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Car: A Drama of the American Workplace

Car: A Drama of the American Workplace

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Author: Mary Walton
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Category: Book

List Price: $17.00
Buy New: $10.00
You Save: $7.00 (41%)



New (14) from $10.00

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 29 reviews
Sales Rank: 281605

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 392
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.2 x 1.1

ISBN: 0393318613
Dewey Decimal Number: 338.476292222
EAN: 9780393318616
ASIN: 0393318613

Publication Date: February 1, 1999
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
A whole book dedicated to the manufacture of a single model of car--and not even a sexy model, such as a Lamborghini or a Rolls Royce, but a Ford Taurus! How interesting could that be? In the hands of talented Mary Walton, it is very interesting indeed. Walton spent more than two years inside the belly of the giant Ford Motor Company researching the manufacture of the 1996 Taurus, and her account makes for surprisingly entertaining reading. Walton, who has written extensively about management theory, brings a perceptive eye and a breezy style to her critique of the automobile industry. In addition to the redesign of Ford's popular model, Walton also examines the sometimes volatile relations between the company's engineering staff and its designers, criticizes Ford's hierarchical management structure, and questions the astounding number of upper-level executives recruited from the military and their resulting martial management style.

The private lives of Ford employees likewise do not escape Walton's critical eye. Twelve-hour days are common among Ford engineers, but the toll on their personal lives is high. So critical is Mary Walton of Ford's management practices that, upon seeing an early draft of Car, Ford revoked Walton's access to its top executives. For a book that provides both solid entertainment and an in-depth analysis of the auto industry, Car is the top of the line.

Book Description
[Tom] Breault . . . came up with a system to guide [top engineer Lew Veraldi] through dense material. When Breault presented a report, he would highlight both his copy and Veraldi's. . . . Eventually, Veraldi realized something was odd. 'Am I the only one in the room with a highlighted copy?' he asked suspiciously. 'Why? Am I the only one who can't follow this?' Breault thought quickly. 'No, sir,' he answered. 'It's because you're the only vice president in the room.'

An astonishing journey into the belly of our most important industry, a portrait of the energy and ingenuity of America at work. Their job, as the wife of the chief engineer put it, was to repaint the Mona Lisa. Faced with redesigning the Taurus, America's best-selling car and the flagship of its fleet, Ford Motor Company assembles 700 designers, engineers, planners, and bean-counters under a tough manager who set out to retake ground lost to the Japanese. On their shoulders rest the reputation and the profits of Ford, not to mention an investment of about 3 billion dollars. A cross between The Reckoning and The Dilbert Principle, this biting, insightful, and often funny account by a seasoned journalist follows the 1996 Taurus from its conception as a clay model in Detroit to its birth in an Atlanta assembly plant to its public debut in a New Jersey dealership. Mary Walton all but lived with the team for two years in a damp Dearborn basement, and she chronicles firsthand the clashes of designers and engineers over shapes, of marketers and accountants over costs, of product guys in Detroit and manufacturing guys in Atlanta as the new machine takes shape on the assembly line. And all of them, all of the time, are looking over their shoulders at the Japanese competition. The Taurus is a single product, but it contains thousands of parts, and just as many stories. Walton has woven these together brilliantly into a book that reveals the tension, the passions, and the pride that fuel the race to #1.


Customer Reviews:   Read 24 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Walton's Story About the Making of a New Ford Taurus   July 18, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I agree with several reviewers: no special interest in the car industry is required to enjoy this book. Mary Walton's story is a fascinating look at the human drama that is part of developing any complex product and bringing it to market, on time and on budget, despite impossible constraints

Walton had Ford's permission to shadow the team tasked to bring a new Ford Taurus to market, and then write about her experience.

There are many warring factions and few genuinely trusted parties from among the various teams responsibility for the new Taurus. The story is the interaction of various engineering teams, engineers from the plant ("factory rats") where the car is to be made, design groups (they pick the colors), executive leadership and finance that makes the real decision to go ahead and build the car, and most fascinating part: many suppliers told just enough to do their job and maybe, if they are clever, earn a profit.

