Ford Motor Company History and SWOT Study
Ford Motor Company History and SWOT Study
Ford Motor Company History and SWOT Study
Antoinette Johnson
Reyte On Publishing Copyright 2009
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Edsel Ford races with Alexander Winton in vehicle he built and gets investors interest to start
Henry Ford Company in 1901. The Model A car is built in Detroit in 1903. The number #1
automaker, Ford sells more cars than GM in 1906. The Model T is first designed and becomes
hugely popular in 1908. Ford goes global and opens a plant in England in 1911. Ford loses
ground and becomes #3 automaker in 1933. Henry Ford II comes on board during the war in
1943. Ford goes public in 1956 under Henry Ford II. Legendary Ford Thunderbird born 1954
followed by the Mustang produced ten years later (Davis, 2003). Global expansion as Ford of
Europe is organized in 1967. Ford takes over #2 spot as the 2nd largest automaker. Lee Iacocca
becomes President at Ford in 1970. Ford invests in Mazda after Henry Ford II retires. After
Edsel Ford II and William Clay Ford Jr. succeed retiring Henry Ford II who joins his dad on the
board of directors. Ford decides to acquire Jaguar and start up their own financial services
division in 1989. Another joint venture as Ford decides purchases Jaguar (Davis, 2003). The next
acquisition involves a joint development of their first mini-van with Nissan. In 1996 the
milestone is reached of the building of the 250 millionth vehicle for Ford Motor Co. The year of
the SUV as Navigator becomes a hot item for Ford Motor Company in 1997. In 1999 Ford
acquires Volvo and its first electric car. Ford Thunderbird released in retro style in 2001. Total
reorganization as Nasser resigns and Bill Ford Jr. becomes CEO. The Rouge River Plant totally
refabricated to produce all Multi-Ford car lines using uniform parts to save production and
manufacturing costs in 2003. 2008 Bill Ford Jr. steps down and Board selects Alan Mulally as
new CEO for a new Ford Motor Company built on a Ford united platform (Davis, 2003).
The company structure and control system and how they match its strategy. SWOT Analysis.
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Strengths
• Global Company – Ford is a global company with manufacturing in the North and South
America, Germany, England plus joint ventures with Japan and Nissan.
The Ford (Family Tradition-CEO 100 Years) has owned and managed a major hand in the
company.
• Bill Ford Jr. introduces major cost cutting measures at just the right time 2003.
New ideas turn out good for the company -Reverse Engineering on Taurus Made in Best in
Class
Weaknesses
Opportunities
• Capitalize on the fact that they are the only auto co. of the big three that
did not have to take a buyout and are not facing bankruptcy. Buyers attracted to Ford being
best able to provide quality and reliability versus nearly bankrupt GM and Chrysler.
• Come up with new designs that beat the competition in style, performance and value
Threats
• Foreign Competition. Toyota, Nissan are still strong and rank among the top vehicles in U.S.
• Losing Market Share – The designs from 2003-2004 were too bland and the consumer was
not impressed with Ford’s lineup.
The company structure and control system and how they match its strategy
Ford Motor Company is composed of two major Strategic Business Units (SBU). The
Automotive and Financial Services SBU. The Financial Services SBU is Ford Motor Credit that
handles all of the credit financing related to purchasing their vehicles. The other SBU, for
Automotive covers the design and manufacturing and selling of cars, trucks, and their
components or parts. This also includes warranty and the servicing of these vehicles. As recent
as 2003 Ford Motor Company reorganized its Automotive SBU into foreign versus domestic
holdings. The Americas sector consists of North and South America and their focus is on the
distribution of the nameplate Mercury, Ford, and Lincoln. The International sector handles all
The idea to try reverse engineering further helped Ford to reduce costs and create an award-
winning vehicle in the Taurus. By examining the end product of its competitors on the same
body class, Ford built better parts and was able to build a Best in Class Vehicle in the Taurus.
In house the use of an engineering portal to share information, designs, and meetings online in
real time have saved time and money for the company. The use of Voice Over I P or (VOIP) has
Since 2003 there have been many new concessions required to maintain the tenuous stability due
to the economic downturn. In 2006 a major decision in leadership was made moving to bring a
CEO to lead the company. Alan Mulally came on board from Boeing to steer the company into a
new era. Prior to this decisive move Ford reduced headcount by 30,000 and closed down their
brands that were not selling in additions to closing several plants (Hammonds, 2009).
Bill Ford is focused and poised to bring Ford Motor Company back from the brink. He has a
vision that encompasses a desire to contribute its part to strengthening America’s economy. He
says, "Our vision for the future is simple: We want to build great products, a strong business,
and a better world” (Ford.com, 2009). The company has an aggressive agenda to reduce costs
and have done so strategically since 1997. This started to compete more directly with
competitors Daimler Chrysler and General Motors, as well as Toyota and other brands. The first
wave of cuts revolved around streamlining production and manufacturing processes. No longer
would there be multiple designs of the same part for each vehicle. The same part now goes in all
Mulally steered clear of the government bailout as they were able to get $25 billion in credit
to Mulally, the company had divisions within its ranks. Car pitted against the truck departments
and different engineers and designers competing within the same teams. No more, Mullally has
led the organization to make a change in color that Ford is “One Ford, one team, one plan and
one goal”. This attitude is totally new in a culture that was very competitive internally in the
At the end of the first quarter 2008 Ford turned a profit. For the same period in 2009 however,
Ford has loss $1.4 billion. This is still seen by industry experts as only half the loss expected
according to Vaughn of WDET Talk Radio in Detroit. Leading officials at Ford Motor Company
are now saying Ford will be able to pull through 2009 without assistance from the government
(Vaughn, 2009).
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References
Davis, M. (2003). A History of the Ford Motor Co. Retrieved April 26, 2009 from
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09116/965408-185.stm?cmpid=business.xml
Hammonds, D. (2009). Ford Vision Makes it the Survivor, So Far. Retrieved April 26, 2009
from http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09116/965408-185.stm?cmpid=business.xml
Vaughan, J. (2009). Ford Loses $1.4 Billion in First Quarter. Retrieved April 26, 2009 from
http://wdet.org/article/ford-loses-14-billion-in-first-quarter/