Zynerji wrote: ↑29 Feb 2020, 18:43
izzy wrote: ↑29 Feb 2020, 17:36
Zynerji wrote: ↑29 Feb 2020, 17:05
More money chasing bad management and lack of vision is not a magic spell that grants success.
Old thinking in the new age is what has Williams chasing glory and never finding it.
And if the Mercedes kit is so expensive, I'd be inquiring into what a switch to Honda/RBR would cost. Maybe both race seats for RedBull juniors, but would move them up the grid while they rebuild.
they don't want to be a B team, that is the whole point. Lawrence and McLaren have gone for Mercedes i don't suppose there's anything wrong with how they price their gearboxes compared to Honda
obviously things have gone wrong for Williams, for a long time, and yes their culture has been out of date, but Claire can be learning can't she. She was so positive and encouraging in the Sky booth i think she has been. And she wants the team to stay a proper garagiste team i think that's great, so much more fannable than a B/slave team
They should get a lot more prize money now, and we can see how much difference funding can make from McLaren and Racing Point, so let's see
Better to be B team than a laughing stock.
And Claire (fine lady, btw) has had 8 years... Anyone with a different last name would have been fired long ago.
And more money doesn't equal success, just ask Toyota. It takes leadership earning the trust and respect from its team members, people development, work atmosphere, positive encouragement, and a servant leader mentally.
Employees always over deliver in those situations.
If hired today, I could do it in 2 years. Ive done it successfully for the last 16 years in many other types of businesses, and I can tell you from experience, that no matter the industry, leadership is what leads to excellence, not budgets.
Coaching BS. If You don't have enough resources (and it doesn't refer only to money), regardless of how good You're at managing them, You still will be short on resources. I don't say Claire is a good manager, actually personally I don't like her actions, but I don't have enough data to say she hasn't maximised her options.
You also have to be really full of Yourself to claim You'd fix that in two years, not even knowing the true situation and limitations. I ran businesses only for a decade, so I'm not as experienced as You. I ran my career through a longer path, trying to gain as much practical experience as I can, taking on as many different tasks in as many different industries and as difficult I could handle before I started doing businesses not 100% in my control. I also used that time and opportunity to observe different management models implemented in companies that used my services. Only then I started building my managerial experience on my own businessess. I've been through managing with sufficient resources, streched resources and outright without any meaningful resources. My conclusions are that there's no simple formula for optimal management. There are many variables that have to be considered, human resources - their quantity, quality and characteristics, being the most important one, that dictate what will be a successful model and those can be extremally varied. I've seen companies in same sector, with similar size and staff size, having nearly identical methods used and one was successful while other struggled. Go figure.
Back to the topic. I think they want to stick to their own manufacture in as wide a spectrum as they possibly can due to several reasons.
One might be to not lose valuable staff. If You remove whole department it's not that easy to reactivate it once You've bounced off the bottom. Even if You don't reduce Your staff in the process, there might be a set of valuable assets that would simply lose interest if You take fun part of the job (engineers do that). Those might be the people that indirectly make other departments work as well or It may also be connected with Williams Advanced Engineering. Then the terms of the deal on the table might not be good enough to be considered. There might also be some long term obligations they need to meet. Then there is good old sentiment. If it's not based on sentiment, this might as well be the best decision they can make at the moment.