As Jaguar scales new heights
in terms of production, output, quality and technical expertise, a new book depicts
how Sir John Egan ‘saved’ the company from extinction and put it on a new
footing. He even rescued the name 'Jaguar'.
This riveting book, by a hugely
respected and successful man – the ‘darling of the Press’ – is incisive, giving
commanding insight into behind-the-scenes happenings at the luxury car maker,
both in his tussles with the unions and his struggles to lift quality and
prepare the company for the future; a future that might one day involve him and
others buying out the company or, at the very least, arranging a deal with one
of the “titans of the industry”, namely BMW.
Saving Jaguar is at the same time understandably
depressing for the picture it paints of the UK motor industry in the 1970s and 1980s
– see also The slow death of British
industry by Nicholas Comfort; one that is unrecognizable today thanks to input
from Japan, Germany and India; input that since has allowed Britain’s
engineering and management talent to bubble to the surface once more.
A precursor to Egan’s account of events
at Jaguar is the image of a ‘good’ knight in shining armour riding into town to
rescue a damsel in distress. Another ‘bad’ knight had ridden into the same town
some years previously, namely Geoffrey Robinson. Robinson not only failed
miserably on his brief to turn the company round but surrounded it with alleged
bribery and corruption scandals associated with a dubious paint shop contract,
preceded by mysterious financial happenings with the British Leyland Mini at Innocenti
in Milan that refused to go away. BL had purchased Innocenti in 1972 for £3
million and Stokes put Robinson at the helm, with disastrous results. The
company was sold in 1976.
An outrageously chaotic industry
Egan
gives the gregarious Robinson little exposure in his book which, as it unfolds
the history of the UK’s “outrageously chaotic” automotive industry of the
period, risks opening several cans of worms. Egan is not afraid to confront
these head on, explaining in detail his techniques in the role of ‘turnaround
man’.
Robinson and Egan had three aspects in
common; both were in their mid-thirties when they were appointed to put Jaguar
on its feet – Robinson in 1973 and Egan in 1980. And both were ambitious and
astute. But there any commonality ended. Politically they were poles apart –
and this made the difference between success and failure. Egan, a Conservative,
could not be more different from the Labour-supporting Robinson who much
favoured co-operatives, even to the point of trying to ‘save’ the Triumph Motorcycle
co-operative in Meriden. Robinson, as a socialist, presumably nothing wrong in
running a company making cars for the rich.
After studying petroleum engineering at
Imperial College, London, John Egan took up employment at Shell in the Middle
East before joining AC Delco, a parts company within General Motors. Aged 32,
he joined British Leyland (BL) in 1971 as part of Central Staff which had the
overall remit to make BL an efficient and profitable car company. Egan’s boss at
the time, was Geoffrey Robinson (educated at Cambridge and Yale universities) who,
being several months younger, had joined BL a year earlier (1970) from the Labour
government’s Industrial Reorganisation Corporation (IRC).
Egan admits his “route to stardom” owed
much to a great deal of luck. Having made progress in Central Staff, Lord
Stokes offered him the job of managing director (md) of Leyland South Africa.
Egan turned that down but was then offered the job of “spearheading the
creation of the Specialist Car Division” (SCD) with the view of integrating
parts supply for Jaguar, Rover and Triumph.
Dire
straits
Successfully
completing amalgamation of SCD’s parts operation, Egan turned his focus to
extending the Unipart operation beyond that of merely Austin and Morris. A
“petty internal squabble” bubbled over who should run the business – Egan won
and turned Unipart into a uniquely successful company-wide operation making £70
million “supplying the service parts and parts that fell off.” The irony was
that as Egan managed Unipart successfully, the rest of the BL business was in
“dire straits”.
Job done, Egan became parts and service
director of BL Cars but at this point realised that “to have any future in BL
he would have to run a core product company like BL Trucks”. Alex Park, then
running the operation did not agree and at that point Egan felt BL had “no
future under its then leader” and with that he left the company to spend four
years at Massey Ferguson in Canada.
This overseas experience added another valuable
dimension to Egan’s career at which point Michael Edwardes, then in charge of BL,
“was looking for people who had been successful in the fierce cauldron that had
been BLMC”.
Edwardes first offered Egan the task of
running Jaguar Rover Triumph (JRT), previously the Specialist Car Division.
