who is known in racing circles for his aggressive style. With Mr. Gascoyne, the team ended the 2005 season in fourth place, its highest finish to date. By 2006, however, Toyota suspended Mr. Gascoyne because of "differences of opinion," Toyota says. Mr. Gascoyne declined to be interviewed for this story.

Performance aside, Toyota's exposure in Formula One reaps many benefits, Toyota executives say.

Toyota President Katsuaki Watanabe says the company's motor-sport activities stimulate excitement among car buyers, especially the younger generation. The technical demands of F1 racing also lead to discoveries -- such as ways to make cars lighter and thus more fuel-efficient -- that can be used in the company's mass-produced vehicles, Toyota officials say.

The company has fared better in other forms of motor sport. On March 9, Kyle Busch gave the Toyota team its first victory in the Nascar Sprint Cup, stock-car racing's top series.

As a marketing tool, however, there are few sports that give sponsors wider global exposure than F1. Each Grand Prix draws millions of viewers world-wide, especially in regions like the Middle East, India and China, where Toyota is experiencing fast-growing sales, says Simon Chadwick, professor of sports-business strategy and marketing at Coventry University Business School in Britain.

Mr. Chadwick says that while F1 enhances brand image and name recognition, there is no evidence that poor performances have a negative impact on a sponsor. That said, as a car maker with clear ambitions to be a Formula One champion, Toyota's mediocre performance on the racetrack may eventually begin to tarnish the company's image, he says.

"There are diminishing returns to underachieving. People will only accept that for so long and then there will be a negative rub-off," he says.

The Toyota team acknowledges its shortcomings but has no plans to abandon its management strategy. Under the Toyota way, mistakes have always been welcomed as an opportunity for learning and improvement. Mr. Yamashina says it has taken time for the team to realize the full benefits of this new management style and he hopes to see the results this season.

"Once we apply this system in F1, gradually everybody's capability might be increased," he said.

During the off season this winter, for example, the Toyota team worked at its Cologne headquarters to improve the aerodynamics of its new TF108 car, which Mr. Yamashina cites as one of the main reasons for the team's poor performance last year.

Their teamwork paid off. During preseason testing in Barcelona, Spain last month, Toyota driver Jarno Trulli recorded the fastest time, circling the 4.655 kilometer, or 2.886 mile, track in 1 minute 20.801 seconds, ahead of last season's F1 champions, Ferrari, the team sponsored by the Italian sports-car maker.

"We set ourselves very high standards so this season we want to prove we can compete with the best in Formula One," Mr. Yamashina says.

User avatar
NickT
2
Joined: 24 Sep 2003, 12:47
Location: Edinburgh, UK

Re: Toyota Lean Management Principles Applied to Formula 1

Post

Interesting article thanks Project Four. I guess we will be able to judge the effectiveness of the Toyota Way at the end of the season, but there has certainly been a big step forward over last seasons' car.

It will also be very interesting to see how Honda compares over the next couple of years to, especially now that they have the right man leading the team.
NickT

User avatar
checkered
0
Joined: 02 Mar 2007, 14:32

Re: Toyota Lean Management Principles Applied to Formula 1

Post

Hm, am I being

too skeptical in suspecting that the timing in highlighting kaizen is at least partly opportunistic? Honda has acquired a high profile "hired gun" in Brawn and Toyota can be pretty sure in the knowledge that at least this year they'll have the F1 measure of their compatriot competitors. Nah, surely that's too negative a view. Sure, there was a PR opening of sorts, but only incidental in nature, beyond the control of Tadashi Yamashina's "timing". There's good reason to trust his sincerity and intent, as introducing this as a hastily imposed half measure will yield nothing.

And I quite like kaizen itself. From what I understand the principles are largely agreeable to me (especially the human element) in effectively sharing responsibility and success by being mindful of others and expanding one's perspective. As much as it can be for an individual who trusts dogma only to a degree ... still, kaizen doesn't truly veer into areas that'd make me very uncomfortable. I'll be very impressed if and/or when this continues as a theme for Toyota's F1 effort - the racing world cannot be the easiest fit (You can hardly stop a race for intra-team powwows, or can you? ... that'd show some commitment!), but in my experience such situations can bring positive "creative conflicts" to the fore.

