Wagoner, Rick 1953–

views updated May 08 2018

Rick Wagoner
1953

Chairman and chief executive officer, General Motors Corporation

Nationality: American.

Born: February 9, 1953, in Wilmington, Delaware.

Education: Duke University, BA, 1975; Harvard University, MBA, 1977.

Family: Married Kathleen "Kathy" Kaylor, 1979; children: three.

Career: General Motors Corporation: 19771981, various positions in GM's Treasurer's Office; 19811984, treasurer of General Motors do Brasil (GMB); 19841987, executive director of GMB; 19871988, vice president and finance manager of GM of Canada; 19881989, group director, strategic business planning, Chevrolet-Pontiac-Canada Group; 19891991, vice president, finance, for GM Europe; 19911992, president and managing director of GMB; 19921994, executive vice president and chief financial officer; 19941998, executive vice president of GM and president of North American Operations; 19982000, president and chief operating officer; 20002003, president and chief executive officer; 2003, chairman and chief executive officer.

Awards: Named Executive of the Year by Automotive Industries, 2001.

Address: General Motors Corporation, 300 Renaissance Center, Detroit, Michigan 48265-3000; http://www.gm.com.

G. Richard "Rick" Wagoner Jr., who in June 2000 at the age of 47 became General Motors's youngest CEO in history, took on the additional responsibilities of chairman on May 1, 2003. The world's largest automaker, General Motors ranked second among all American companies in terms of annual revenues, topping the $185.5 billion mark in 2003. However, it remained locked in a no-holds-barred battle with the rest of the worldwide auto industry for market share, and Wagoner

was determined to take whatever steps were necessary to in crease GM's piece of the auto buyer's dollar.

After two years of U.S. market share gains, GM in 2003 experienced a reversal as its share of the American automotive market shrank from 28.4 percent to 28 percent on a 2.4 per cent decline in U.S. revenues. Undaunted by the small decline, Wagoner in early 2004 told security analysts he was optimistic that the automaker would once again increase its market share in 2004. He predicted 2004 earnings of $6 to $6.50 a share. Of what it would take to succeed in the international auto marketplace, Wagoner told the Associated Press: "The winners in tomorrow's global auto industry will be those companies that best combine the efficiencies of global scale with a superb focus on local markets. I like GM's position" (January 8, 2004).

AN UPHILL BATTLE

Although GM held 15.2 percent of the global automotive market, Wagoner faced an uphill battle in keeping the company profitable and growing its market share, according to a November 2003 report in Fortune magazine. In addition to the cutthroat competition of the automotive business worldwide, the company was staggering under the multiple burdens of government regulation, overcapacity, and massive pension and health care financing costs. Wagoner was particularly outspoken about the Japanese government's efforts to keep the yen artificially weak, which gave some of GM's biggest competitorsnotably Toyota, Nissan, and Hondaa decided advantage in the international marketplace. Interviewed by Mark Haines on CNBC cable television in early 2004, the GM CEO said that the latest data indicated Japan had spent roughly $150 billion over the previous year to keep the yen down against the U.S. dollar and the euro.

Born in Wilmington, Delaware, on February 9, 1953, Wagoner spent most of his childhood in Richmond, Virginia. His father, a graduate of Duke University, extolled the virtues of the prestigious private North Carolina university to both Wagoner and his younger sister. Wagoner, an enthusiastic and promising basketball player in high school, took his father's advice and enrolled at Duke, which for decades had fielded a standout basketball team. Although he was majoring in economics with an eye to a career in business, Wagoner, who stood six feet four, secretly dreamed of becoming a professional basketball player. Those dreams, however, were dashed before his first year at Duke had ended. Wagoner played on the freshman basketball team but, as quoted in the Chronicle, Duke's daily newspaper, in early 2004, "learned pretty quickly I would not be pursuing a career in the NBA."

EARLY YEARS AT GM

While at college, Wagoner met Kathleen Kaylor, who was two years behind him at Duke's undergraduate Trinity College. The couple married in 1979; they have three sons. Wagoner in 1975 earned his bachelor's degree in economics from Duke and enrolled in the MBA program at Harvard University. In 1977, shortly after receiving his MBA, he took a job as a financial analyst with GM's Treasurer's Office in New York City. According to the Chronicle (February 2, 2004), Wagoner found New York a bit overwhelming at first, but in time the job there proved to be "a great working environment with great people."