Egan turned this down “believing his leadership process would be too diluted
across too wide a business”. Also, he considered Triumph “beyond hope”. However,
a later offer from Edwardes to run Jaguar “was altogether more compelling”.
He and Edwardes “agreed a deal” on
Jaguar which was then losing money heavily and, without rapid improvements,
would have to be closed down.
“But if we could turn it around, he
(Edwardes) accepted it should not remain within BL Cars. Jaguar would have to
be independent , but would have to earn whatever independence it got – that was
the only way I thought I could control the (trades) unions,” declares Egan.
Egan makes clear his business modus operandi. “I managed by creating
teams of strong-minded individuals on whose advice I could rely” he writes.
Industry background
Egan’s
tenure at Jaguar from 1980 has to be viewed against the then industry
background. The Labour government of the day set up the IRC in 1966 with a
remit to promote “efficiency and competitiveness” in British industry. This led
to the National Enterprise Board NEB) under the leadership of Lord Ryder, who
later resigned.
As part of the Labour government’s
reorganisation of the UK motor industry it formed British Leyland Motor
Corporation (BLMC) from the merger of British Motor Holdings (BMH) and Leyland
Motors Corporation. It made Lord Stokes as chairman.
In 1973, Stokes appointed 35-years old
Geoffrey Robinson as managing director of Jaguar. Robinson, with his enthusiastic
endorsement of socialism, arrived fresh from running Innocenti in Milan Italy. Smooth-talking
Robinson won the Jaguar job having convinced Stokes of Innocenti’s profitability
and its record return on capital under his reign. But behind the façade lay hidden
high costs and a communist trades union tightening its grip.
On joining Jaguar, Robinson was told
that Jaguar’s quality was “no good” and that he should “improve it”.
Consequently, Robinson set about trying to rival BMW and Mercedes-Benz. With
Jaguar’s order book standing at 30 months Robinson saw a golden opportunity to
double production to 60,000 units a year.
Robinson became well known for his
maverick behaviour, not the least as the architect of what became the famous Jaguar
paint shop scandal in which a contract worth millions seemingly had received no
senior manage approval.
Robinson’s expansionist plans to boost
production required the new paint shop to silence criticism of poor paint work from
dealers and customers. At this point, Robinson mysteriously renewed his links
with Italy and ordered a new paint plant from Interlak – the infamous Project
2641 – even though several companies in Britain could supply a similar plant.
Bribery and corruption
Robinson
appointed manufacturing Robert Lindsay as his intermediary on Project 2641 with
Interlak. Before long rumours were flying round the industry of allegations of
bribery and corruption, especially as the contract price spiralled from £8,650,000
to £15,644,000. At that point Stokes took charge and put the issue of a new
paint shop on the back burner. In May 1975, Robinson ‘resigned’.
In 1977, the UK government appointed
South African Michael Edwardes as chairman of British Leyland; he was knighted
two years later. Edwards’ tenure lasted until 1982.
All of Robinson’s maverick style had
become water under the bridge by the time John Egan arrived in 1980, but the
paint shop remained a cause for alarm and required Egan’s attention as he
embarked to put quality on a new footing.
And so it was in April 1980 that Egan
started work at Jaguar faced by striking union workers outside the gate. In
meetings he told them “I am here to recreate Jaguar”.
His first conclusion proved to be that
Jaguar had no future unless it could fix the outmoded Castle Bromwich body and
paint shop, the result of “a British government inept at investing in business”
and the “brutal enemy” – the trades unions.
Throughout his book, Egan tells it as it
happened without pulling punches. At the outset he reaffirmed that “business is
about making money out of satisfying the customer” and managers “had to control
the company, not the unions”. Even from the beginning, Egan was assured and
confident: “I know I am capable of saving Jaguar”, he said.
Jaguar could sink no lower. In 1980 it
lost £50 million on sales of £150 million. That’s how bad things were. Meanwhile, predictably, Robinson became Labour Member of Parliament for Coventry North.
Bosch refuses to help
And
so began Egan's transformation starting first with direct action on quality,
including taking firm against suppliers like Joseph Lucas and GKN. Bosch
refused to help on the basis that “Jaguar will not live long enough”.
