A “New GM”?
By Olivier Garret, CEO, Casey
Research
A friend of mine
mentioned to me that he was surprised that “bankrupt GM” was spending some
serious advertising dollars to try to lure customers to its website.
My comment to
him: It makes sense, if it is done properly!
Yes, it is often
necessary for a distressed company to communicate with its customers
(advertise) and assure them that the future is brighter. That said, GM appears to have it all wrong once again.
What brought GM
to where it is today is a lack of focus on what mattered to its customers –
while it was losing market share to competitors that built higher-quality cars
at competitive prices and strived to anticipate what customers needed. GM tried
to remake its image several times over the past 20 years… without ever
changing.
You might
remember the slogan “An American Revolution.” The fact is,
GM was led by insiders and bureaucrats. They climbed to the helm of the
corporate ladder, not because they were good leaders but because they were
effective at corporate politics and financial management. While GM employs scores
of very competent and dedicated mid-level managers and union workers, they
never got a clear signal or a commitment from the top that the company’s
culture had to change in order to survive. People then did what they do best:
they tried to protect the status quo and retain their perks. It worked for many
years.
Unfortunately,
the world of manufacturing has changed, and the strategies that made GM the
world leader between the ‘40s and ‘60s have not worked since then. The company has
needed a complete makeover for decades, and yet it has failed to embrace real
change.
In this respect,
bankruptcy could be an incredible opportunity for General Motors to get a fresh
start and leave the chains of its legacy behind once and for all. It would be
able to focus on building a successful company around its best assets (many
great people, some good products, and physical assets). If the company could
commit to doing much more than just a financial reorganization, it would have a
bright future ahead.
So I looked for
visible signs of change at the “New GM,” its first post-bankruptcy
communication with its customers.
But let me first
summarize the key elements of a “crisis” communication campaign. To be
successful, it needs to be:
1) Reassuring. Show that the company is in control of its
destiny.
2) Focused
on the customer. What is
the company doing for them (more exciting cars, more reliability, financing
programs, excellence in service)? The message needs to be credible and – in the
case of GM – should demonstrate how the new GM is different from the old one:
Ø
Focused
on fewer models – the best – to make them even better;
Ø
Committed
to improved productivity, as it means more value for the same price;
Ø
Run
by people that truly love cars vs. accountants – Henry Ford was an
industrialist that knew cars, lived and breathed them; Wagoner never inspired
the same passion).
3) Truthful. Unless the company is committed to
meaningful changes, why bother?
Customers will be disappointed by the message if they find out that the
reality does not match expectations built by the campaign. This will lead to
failure, as customers don’t forgive disingenuousness.
4) Vibrant
and exciting. Why should
a customer come back to GM? While “vibe” won’t be successful by itself, it is
an essential differentiation tool to keep people interested in the rebirth of
an American icon.
So, what is the initial verdict?
After I let the ads
entice me to visit the new GM website, I landed on a page titled “Our Mission.”
Here are my
impressions: The page I landed on was cold and boring, almost amateurish. Also,
I did not get their “mission.” There was a bold statement saying,
“Reinventing the company,” yet they talked about a new battery lab, the SAAB
spin-off, and the Penske purchase of Saturn. No sign
of excitement, passion, or true change. Note to GM: Talking about yourself does
not engage your customers.
Alright, maybe I
didn’t land on the page where GM meant for me to go first. So I checked the
“Our Company” page… with the same sinking feeling.
Couldn’t GM
marketers find a better picture of Fritz Henderson or a more engaging subject matter
to tell me what they are going to do for me, their potential customer? By the
way, Mr. Henderson has been with GM since 1984. Is he the guy that will change
the culture of the company? Can he really make GM a leading carmaker after
being part of the management team that took it on a downward spiral for a
quarter of a century?
Oh
wait! I can see that GM just appointed a new chairman: Edward Whitacre. He must be the inspiring new leader.
Interestingly enough, Mr. Whitacre is a retired
chairman of AT&T. He spent 43 years in the telecom industry; he hardly
looks like a man whose life’s passion is cars.
A
quick googling of Mr. Whitacre’s
background tells me that he brings with him a real passion for technology (he didn’t even have a computer in his
office at AT&T), the Boy Scouts of America (he was their national president
from 1998 to 2000), and M&As
(the highlights of his career in telecom). Not exactly the profile I had in
mind for GM’s leadership at this point… oh well.
Further
down on the page is an article on the GM/Segway joint
venture. Clearly the new PUMA must be the answer to GM’s customers most pressing needs. To me, though, it looks like
a rolling coffin that will at best serve a small niche of yuppies, or airport
security staff, or municipal police force. Hardly what GM needs for a makeover.

(Photo: Reuters)
The
next article tells me that the era of combustion engine vehicles is just about
over. (If that’s true, why should I buy a car now?) But rest assured, even
though the “New GM” may not have what I need today, it is working on tomorrow’s
vehicles.
Well,
if I remember correctly, GM’s competitors were the ones that produced the first
commercially successful hybrids, while GM was promoting monstrous, gas-guzzling
Hummers. Why should I trust that these guys now have a“feel”
for the market? Do they truly understand where the future lies for this
industry?
Maybe
it is because President Obama stated that the
American car industry will lead the green revolution and bring us the solution
to the U.S. energy dependency problems. If I were Mr. Henderson and my job security were contingent on
serving the wishes of my largest shareholder instead of the needs of my
“potential” customers, my best strategy would be to pursue an all-electric
vision. All I really needed anyway would be another five years before I could
get full pension benefits guaranteed by the U.S. taxpayer.
My
conclusion: Unfortunately, the first piece of communication from the “New GM”
is all but reassuring; it fails all the tests for a successful crisis
management campaign, leaving the visitor anything but excited about the
struggling company. It leads me to believe that the “New GM” may have to file
again shortly after emerging from its current “pre-packaged” bankruptcy. Alas, by
that time, there will be a lot more job losses, and
the brand will probably never recover.
I
have been convinced for years that bankruptcy could save our domestic auto
industry. However, I never had in mind a politically driven process like this –
Washington technocrats and union leaders getting
together and concocting this kind of an ill-conceived “solution.”
What
I envisioned was a much more standard process where all the stakeholders put
their claims in front of a restructuring team and a bankruptcy court. Then they
collectively try to find the best compromise to move forward. They generally
end up accepting significant losses but will vote in support of a plan that
highlights a clear path to recovery and hope for future upside. In the absence
of such a plan, they will push for liquidation and try to preserve the few
assets they still have.
In
some cases, the company cannot “remake” itself. Liquidation may then turn out
to be the best thing that can happen. New owners pick up the pieces for ten cents
on the dollar, and with a low-cost investment, they can start a truly new company focused on well-defined
opportunities/customer needs. These new companies could again become icons of
American entrepreneurship.
In
either case, the American taxpayer would not be on the hook for tens or
hundreds of billions of dollars, and the “New GM(s)” might have a chance to
survive and thrive. Of course, this is not what is happening here. So, speaking with the legendary Mogambo
Guru… second note to GM: You’re all freakin’ doomed.
All
things considered, GM will most certainly not save the U.S. economy… or even be a part of it in the
long run. And if you want to preserve and even multiply your assets, we
wouldn’t recommend investing in GM – or any “blue-chip stock” – at this time.
Instead, take a look at our Chief Economist Bud Conrad’s favorite investment of
2009… a play that is almost guaranteed to pay off handsomely this year. Click
here to learn more.