For the next four years Wagoner steadily worked his way up the ladder at GM's Treasurer's Office. In 1981, encouraged by his wife, he accepted a position as treasurer with General Motors do Brasil (GMB), the automaker's Brazilian subsidiary. This job, Wagoner told Automotive Industries, gave him an excellent overview of GM's entire business but on a scale that was easier to grasp than it would have been at GM headquarters in Detroit. "Manufacturing, engineering, how to deal with the government and banks there were even days we had to get loans to meet our payroll" (February 2001).

In 1984 Wagoner was promoted to executive director of GMB, a post he held until 1987, when he was named vice president and finance manager of GM of Canada. In 1988 Wagoner was named group director for strategic business planning at the Chevrolet-Pontiac-Canada (C-P-C) supergroup. After participating in a broad range of business decisions at GMB and GM of Canada, he found the job at C-P-C less than satisfying. C-P-C had a huge central office but was very compartmentalized. "My ability to contribute wasn't the same," Wagoner told Automotive Industries (February 2001). "These were independent groups, stapled together. C-P-C gave us no economies of scale or efficienciesnot a winning strategy for the future." Although he spent only a year at C-P-C, Wagoner took a very valuable lesson away from the experience, one that would serve him well in the future.

HIGH-LEVEL POSTS IN EUROPE, BRAZIL

After his brief stint with C-P-C, Wagoner was posted to Zurich, Switzerland, as vice president, finance, for GM Europe. After two years in Zurich, he returned to Brazil in 1991 as president and managing director of GMB. As the leader of GM's Brazilian operations, Wagoner was credited with updating the company's operations in this key South American market. According to Forbes magazine, Wagoner championed the "get current, stay current" strategy at GMB, scrapping GM's previous practice of selling older-model cars in Brazil; instead, he brought the latest models to market there. It was in these two high-level jobs, Wagoner told Automotive Industries, that he learned about the importance of integrating a great product, close cost control, lean manufacturing, and global purchasing. "Both experiences showed me what we could do when we leverage GM's global resources. It significantly molded my thinking and still does today" (February 2001)

In 1992, 15 years after going to work for General Motors, Wagoner finally made his way to GM's corporate headquarters in Detroit, as executive vice president and chief financial officer. His success on the financial side of the company's operations had made him a logical choice for this post. His appointment as CFO put him on the team being assembled by John G. Smale, the lead director on GM's board, and John F. "Jack" Smith, then president and CEO, to return the automaker to profitability. The early 1990s, under the leadership of Robert Stempel, had seen big losses for GM: $2 million in 1990, $4.5 billion in 1991, and a whopping $23.5 billion ($20.8 billion from an accounting charge) in 1992. Late in 1992 Stempel was replaced by Smith after a boardroom coup.

A year after his appointment as CFO, Wagoner was given the added responsibility of overseeing GM's worldwide purchasing operations. From 1994 until 1998, he served as executive vice president of GM and president of the automaker's North American Operations (NAO). Wagoner has described himself as something of an outsider, coming as he did from the financial side of GM's operations. "I didn't tear down engines at 16," he told Irene Gashurov of Fortune (February 21, 2000). "But I think my product instinct is pretty good. I work here because I have the same passion for product that any CEO does." In the latter half of the 1990s Wagoner was an ardent supporter of GM's advanced design system called APEX (Advanced Portfolio Exploration). Under APEX a team of more than 120 engineers and marketing specialists actively designed, engineered, and test-marketed 50 new vehicles at a time. Of Wagoner's contribution to the new direction in GM vehicle design and marketing, GM designer Wayne K. Cherry told Fortune (February 21, 2000), "Rick is the reason our product-development strategy has turned around."