Lucas’s business model relied on making
small profits on original equipment business but “huge profits” on aftermarket
products. Egan (who once was told that Lucas was the only lighting company that informed its customers to be home by dark!) found himself kick-starting Lucas’s revival as well as Jaguar’s
as he embarked on winning supplier support.
He used the Royal Shakespeare Company
to teach his managers to lead meetings. He sought help from BMW – “learning
from grown-ups has always been the most efficient way to learn”.
Gradually the company began to make progress,
so much so that £100 million was forthcoming from Industry Secretary Norman
Tebbit for the new model programme – no wonder Lord Tebbit’s photograph appears
twice in the book!
The £100 million was not a passport to
the sunny uplands; the business plan behind it called for breakeven in 1981 and
profitability by 1982. If not Jaguar would close.
During 1981 Egan became “battle weary” trying
to “motivate the workforce to believe in their own capabilities”. He found also
“bureaucracy the most discouraging of all human barriers”.
Eventually, Egan got on his bike to tour
major regions around the world selling cars to dealers in order to meet the forecast he had
drawn up. Before long he had his North American dealers on side - they had faith he could deliver cars they could sell.
Declares Egan: “We started making
profit in September 1981 and became profitable in 1982…..We did not make a loss
again.”
But to increase production and generate
profits required the workforce to produce four cars per man against three
previously. To increase production Egan had to fight a “wily enemy”. It was a
battle of “wills and skills”.
Hearts
and minds
“The
shop stewards had an easy life looking for trouble but doing no work themselves,”
he writes. To circumnavigate this he appealed to the workforce and their wives
directly – staging “hearts and minds” evening events to drive home the
productivity message.
It was also the start of computer-assisted
learning to boost employee knowledge. He also secured greater interaction with
colleges – hence the first part-time MBA course at Warwick Business School.
The result of the combined effort
witnessed a fall in the hours per car from 700 in 1980 300 in 1984. Process
improvement followed process improvement. TQM was introduced and industrial
robots arrived for the first time. Robots, like this welding robot of the 1990s shown below, brought increased productivity and
quality.
Egan never rested. He was always
looking for solutions to problems, even to the point that if Edwardes’ recovery
plan for BL had failed, Egan and others would buy Jaguar out. He was not going
to let BL’s bankruptcy bring down Jaguar, such was his determination. He was
confident that in 1981 and 1982 that he could have found the necessary funding
to organise purchase of the company. A far cry from the days of Geoffrey
Robinson. Among the “titans of the industry” Egan met was the boss of BMW with
whom he discussed a possible tie-up.
Little cameos of Jaguar dail life emerge throughout the text. As when journalists wondered why there were so few Cabriolets on the road. "David Boole, in one of his usual flashes of PR genius, blamed the roof configuaration. It was hand-nade, as we had not originally intended to make many, he told the Press. We would now put in proper manufacturing facilities, he said, because we were overwhelmed by demand - which was always a good excuse, even with tongue in cheek." To which Egan adds a few lines later: "We had a lot to learn. We were babies when it came to designing and developing new product. Stil.....after much effort and embarrassment our Cabriolet eventually became a success."
Also, in 1983, "out of the blue" BL Cars received an offer from General Motors to buy Jaguar. Egan writes: "I knew from my previous life with GM that you had to go to the top if you wanted a vision that lasted longer than the 12-month budget". Egan concluded it was better to go independent and managed to convince Norman Lamont, Chief Secretary to the Treasury. The Cabinet agreed with Egan but with the proviso that a Golden Share should be put in place. Egan writes: "With that, he (Lamont) told me to deny any discussions had taken place, to put my hard hat on, and await events." And with that Jaguar was privatised, but not before the little matter of the Jaguar name was settled. Egan discovered the Jaguar name was owned by a company in Pakistan making tennis racquets. It also had a smart sports bag in British Racing Green with a leaping Jaguar logo imprinted in gold. "So we bought the company, and the sports bag eventually became the leading sports bag in the UK," writes Egan proudly.
As is now well known, after some 10 years at the helm, Egan reluctantly began talks with Ford Motor Company after first discussing a possible deal with General Motors (GM). The GM deal would be difficult.