Toyota's F1 effort hasn't been without its complications (ones which I'll forego listing here), but somehow through it all I've had a soft spot for the team. One which I haven't even bothered to rationalise to myself. Lately, the team has earned further endearment by making an effort in highlighting all the aspects of its operations (and many different employees from all walks of life) through purpose-produced videos, their website and other promotional material. It's easy to see kaizen taking hold right there and it's not too hard to envision how continually expanding on this approach could end up hitting all the right notes in tuning Toyota for yet another success.

Thanks for sharing the article, food for thought.

User avatar
Rob W
0
Joined: 18 Aug 2006, 03:28

Re: Toyota Lean Management Principles Applied to Formula 1

Post

checkered wrote:Hm, am I being

too skeptical in suspecting that the timing in highlighting kaizen is at least partly opportunistic? Honda has acquired a high profile "hired gun" in Brawn and Toyota can be pretty sure in the knowledge...
I agree Checkered. I am sort of at the stage where I read this sort of story and cynically think: "they're trying to get PR for stuff they say they're working on".. but real PR is in having done it and shown success. I think there really is little comparison to be made between consumer car design and production and the F1 world but Toyota bases tons of their PR around the association. I rarely see Mercedes or Renault doing it to the same extent - and even then, only when they have actually won something.

F1 is about motorsport passion and striving for infinite alterations and tweaks to improve and keeping tabs with your competitors around you who are also doing the same with a turnaround often of only days for new developments. Consumer cars are usually about the design of a replacement for the previous generation model and factoring the current common market forces (such as desire for convertables or more eco-friendly vehicles) and with years of planning and production scheduling put into every car they build. Running an F1 team and building consumer cars are light years apart - something I still don't see Toyota as having fully grasped yet.

R
Last edited by Rob W on 30 Mar 2008, 15:03, edited 1 time in total.

waynes
waynes
1
Joined: 23 Aug 2006, 23:23
Location: Manchester

Re: Toyota Lean Management Principles Applied to Formula 1

Post

excuse my ignorance, or probably stupidity, but havent Toyota finished on the podium?

im sure they have, so that article is rather inaccurate if so

User avatar
Ray
2
Joined: 22 Nov 2006, 06:33
Location: Atlanta

Re: Toyota Lean Management Principles Applied to Formula 1

Post

Maybe it's just how management at my company have interpreted/applied kaizen, but I hate it. It's such a stupid way of doing things around my particular job. Such a waste of time and effort, and the more they try to emulate it the worse things get around here. I takes way too goddamn long to get anything done because they want charts. PowerPoint presentations. Graphs. 'Data.' Crap that justifies them keeping an office chair warm, not gettting thie damn job done.

To top it off they pay some effin Japanese guy to fly over here and tell us how to run things. They don't ask the mechanics for changes or improvements, they follow the new kaizen fad and kiss each others asses over it. The worst part is, the kaizens make things substantially worse. After they do that kaizen and give each other awards, they go back and fix all the things that it broke earning even more awards. I HATE THE TOYOTA WAY! Everyone is falling over it and it doesn't benefit us here at my plant, yet they won't listen to us.