ENGINEERING A MAJOR TURNAROUND

As president of NAO, Wagoner engineered a major turnaround in this most crucial of GM's markets. At the time he took over at NAO, the division had suffered three consecutive years of losses, totaling in excess of $11 billion. In 1994, his first year in the post, NAO managed to squeeze out a profit of roughly $680 million. For 1995 NAO's earnings jumped to $2.4 billion. Work stoppages in the first and fourth quarters of 1996 held NAO's earnings down to $1.2 billion that year, but the division bounced back in 1997 with a profit of $2.3 billion.

Wagoner's success in turning things around at NAO made him an ideal candidate for higher office within GM's corporate structure, and in 1998 he was tapped to serve as the company's president and chief operating officer. In his new post, Wagoner spearheaded a campaign to centralize the giant automaker's sales, marketing, and other operations. For decades the company had been operated as a collection of semi-autonomous fiefdoms, but under CEO Jack Smith and Wagoner GM's management took pains to coordinate its multivarious functions more closely. Wagoner told Bill Koenig of the Indianapolis Star and News (November 17, 1998) that such centralization had "never been an objective until Jack took over," referring to Smith's appointment as CEO in late 1992.

Another top priority for GM in the late 1990s was labor relations, an area in which the giant automaker lagged its competitors. Wagoner told the Star and News that GM was making an effort to repair its strained relationship with the United Auto Workers (UAW): "My sense is people are working hard on (labor) issues" (November 17, 1998). Early on in his dealings on labor issues, Wagoner was perceived as a hardliner. In the period between the beginning of 1996 and the end of 1998, according to BusinessWeek, Wagoner's efforts to boost productivity and outsource some manufacturing operations helped to trigger 13 work stoppages with a collective cost to the automaker of $4 billion. In what was probably his worst error of judgment, Wagoner in the spring of 1998 ordered dies removed from a Flint, Michigan, plant that was about to begin manufacturing critical truck components. Workers were so infuriated by the move that they shut down all of GM's manufacturing operations. Of that misstep, Wagoner told BusinessWeek: "Just add that to the list of the other million things where we probably made the wrong call" (February 1, 1999).

A GENTLER LINE ON LABOR

Stung by the consequences of his hard line on labor issues, Wagoner in late 1998 began softening his approach. BusinessWeek (February 1, 1999) reported that Wagoner had consulted with top UAW leaders before naming Gary Cowger to head GM's worldwide manufacturing and labor relations. UAW president Stephen P. Yokich told the magazine that the UAW was pushing "for someone who could work well with the union," and Cowger's years on the factory floor had earned the union's respect. Wagoner also made it a point to maintain closer ties with union leaders, participating in meetings and telephone consultations. "We're opening up the dialogue a lot more," he told BusinessWeek.

On June 1, 2000, Wagoner became GM's youngest CEO in history when he succeeded Jack Smith in that position. Wagoner retained his post as president, while Smith remained GM's chairman but handed over responsibility for leading the corporation on a day-to-day basis to his protégé. Smith told the Richmond Times-Dispatch that the younger man's appointment was not just a reward for what Wagoner had already accomplished but also "a vote of confidence that he can take GM to even greater heights in terms of products, services, and shareholder value" (February 4, 2000).

Wagoner had already distinguished himself from his predecessors by breaking with a long-running GM tradition of promoting from within. Wagoner's first major hire from outside GM's ranks actually came in February 1999, more than a year before his promotion to CEO. Steve Harris, one of the auto industry's most widely respected spokespersons, was lured away from his job as senior vice president of communications at DaimlerChrysler to become GM's vice president of communications. Less than six months after taking over as CEO, Wagoner brought longtime Ford Motor Company executive John Devine on board at GM as vice chairman and chief financial officer. Perhaps the most daring of Wagoner's hires from outside came in early August 2001 with the appointment of Robert Lutz, a former vice chairman at Chrysler Corporation, as GM's vice chairman for product development. The Swiss-born Lutz had worked closely with Lee Iacocca to lead Chrysler's second comeback in the late 1980s and early 1990s by bringing to market such innovative products as the Dodge Ram, Dodge Viper, and Plymouth Prowler.

