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Ford & Firestone’s Tire Recall

Ford & Firestone’s Tire Recall. The Costliest Information Gap in History. Nicole Gibson Kevin Howe Melissa Rorison Nigel Vanderlinden Ashley Yantzi. Issue Identification.

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Ford & Firestone’s Tire Recall

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  1. Ford & Firestone’s Tire Recall The Costliest Information Gap in History Nicole Gibson Kevin Howe Melissa Rorison Nigel Vanderlinden Ashley Yantzi

  2. IssueIdentification The Ford/Firestone crisis occurred as a result of poor information management and the absence of effective database systems. Ford, Firestone, the NHTSA, and FARS tracked and recorded data independently of each other. Critical data elements were fragmented across these databases – no central repository existed and little to no information sharing occurred. This resulted in incomplete information, or ‘knowledge gaps’, within each of the participants database systems making it difficult to uncover the source of the problem.

  3. Analysis Separation of Databases and Data Elements led to ineffective management of information: FARS - Government database used to track defects that cause fatal accidents. Gaps: Did not track the type/brand of tires on vehicles involved in fatal accidents. NHTSA - Information regarding complaints, accidents, number of deaths. GAPs: did not track tires involved in collisions, only the vehicles themselves

  4. Analysis • Ford - Collected data about problems in other countries and defects of tires, tracked warranty data on parts of vehicle other than tires • Gaps: lacked the warranty data on tires • Firestone -Tracked data regarding the amount of tires returned under warranty • Gaps: possessed information on warranty data, factory quality test, field research none of which pointed to anything wrong with tread separation • No party had a complete view of the information • Each side blamed each other for the failure • It took too long for the issue to be brought to the public’s attention – more lives lost

  5. Alternatives • Integrate tire and vehicles warranty data • Ensure that all databases are linked across industry, institutions, and geographic regions • Create a central database housing all critical data elements (Ford, Firestone, government & safety associations) • No tires on vehicles – they are too dangerous 4 Proposed Solution 1 2 3 Low High Level of Integration

  6. Evaluation of Alternatives

  7. Recommendation • Implement an interorganizational system across Ford, Firestone and government agencies. • Integrate defect and accident statistics across regions and institutions and link databases to better identify patterns that would be cause for concern

  8. Implementation Key Actions: • Form Implementation Team consisting of management from each party • Standardize information collection among all participants • Integrate database systems to allow for information sharing across regions and institutions • Monitor and evaluate integrated system on a continuous basis

  9. Evaluation of Ford’s Proposal • Ford proposed “Early Warning System” • Real-time data included from all geographic regions and manufacturers • Proactive approach to detecting defects • Patterns of problems flagged for further inspection – good idea • Bridgestone not on board with this

  10. Conclusion Ford & Firestone had a problem with tire tread, And a lot of people wound up dead. Their data bases were incomplete, Integrating information would have eliminated the heat. The congress was really mad, Because they didn’t tell the public about the problems they had. Separation of info made it hard to find a trend, So the Ford/Firestone relationship came to an end.

  11. Questions?

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