The two main and very colorful players, and self-described "pros" are Dick Landgraff and George Bell, his right-hand man. Their quotes are peppered throughout the book and by themselves make the book a worthy read. Here are few samples:

George Bell, Landgraff's trusted chief engineer, had a "to make sure no one does anything stupid." Decisions that cost too much or upset the timetable are something stupid.

"Any set of objectives that can be immediately met is probably not aggressive enough." George Bell

Dick Landgraff believed that you should simply "find people you can trust and then empower them to do things. If they screw up, get rid of them."

Some Georgisms: After looking at the engine compartment, "This looks like a dog's breakfast." And "Let's stop lashing ourselves with barbed wire."

"The only thing that really counts is `Did I make the objectives?' I'm not being graded on, `Did I make everyone go away feeling good?'" Landgraff on not caring if he wasn't Mr. Nice Guy.

You had to feel sorry for these amateurs from electronics. All they did was set themselves up for another slam-dunk. They were up against an pro.

"Ford offered too many distractions...going to meeting, being mentors to people...It's more important to pay attention to the car. Every time you don't, something goes wrong. People get caught up with all of this other, what I call frivolous stuff. Like, going to seminars to hear about what's going on with the 1998 steering column, and going to luncheon meeting to find out what truck operations is doing on some other thing. People lose their focus, they lose their ability to remember what it is they're supposed to go do, so they dissipate their efforts in a lot of interesting and perhaps even valuable sorts of things, but they're not critical to what they're really trying to accomplish." Landgraff

"Suppliers...we have to take away all the excuses."

Landgraff letter to Lear Seat president: "You've got to get a guy with real responsibility for the success of the business, you've got to make is clear you're unhappy, and then you've got to follow up."

"Unfortunately, we've hammered on Lear Seat so much, they've grown an asbestos ass." Landgraff

"The problem with these PR guys is, it's amateur night at the movies. Their time horizon's about thirty minutes." Landgraff

Body and Assembly acted as if the plant was "eighteenth-century France. A big castle with a moat around it...I don't pay attention to that stuff." Landgraff.

************

In the end, Ford was unhappy with Mary Walton's manuscript and cut off further contact with Ford people. Makes you wonder what Ford was thinking or expecting. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and recommend it all the time as an alterative to just another faddish management book



5 out of 5 stars If your are looking to work in the car business READ THIS BOOK!   March 15, 2007
I have been an engineer in the automobile industry for the past twelve years and this book does a great job of describing what its like. I strongly recommend this book to anyone considering a career in this industry. Even though the Taurus is now gone not much has changed as far as the business goes.


4 out of 5 stars Car, by Mary Walton   September 12, 2005
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

Very interesting study of the effort to bring a new car design to the showroom. Well written and easy to understand, even while introducing all sorts of automobile jargon. I skimmed through all the "human interest" parts, which described the lives of the main characters. Others might find that interesting, but I was just interested in the interaction of the multitude of groups involved in such a project, most often in competition with each other, and, more often than not, working at cross-purposes.


5 out of 5 stars Even non-car people will love this book   June 25, 2002
 3 out of 4 found this review helpful

I picked this book up and couldn't put it down, I'm not even really interested in the process of designing and producing an automobile. The writing style is fun, and while a bit simple it is highly engaging. A nice departure from the facts, figures and bone dry writing I would have expected.

Kristina Osborn
Acquisitions
Columbus College of Art and Design, Packard Library


4 out of 5 stars More than just cars - the development process   May 29, 2002
 6 out of 6 found this review helpful

The appeal of this book goes beyond an interest in the auto industry or an interest in cars. If you work in any kind of development process, from software to hardware, this book is both an entertaining and instructive read. It seems we're all fighting the same battles: Designers and engineers constantly at loggerheads, testers finding bugs at the last minute, division presidents saying outlandish things to the press and the sales people looking for the spin. If you don't want to read yet another boring book on how to improve the software development process, try this.

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