OUTSIDE HIRES WIN PRAISE

In naming Wagoner its Executive of the Year in February 2001, Automotive Industries interviewed a handful of widely respected auto industry observers, all of whom applauded the GM CEO for his willingness to hire from outside in order to put together the best possible team. Dave Cole, director of the Center for Automotive Research, said, "Rick has already broken the historic, internalized culture at GM. He's brought in key outside executives like Steve Harris and John Devine. Equally lavish in praising Wagoner's outside hires was auto industry analyst and author Maryann Keller: "Hiring John Devine to be GM's chief financial officer was a terrific move by Wagoner. It shows he's willing to pick his own team. Devine knows the car business."

The impact of Wagoner's bold moves on GM's bottom line was perhaps the clearest sign that the new CEO was moving in the right direction. In 2001 GM posted a profit of $601 million on worldwide sales of $177.3 billion, a net profit margin of only 0.3 percent. The company's net profit margin jumped to 0.9 percent in 2002, when net income hit $1.7 billion on revenue of $186.8 billion. Most impressive of all was the company's performance in 2003, when net earnings rose to $3.8 billion on sales of $185.5 billion for a net profit margin of 2.1 percent.

Although GM faces a wide array of new and continuing challenges in its quest to pad its bottom line and increase its market share, Wagoner seemed confident when he was interviewed on the CNBC cable network on January 5, 2004. He expressed his belief that the auto market in the United States would run "at a higher annualized rate" in 2004 than in 2003. One of the biggest challenges facing GMand Wagonerwas finding a way to increase the earning power of its automotive sector. In recent years much of the company's earnings came from GMAC, its financing division, which finances not only autos but homes as well, a business that boomed in a time of record low mortgage rates.

Wagoner and his family lived in suburban Detroit. Away from his responsibilities at GM, he served as chairman of the board of visitors for Duke University's Fuqua School of Business and also sat on the board of trustees of the Detroit Country Day School.

See also entry on General Motors Corporation in International Directory of Company Histories.

sources for further information

Brooke, Lindsay, "The New Playmaker," Automotive Industries, February 2001.

Ellis, Michael, "Finance Operation Powers GM Earnings," Reuters Business, January 20, 2004.

Evanoff, Ted, "Incoming CEO Helped Lead General Motors' Turnaround," Detroit Free Press, February 3, 2000.

"G. Richard Wagoner, Jr.," Marquis Who's Who, New Providence, N.J.: Marquis Who's Who, 2004.

Gashurov, Irene, "GM's Big Decision: Status Quo: Can an Insider Jump-Start the World's Largest Corporation? Rick Wagoner, the New CEO, Is About to Try," Fortune, February 21, 2000.

"George Richard 'Rick' Wagoner Jr. T'75: The Secret to His Success: Keep It Simple," BenchMark, June 2001.

Gilligan, Gregory J., "General Motors Names Richmond, Va., Native CEO," Richmond Times-Dispatch, February 4, 2000.

"GM's Motor Man," Economist, March 18, 2000.

Gorman, Chrissie, "GM Chair Offers Job Guidance," Chronicle, February 2, 2004.

Haines, Mark, "General Motors, Chairman & CEO Interview," CNBC/Dow Jones Business Video, January 5, 2004.

Kerwin, Kathleen, and Joann Muller, "Reviving GM," BusinessWeek, February 1, 1999.

Koenig, Bill, "General Motors to Centralize Company's Sales, Marketing Efforts," Indianapolis Star and News, November 17, 1998.

McCracken, Jeffrey, and Jamie Butters, "General Motors Gains New Vice Chairman for Product Development," Detroit Free Press, August 3, 2001.

Meredith, Robyn, "Digital Drive," Forbes, May 29, 2000.

Porretto, John, "GM in Overdrive: Automaker Raises Its Profit Estimate, Foresees Record Sales," Grand Rapids Press, January 9, 2004.

Smith, David C., "What's Next for GM's Rick Wagoner?" Ward's Auto World, January 1, 1996.

Taylor, Alex, III, "GM's Over-the-Hill Gang," Fortune, September 3, 2001.

, "Looking Out for No. 1: General Motors CEO Rick Wagoner Speaks Out on the Yen, Health Careand Why He Doesn't Think Much about the Rest of the Big Three," Fortune, November 24, 2003.

