Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Best in France project Julien DALCORSO Aude DEBARD Jean-Christophe LEMOINE Radim SEVCIK Toyota Motor Manufacturing France Case study.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Best in France project Julien DALCORSO Aude DEBARD Jean-Christophe LEMOINE Radim SEVCIK Toyota Motor Manufacturing France Case study."— Presentation transcript:

1 Best in France project Julien DALCORSO Aude DEBARD Jean-Christophe LEMOINE Radim SEVCIK Toyota Motor Manufacturing France Case study

2 Content 1. The Toyota group 2. Why France? Why Valenciennes? 3. The industrial process 4. Human Resources Management

3 The Toyota group Toyota Motor Corporation founded in 1937 Manufacturing plants in 25 countries Present in 160 countries

4 The Toyota group Employees: 264,000 people worldwide Net revenues (2002): $107.4 billion (+9%) Net profit (2002): $4.2 billion (-15.7%) 3 rd largest car manufacturer in the world (5.54 million vehicles in 2002)

5 Toyota France Setting up in France in 1997 Toyota’s objectives: Become a WORLDWIDE leader Production of Yaris (180 000 vehicles/year) Two independent structures:  Toyota France: distribution branch  Toyota Motor Manufacturing France (Valenciennes): production branch

6 Why France? Need to enter the EURO Zone  to avoid currency exchange rate fluctuations 3 possibilities  Germany Largest European market Production costs too high  Spain geographically too distant from its market and from the HQ  France Second European market competition between 3 regions, notably Alsace, Lorraine and Valenciennes

7 Why Valenciennes? Within a radius of 150km  Population: 250 M Paris, Cologne, Brussels (Toyota Europe HQ)  1/3 of European GDP  Presence of OEMs and car manufacturers SAE Detroit, Française de Mécanique PSA-Fiat, Renault, VW, Ford

8 Why Valenciennes? Assets  Flat industrial land available (0% slope) Never been used before for industries Well served by public transport  Very low price of land  Proximity to Rotterdam harbour  Available workforce (20% unemployment in 1996) PSA territory (25% of the local employment)

9 French support to Toyota Recruitment process: helpful collaboration of ANPE  screening of 50 000 possible employees Tax exemptions (local and workforce) Government incentives: < 1 % of the total investment (4 bn FF)

10 Some handicaps Language barrier  use of interpreters  orders in English Difference in culture  rigour  details  TV and entertainment Long French procedures  problems dealing with the French “Administration”  14 months for delivery of construction permit

11 The industrial process A. The supply chain Toyota’s activity in Valenciennes:  mainly assembling  few internal production Adaptation of the supply chain logistics :  from Rotterdam (by barge and trucks)  from local suppliers (Valenciennes : an automotive cluster)  from Japanese suppliers settled in Valenciennes A good mix of local and international suppliers

12 The industrial process B. The assembly line Process in line with Toyota’s global procedures:  2 seven-hour production phases a day  flexible timetables  use of Toyota’s standard productivity indicators Adaptation of the assembly line to markets trends :  possible doubling of output (300 000 vehicles a year)  …through extension of the present assembly line

13 The result The world’s most advanced Toyota plant  Quickest production takeoff ever seen  A model in terms of technology and production timing  Productivity superior to Toyota’s UK plant  Integration of group’s capitalized experience

14 A successful mix of imported methods… Just-in-time management:  Minimum stocks  Daily catch up of production « Jidoka »:  Humanize automatization  Encourage initiative  Use of « andon»

15 …and adaptation to the local context Corporate culture adaptation: 3 new pillars 1. Diversity 2. Developmentability 3. Loyalty Toyota’s experience of foreign countries: a deep organization.

16 A performing human resource 2 600 employees (Toyota = 3rd employer in the region) - average age : 28 - 2 200 CDI - many temporary employees recruited (until 600) The match of Toyota’s need and the French labour market: looking for potentials  Aptitude tests  Capacity to follow guidelines and instructions

17 A mutual learning All the key functions are coupled with a Japanese counterpart 27 permanent Japanese expatriates  Number twice inferior as usual  3-year rotation  In charge of varied functions Reduced hierarchical organisation

18 An increasing loyalty to Toyota At the beginning, strong turnover Loyalty’s instruments that proved to be successful:  Package: salary above the average ( net salary : 945 euros vs 918 euros) incentives: 157 euros/month saving plan (PEE) perks (housing grants, cheap social insurance)  Training: 1.48 million euros in 2002 = 5 to 7 % of the workforce investment shared both by the employees and the employer support of a medical team in to order to help the employees find the best gestures

19 The 35-hour work week Adoption of the 35-hour work week during the settlement negotiations Toyota’s willingness to obey the new law Overtime needed when production volume of the day not met => resentment of some employees Misunderstanding of the law among the youngest employees: 35 hours of presence vs effective work.

20 Sources Interviews  M. Jean-Louis Roy, CCI Valenciennes  M. Nicolas Fayol, Responsable de la Communication de Toyota Motor Manufacturing France  M. Hironaka Chiba, Executive Coordinator de Toyota France Press articles  «Toyota chouchoute ses jeunes salariés» in Entreprises & Carrières, n° 668/669, 6-19 mai 2003, p. 20-22  « Toyota cherche à exporter son modèle » in Les Echos, 22 avril 2003, p. 37


Download ppt "Best in France project Julien DALCORSO Aude DEBARD Jean-Christophe LEMOINE Radim SEVCIK Toyota Motor Manufacturing France Case study."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google