1 / 18

Poster Presentation: Toyota

Poster Presentation: Toyota. Donald Lau Lau Hiu Fung Student number: V8188813. Presentation by:. Agenda. Headline facts: Toyota Global auto industry trends and orientation Japanese auto industry history with culture Toyota company background Company history Production history

taylort
Download Presentation

Poster Presentation: Toyota

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Poster Presentation:Toyota Donald Lau Lau Hiu Fung Student number: V8188813 Presentationby:

  2. Agenda • Headline facts: Toyota • Global auto industry trends and orientation • Japanese auto industry history with culture • Toyota company background • Company history • Production history • Business segments • The Toyota Production System • Toyota’s strategy • The product strategy • The balance between price and quality • Manage your distribution channels better

  3. Headline Facts: Toyota • Toyota has annual sales of $120 Billion • Produces ~5.5 million vehicles per year • From 56 manufacturing plants across6 continents • Employs ~200,000 people • 3rd largest automotive manufacturer

  4. 1998 Production Comparison Chart

  5. Global auto industry trendsand orientation • Overcapacity • Economic downturn • Shifting consumer demands • European trade barrier reductions

  6. Company History with culture • Established in 1937 out of Sakichi Toyoda’s weaving machine company • Launched first car (SA Model) in 1947 • “Toyota Production System” formed in 1950 based on Just-In-Time principle • First global expansion in 1959 at Brazil • In 1972, cumulative production >10M units

  7. Production History

  8. Business segments • Automotive • Design, manufacture and sales of passenger cars, recreational vehicles, SUVs and related parts • Financial services • Provisions of loans to car buyers and car dealers • Others • Industrial vehicles (forklifts, etc.)

  9. The Toyota Production System • Revolutionized manufacturing industry • At its core is “lean” • a relentless drive to improve efficiency and eliminate waste • Beginnings of TPS were born out of necessity due to lack of resources in post-war Japan.

  10. Toyota Production SystemKey Main Concepts • SMED • Single Minute Exchange of Dies • Promoted flexibility of production runs • JIT • Just In Time manufacturing • Small batches which reduced inventory costs, tightened relationship with suppliers and improved quality control

  11. Toyota Production SystemKey Main Concepts • “5 Whys” Quality • Asking “Why?” 5 times to locate source of problems • Stopping the production line whenever there are quality problems to ensure they are not repeated • Low cost supplier • Long term supplier relationships

  12. Toyota’s Strategy • Increase competitive strength through advanced technology • Environmental technology • fuel consumption, emission, recoverability • Hybrid vehicles and next generation fuel cells • Cost-reduction efforts • discontinuation, integration of older models • Increased emphasis on financial services and information communication system

  13. Toyota’s Strategy In April 2001, Toyota adopted the "Toyota Way 2001", an expression of values and conduct guidelines that all Toyota employees should embrace. Under the two headings of Respect for Peopleand Continuous Improvement,

  14. The product strategy Showing better sales and brand recognition because of product characteristics Showing higher usage because of customer benefits Especially true in technological products as well as consumer durables sector Satisfy the customer and they want.

  15. The balance between price and quality Psychological decision making Need to decide what type of customers you are going to target Customers decide the value based on the competitors present in the market

  16. Manage your distribution channels better European Distribution Strategy Showroom Located in EuropeSales channel in Japan SWOT European Distribution Dealers network warehouse

  17. Service Channel in distribution A technical R&D centre in Belgium A European showroom located on the Champs-Elysees 14 parts logistic centre and 9 vehicle logistic centre across Europe 93,400 direct job in Europe including the dealer network More than 8 billion invested in Europe since 1990 for service channel

  18. Japanese auto industry history • From follower to leader • From domestic producer to exporter • Interventionist government

More Related