, "No. 25: Rick Wagoner: General Motors," Fortune, August 11, 2003.

Don Amerman

Wagoner, G. Richard

views updated Jun 08 2018

G. Richard Wagoner

G. Richard Wagoner (born 1953) made corporate history in 2000 when he became president and chief executive officer (CEO) of the General Motors Corporation at the age of 47. The appointment made Wagoner the youngest person to head GM, the world's largest automaker, since Billy Durant, who founded the company in 1908. Upon taking the reins at GM, where he has been employed for his entire career, Wagoner instituted several business–side innovations that have increased the company's competitiveness in the world market.

Wagoner was born on February 9, 1953, in Wilmington, Delaware, and grew up in Richmond, Virginia where his father, George, worked as a mid–level executive for the Eskimo Pie ice cream company. The younger Wagoner (the G. in his name stands for George) served as student body president while in high school. After graduation, he attended Duke University, his father's alma mater, in Raleigh–Durham, North Carolina, where he played forward on the basketball team during the 1971–72 season. He was elected president of his fraternity and graduated summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa in 1975 with a degree in economics. Wagoner proceeded immediately to Harvard University's Master of Business Administration (MBA) program, from which he graduated in 1977.

Joined General Motors

General Motors Corporation's New York treasurer's office hired Wagoner after he received his MBA, and the young financial analyst immediately demonstrated a talent for numbers that surpassed many of his peers. "He was one of the top two or three analysts out of about 40 or 50," recalled John Finnegan, head of GM's finance operation, in a 2002 article in Fortune. In 1981, Wagoner took a position as treasurer for GM do Brazil, where he was quickly promoted to chief financial officer. Wagoner received hands–on training in corporate management and learned to speak Portuguese, spending six years with the division. "It was a big step and an unbelievable opportunity to go from being a money guy to being in the middle of running the business," he told Fortune.

In 1987, he transferred to GM Canada, where he served as vice–president and finance manager for a year, and then director of strategic business planning for the Chevrolet–Pontiac–GM Canada group for another two. He was promoted to vice–president in charge of finance for GM Europe in Zurich, Switzerland, in 1989 and, that same year, was named to GM's board of directors. While in Zurich, Wagoner helped engineer the purchase of half of the Swedish automaker Saab. Wagoner returned to Brazil in 1991 as managing director of GM do Brazil. He remained there for 13 months, implementing global purchasing and cost–cutting programs and improving the company's operations. He was one of only two top executives to be awarded a bonus that year, a testament to the success of his efforts.


Named CFO, COO

Wagoner had never worked at GM's Detroit, Michigan, headquarters until 1992, when he was named the company's chief financial officer at the age of 39. "He was young, but it didn't worry me," then–CEO Jack Smith told Fortune. "It was an easy call." The following year, Wagoner also took charge of GM's Worldwide Purchasing Group, and in 1994 he was named president of the company's North American Operations, a position that was considered second only to the CEO. Wagoner faced numerous challenges in this position. At the time he took the post, GM made less per car than any other major automobile manufacturer, earning only half the profit per car as Chrysler. It had been losing market share in the United States almost every year since 1962 and neared bankruptcy. The company "possess[ed] a legacy of inefficiency few corporations can rival," asserted industry analyst Scott Hill in Fortune.

Wagoner began to implement cost–saving changes, such as unifying engineering and manufacturing systems to increase both productivity and quality. In addition, he convinced the company to assemble cars on a limited number of platform types worldwide, championed the development of an Internet–based purchasing system for suppliers, streamlined the product oversight system, and attempted to improve labor relations. He also, by his own admission, made some mistakes, including angering GM dealers by forwarding a plan to buy some of them out. "I learned a lot," he told Fortune. "Having your key constituents mad at you is not the way to be successful."