Like I said, this only applies to my workplace, not everywhere and it's only my opinion of how it's working here.

modbaraban
modbaraban
0
Joined: 05 Apr 2007, 17:44
Location: Kyiv, Ukraine

Re: Toyota Lean Management Principles Applied to Formula 1

Post

I don't remember if I did some ranting on this topic on F1T before, so :)

To put it short (as I'm usually lazy anough to do) I learned about kaizen from the 'One Aim' magazine that came as a free bonus to F1Racing mag when it was on sale here (not anymore). To be honest I really dislike the current Toyota in pretty much everything they do. They seem to do all the efforts to persuade me that their cars are nothing more but means of transportation, that have nice quality though. But for the same or even less money you can get a bit of spirit in the car if you choose Honda, Subaru, Mitsu or Mazda. Even the last resorts of Toyota racing history the Corolla and Celica became faceless and dull in their newest editions. I think kaizen may be a god way to build something like the perfect Tata Nano sort of car, to ensure maximum quality at lowest cost and reach immense production numbers. But it was years ago when the F1 specialists started claiming that Toyota's mass-production phylosophy won't work in F1. It's all up to individuals. Toyota won't wanna realize this, they sacked Mike Gascoyne, Honda on the other hand hired Brawn having learned from sacking Richards.

Carlos
Carlos
11
Joined: 02 Sep 2006, 19:43
Location: Canada

Re: Toyota Lean Management Principles Applied to Formula 1

Post

This kaizen weirds me out, this is how I understand it: when something goes wrong, everybody congratulates the guy that screwed up, smile at each other and giggle a bit, you'd think the whole bunch of them smoked a bowl out back, then just add on Ray's experience. Maybe it's a cultural thing. In the old days, yes I'm going to talk about the old days -- If you worked with a decent bunch of guys, let's say your grinding on a mold and take out a little too much metal, in a proper workplace,they cover for you, somebody sneaks it out of the tool room and welds in a little material, and the mold shows up again, the old man that's always chewing on a cigar sidles up and say's "Son, if you don't know how to do something, it's a good thing to ask, use a smaller bit, a tool rest and keep your eye's on what your doing, you been smoking' some of that funny stuff son?" You can't actually go around thanking everyone for bailing you out, you pay attention, learn to do the job and make sure to hold up your end, not to make extra work for your crew. My town used to be one of the top metal working centers in the world, now every things done in China, I don't think they have kaizen, low wages and a lot of labor, definitely. A friend went to Shanghai last year and was amazed. He saw a painter rolling a wall on a ten story building suspended on a piece of wood and a rope with a guy at the top holding onto the rope. He asked what happened if the guy dropped the painter, his interpeter looked at him like he was a little dumb and said " We get another painter." That's quite a productivity plan, I guess every nation and culture is a bit different. It's just not how it's done here. :D

Conceptual
Conceptual
0
Joined: 15 Nov 2007, 03:33

Re: Toyota Lean Management Principles Applied to Formula 1

Post

ALL forms of management will eventually fail if they are not based upon the Neo-Tech principles. I'm sure that there isn't much room in a F1 organization for what Neo-Tech describes as the "white collar hoax", but from that article, it is pretty apparent that they do NOT hold to the complete concept that Neo-Tech teaches.

We will see I guess.

Chris

User avatar
Ciro Pabón
106
Joined: 11 May 2005, 00:31

Re: Toyota Lean Management Principles Applied to Formula 1

Post

Correction for the better (I hate to use foreign words like kaizen in any language, english included) serves you when you have standardized operations. Actually, that's the first step of it: "analyze current standardized operations" and the last is "put in place improved operations. So, what do you do when there are no standardized ops?

So, "kaizen" it's good for a plant that has been running for a while, where you have to have the "accountant soul": you try to shave a cent from every move the plant makes.

However, when you have to build a plant, this accounting spirit is pure manure. You need creativity, you need to sincerely wish to take risks, to enjoy ungodly working hours, you have to dare. You don't need teams, you don't even need team leaders, you need persons that can look at the big picture and, over all, that are disobedient. These are the "consultants" mentioned in the article: lonely geniuses. You won't get an Einstein by putting together 1.000 mediocre physicists.