Also, in 1983, "out of the blue" BL Cars received an offer from General Motors to buy Jaguar. Egan writes: "I knew from my previous life with GM that you had to go to the top if you wanted a vision that lasted longer than the 12-month budget". Egan concluded it was better to go independent and managed to convince Norman Lamont, Chief Secretary to the Treasury. The Cabinet agreed with Egan but with the proviso that a Golden Share should be put in place. Egan writes: "With that, he (Lamont) told me to deny any discussions had taken place, to put my hard hat on, and await events." And with that Jaguar was privatised, but not before the little matter of the Jaguar name was settled. Egan discovered the Jaguar name was owned by a company in Pakistan making tennis racquets. It also had a smart sports bag in British Racing Green with a leaping Jaguar logo imprinted in gold. "So we bought the company, and the sports bag eventually became the leading sports bag in the UK," writes Egan proudly.
As is now well known, after some 10 years at the helm, Egan reluctantly began talks with Ford Motor Company after first discussing a possible deal with General Motors (GM). The GM deal would be difficult.
“A Ford deal of some kind might be the
only viable outcome, and might indeed be better than a risky project with GM,
cobbled together in haste and with a degree of acrimony,” writes Egan. Egan could see Jaguar's tie-up with GM as being akin to an elephant getting into bed with a mouse. "It may not be very interesting for the elephant," writes Egan. "But the mouse usually gets killed."
Detroit is a small place and Ford inevitably soon heard about GM's plans for a joint venture with Jaguar, even to the point of the two creating a joint XJ80 (partly designed by Jaguar's enginering director Jim Randle who also created the XJ220 supercar later made by TWR) to be made by GM and Jaguar. Unbeknown to Egan, Ford had been
talking to Saab to sign a deal with the Swedish company. In 24 hours that would
have happened if Egan had not made a Concorde trip to the US. In negotiations
Egan secured a price from Ford of £1.6 billion for a company with a net worth of £300
million – the magic multiple of five used in business transactions.
Sizzle not
sausage
Almost
immediately after completion of the transaction, Egan visited Ford’s World
Headquarters in Detroit with a degree of trepidation. Called to the chairman’s
office, 'Red' Poling asked: "Say, John. What am I going to tell the
shareholders? I've paid five times the book value for a car company. I can't think of any car company worth even
book value."
Egan replied: "When I was taught
to be a salesman, I was taught to sell the sizzle not the sausage. What you
have bought here if $500 million of sausage, but you also bought $2 billion of
sizzle. Think about it."
Egan stayed at Jaguar for only a few
months. Ford managers were concerned the company had bought a nameplate and some
assets. And the first Ford people who came "did not like the assets".
Writes Egan: "One of the early
arrivals described some of the facilities as worse than at Gorky, a car plant
he had seen in Russia."
Since leaving Jaguar, Sir John Egan has
been chief executive of British Airports Authority, president of the
Confederation of British Industry and chairman of Severn Trent. He was knighted
in 1986. As to his years at Jaguar it does seem, from reading his book, that no matter what problem life threw at him, Egan had no difficulty in finding a solution.
Egan now believes the future for Jaguar
is "much brighter" under Tata Motors.
Ratan Tata, when asked by an employee
how long would Tata own Jaguar, he replied "Why, for ever."
By John Mortimer, author of The ‘nearly’ engine – the story of the automotive gas turbine, and Angel in the house.
By John Mortimer, author of The ‘nearly’ engine – the story of the automotive gas turbine, and Angel in the house.
For more details of Sir John's recovery plan for Jaguar, including a return to motor racing (in which Egan freely admits he was "won over by the persuaviveness of a quite extraordinary man, Tom Walkinshaw, who convinced me we should run a team of racing XJ-S coupes,") read the book:
Signed copies of John Egan’s book Saving Jaguar are available at £24.95
plus postage from Porter Press International PO Box 2, Tenbury Wells,
Worcestershire WR15 8XX, UK. sales@porterpress.co.uk
1 comment:
‘What if' is always an easy question to ask. But with the benefit of hindsight (always 20:20), one is tempted to speculate that John Egan's reign at Jaguar might well have achieved more positive results if he had enjoyed the key advantages of today's 21st Century Jaguar Land Rover company. I refer to the combination of virtually unlimited funding - from Tata - and the undoubted level of engineering and management expertise conferred by German (primarily BMW) executives at the top. Crucially, British trade unions (Egan's main 'enemies')seem more willing to co-operate with non-British management regimes - a legacy, I'd suggest, of lingering 19th Century class antagonism.
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