Took the Helm

GM's board was more focused on Wagoner's successes however, and in 2000 he was named CEO of the world's largest vehicle manufacturer. The appointment made him the youngest CEO at the company since it was founded by Billy Durant in 1908. Wagoner launched an even more aggressive campaign to streamline operations and boost profitability once he took the helm, approaching his position with a competitor's demeanor. "People here at the Tokyo show have asked me what I think about Big Three market share, and I jokingly say I'm not in charge of Big Three market share. I'm in charge of Big One market share, and our goal is to grow," Wagoner told Fortune in 2003, speaking from the Tokyo auto show. "You have to ask the other two guys what their strategy is. We focus on how we can grow share, and we really don't care who we take it from."

One of Wagoner's first moves was to announce discontinuation of the struggling Oldsmobile line, effective in the spring of 2004. Wagoner drew more positive attention for a daring move in late 2001 when, as the post–September 11 economy slumped, GM announced it would apply zero–interest financing to the purchase of all new cars. The result was a drastic increase in sales that impressed market analysts across the board. "We're not out to take volume by giving cars away but we don't want others to offer greater incentives and take our share," Wagoner told The Guardian of London. In addition, Wagoner introduced changes in the company's management style, including implementing a "Go Fast" program, based on a similar model pioneered at General Electric, whereby bureaucratic holdups are hashed out in group meetings.

He also bucked company tradition and hired outside the GM fold, bringing in Ford Motor Company's John Devine as chief financial officer and Robert Lutz, a former Chrysler executive, as vice chairman and head of product development. "The old model promoted only from within, and today's business world is moving fast," Wagoner told Forbes in 2000. "Bringing in the right people with the right skills and the right chemistry can make a huge difference." The Lutz hire signaled an increased emphasis on contemporizing product design, a mindset that also was underscored by the hiring of former Renault designer Anne Asensio. One of the earliest design experiments was the Pontiac Aztek, a cross between a small car and a sport utility vehicle, which flagged in sales. Wagoner told the Los Angeles Times in 2001 that the disappointment did not temper his plans to champion innovative design. "For years we've been seen as too conservative," he said in a 2001 interview. "So some young designers and engineers really stretch out there, and if it doesn't hit everybody's hot button out on the marketplace, the last thing I want to do is say, 'Don't do that again; let's go back to not letting people express themselves.' I don't want to send the message that we want to stop pushing on the edge."

Wagoner, who did not even have a computer in his office when he moved to GM headquarters, also brought the company into the information age. "The Internet is offering all sorts of capabilities to do things faster, whether it is work with our supply base, deal with the customer in order–fulfillment more aggressively, how we make our own decisions, how we communicate with each other," Wagoner told Forbes in 2000. "We just need to lead in that whole e–business era." To that end, Wagoner oversaw the creation of an online system for processing purchasing orders and the development of an OnStar dashboard communication service, which allows voice–activated Internet connection. The company was also a leader in setting up an online shopping and consumer information site.

Wagoner has placed a premium on creating partnerships with overseas automakers and he has continued to streamline manufacturing processes at home as well. "We are getting the real cost of engineering new products down, for a variety of reasons . . ." he told Fortune in 2003. "We're using our assets better, we're sharing ideas better across the company, and we're putting a premium on reusing good equipment' we don't just throw stuff out." Wagoner is no environmentalist, however. While he has championed the development of oil–saving fuel–cells, a technology that is still in the early research phase, he has vigorously lobbied against government–mandated fuel–efficiency standards.

Even while spearheading big–picture innovations, Wagoner remains hands–on, often making time to crunch numbers like he used to do. Fortune writer Alex Taylor noted in a 2002 article that Wagoner often pores over global production and sales figures. "I have some affinity for numbers and analysis, and I like to know when we're running behind," Wagoner told Taylor. "I don't like it when we don't get the straight scoop. Those are the things that get my ire up quickest." After his first year as CEO, Wagoner expressed relief that the company had turned the tide under his watch. "I'm happy to see some momentum," he told the Los Angeles Times. "We've seen productivity improvement, a lot of our products are hitting well on the market, and the quality trend is good. I feel good for our people who have been under siege for a long time."


Periodicals

Economist, March 18, 2000.

Forbes, May 29, 2000.

Fortune, April 1, 2002; November 24, 2003.

Guardian (London), July 20, 2002.

Los Angeles Times, June 18, 2001.

New York Times, June 7, 2000.

Washington Times, July 31, 2001.