In the words of a more knowledgeable person than us:

"Flat hierarchiy is equally stupid as hierarchy, it is only changed from top down to a horizontal model of hierarchy – it is still hierarchy. It has only the appearance of being consensual. Unless people are willing to change, there is no solution. It’s got to start with individuals. My friend Margaret Mead said "look at any major change in the world, it started by a group of friends". That’s how it is." -- Stafford Beer --

So, all that bull manure about kaizen and Toyota and racing is that: manure. The future of Toyota in F1 definitely does not depend on how a Corolla is made. This Yamashina manager is deluded by his own little tale about life, and should be fired on the spot, if you ask me.

I've found thousands of people like him: they take a course on, I don't know, "Empowering through Neo Tech" (sorry, Conceptual, just joking on this kind of obsession, I assume you're not obsessed with one technique) and from then on, they look at everything in life like another exercise from their "sacred handbooks" on the subject.

Either you have read what you have to read in life or you haven't. When your 56, nobody is going to explain to you the Iliad and what it means. Now, poor Jarno, a genius driver breaking his butt to get the extra tenth of a second and seeing it attributed to kaizen. What an irony.
Ciro

modbaraban
modbaraban
0
Joined: 05 Apr 2007, 17:44
Location: Kyiv, Ukraine

Re: Toyota Lean Management Principles Applied to Formula 1

Post

P.S. There's a part of that kaizen that definitely worked - snatching a good italian motorist :)

User avatar
checkered
0
Joined: 02 Mar 2007, 14:32

Re: Toyota Lean Management Principles Applied to Formula 1

Post

I did some

further (relatively superficial) reading on kaizen and the history is intriguing. It has evolved from the "Training With Industry" (TWI) program that the US implemented during WWII and subsequently adapted in post-war Japan. Widely influenced by W. Edwards Deming and Joseph M. Juran, it's hardly solely a product of a single culture or company, but a synthesis of many. This, to me at least, suggests that labelling something "kaizen" need not be a uniform set of principles and practices alone.

Should Tadashi Yamashina take to heart this historical perspective, he will know better than to hold kaizen as an immutable object, perfect in its own right. To me, it could be treated as a deliberately chosen but variable perspective, allowing for the scientific method (that kaizen is said to be based on) to be better recognised at the social/organisational level for example. I can understand very well that the Japanese social mores may have been a receptive environment for an approach that emphasizes a communal response to challenges, but that notion is also superficial. Simplicity and complexity are very different things for persons coming from, say, a purely western European vs. a purely Japanese society and it'd be a shame if the constructive discourse between the two would end - whether in kaizen or something else.

I've seen the two memic perceptions compared thus: Whereas the "European" mentality sees the "self" as an entity being found within, behind a layer or two but never completely exposed, the "Japanese" version is a seemingly infinitely layered one where the "self" is whatever the topmost layer immediately indicates. Multiple layers may be visible, each one as true as the other. This is bound to affect what privacy, for instance, entails. Or whether intellectual work is seen as property or an adoptable quality. Or what hierarchies are subservient to. I'm more than happy to be conflicted with these sorts of things since change is rarely found solely within one's comfort zone.

Make no mistake, I'm no proponent of kaizen as such. I know far too little about it (nor have I endured it) to be very opinionated. I hope it's not in such a grave odds with individuality, flexibility and pure inspiration as some of you seem to fear. Clearly, everyone's experience about it is valid and I'm not arguing that. But to me it's unrealistic to expect that F1 operations could be honed to the same detail as assembling a Yaris, for example. It's hard to imgine anyone - let alone someone with great access to compare the two - could elementally confuse the efforts by adhering to terminology alone.

Toyota's F1 team will improve or worsen, because or despite kaizen has been introduced - for now it's all up in the air. A person, reflecting on the history of the "Toyota way", may decide to adopt something and apply it merely as another enabling layer, a sociocultural interface to further any interest he/she wishes. In fact, that may be all someone like Tadashi Yamashina expects - WYSIWYG, Japanese style. And taking this (admittedly shaky) proposition to yet another conclusion, mediocrity can be also viewed as just another layer present only in groups - and not some fundamental, unshakable and all but universal human quality in the light of which the few true geniuses can bask themselves. Mediocrity, after all, doesn't come in ones.