
October 4, 2006
GENERAL WATCH NEWS
from
www,wardsauto.com
David Smith
He's widely known as Rick Wagoner, the guy who runs General Motors Corp., but
very little is known about the man, himself.
Unlike automotive rock stars such as Carlos Ghosn, chairman of both Renault SA
and Nissan Motor Co. Ltd., or Dieter (“Dr. Z”) Zetsche, chairman of
DaimlerChrysler AG; George Richard Wagoner Jr.'s style is to keep a low personal
profile.
Those who know him well say that's simply his view of his role. “He's the
ultimate team player, not a talker,” says David Cole, chairman of the Center for
Automotive Research. “He doesn't need stroking. He commands loyalty by his
ability to work with people. The old leader was king; the new leader is a coach,
and coaches win. He knows what he doesn't know.
On a personal level, even Wagoner's harshest critics agree he's decent, bright
and likable. Nevertheless, Wagoner has remained in the headlines and under
attack by legions of critics and GM shareholders as the auto maker's fortunes
have skidded.
Wagoner, 53, is facing a balancing act between keeping his job — one critic
harshly called for not only his removal but also his “indictment” at GM's June
annual meeting — and carrying out his turnaround strategy to cut costs.
In the past year, Wagoner has sliced payroll by a third and announced plans to
close 12 plants in North America. The exodus includes 4,600 workers accepting
buyouts and 30,400 retiring, reducing U.S. hourly manufacturing headcount by
28%.
Wagoner also has won big concessions from workers and retirees on health care
and appears to have diffused a potential crisis at bankrupt supplier Delphi
Corp.
All told, GM has cut $9 billion in expenses this year and expects to save $8
billion annually in structural costs beginning next year. It is miles ahead of
cross-town rival Ford Motor Co. in terms of getting right-sized for North
America.
While Wagoner is far from out of the woods, there has been encouraging news. GM
surprised Wall Street by earning $1.15 billion in operating profits during this
year's second quarter.
Whether he succeeds or fails, Wagoner likely will be remembered either as the
guy who saw the world's largest auto maker sink to also-ran status under his
watch, or the CEO responsible for engineering one of the greatest industrial
turnarounds in recent history.
In this pressure cooker, what is he like to work for? “I think he's far and away
the best boss I've ever had,” says Bob Lutz, whom Wagoner recruited in 2001 to
head GM's product development, while conceding the two do not always see
eye-to-eye.
“We're 90% aligned and 10% not, but we can have a healthy discussion” and reach
agreement, Lutz says.
Wagoner played freshman basketball (forward) at Duke University and remains an
avid basketball fan. His spacious office at GM's headquarters in Detroit's
downtown Renaissance Center is loaded with commemorative basketballs, although
he no longer has much time to shoot hoops.
Born in Wilmington, DE, Wagoner was raised in a middle-income family in
Richmond, VA. The late George senior, who died in 1998 was an accountant for
Richmond-based Eskimo Pie.
His mother, Martha, was a teacher. He has an older sister and a younger sister.
The family was close, and his parents “felt we had capabilities and that we
should use them,” Wagoner says. “There were very high expectations whether it
was at school or whether it was personal integrity and stuff like that,” he
says.
“My Mom was a very strong influence, but they both were very supportive. They
were at every sporting event (in which he participated). I'm not sure today if
she understands basketball that well, but she was very vocal with the refs,” he
laughs.
Wagoner said becoming chairman of GM one day never entered his mind. “Like every
young boy, I was really interested in cars. Back then you'd always ride in the
school bus and count how many Chevys and Fords” were on the street. “We didn't
have many Cadillacs around. I wasn't sure what I wanted to be when I was a kid.
I thought I was going to play in the NBA.”
Wagoner excelled at high school sports in suburban Richmond, playing basketball
and football and running track. “I was an end — 6-ft., (1.8 m) 150 lbs. (68 kg)”
as a freshman. “I was the skinniest guy around.” He gave up football, however,
and began concentrating on basketball.
Wagoner shot up 4 ins. in his teens and today still is a trim 6 ft. 4 ins. (1.93
m). Typical of his keen sense of humor, he says, “At least I was 6-ft.-4 ins.
before the news coverage started two years ago. Now I'm 5-ft.-9 ins. (1.76 m)
and shrinking.”
He says it doesn't help to worry about media coverage. “I guess it comes with
the turf. I've just tried to stay focused doing what's right for GM and the
future of the company, and the rest will work itself out.”
After high school, Wagoner's basketball prowess elicited “moderate” interest
from larger schools, but he already had decided to look at Duke, Davidson and
the University of North Carolina.
His late father graduated from Duke, “so I had been somewhat brainwashed,” he
quips. Duke offered a partial academic scholarship but not an athletic ride.
When he arrived in Durham, he joined Duke's freshman basketball team.
“I had a great experience, but after that I decided it was pretty clear I wasn't
going to make it into the NBA,” he says.
Wagoner maintains close ties to Duke and has two season tickets to basketball
games, which he rarely has time to attend, and counts storied Coach Mike
Kryzyzewski (Coach K.) among his heroes.
Others include the late GM Chairman Thomas Murphy and President Elliott (Pete)
Estes, who were “stars” when he joined GM in 1977; John F. (Jack) Smith Jr., his
predecessor as chairman and arguably his chief mentor; Larry Bossidy, former
General Electric Co. vice chairman; and Jack Welch, GE's legendary leader.
After graduating summa cum laude from Duke in 1975, Wagoner applied to several
business schools to seek his MBA and chose Stanford but had to wait to get in.
Instead he was accepted at Harvard and received his MBA in 1977.
“I had a handful of offers,” he says. “I was generally interested in
corporate-type jobs as opposed to banking or consulting” and looked at several
companies.
He chose GM, starting in its treasurer's office in New York City because
“obviously it was a terrific company and had more interesting products. So it
was a reasonably easy choice, complicated by only one factor, which was I had no
interest in living in New York.”
It may have helped that Kathy Kaylor, a co-ed from Lakewood, OH, whom he'd dated
at Duke, also wound up in New York in 1977 as an employee benefit consultant.
They were married in 1979 and have three boys: “Trip” or G. Richard Wagoner III,
22; Scott, 20; and Matt, 16.
The Wagoners settled in Scarsdale “in the worst house in town” and were in the
midst of “massive renovations” when he was tapped in 1981 to move to Brazil as
treasurer of GM do Brasil Ltda. He was only 28.
“I'm thinking that sounds like a stretch,” he says, but his wife was all for it.
From then on Wagoner shot up through GM's executive ranks, assuming major posts
in Detroit and a total of 11 years outside the U.S. He took over as president
and managing director in Brazil in 1991 after high-level stints in Switzerland
and Canada.
Critics underscore GM's looming troubles have clearly piled up during Wagoner's
tenure as chief operating officer and CEO, and that he has been too cautious and
conservative in addressing them.
“As far as big moves go, I don't think we've been shy. Look at what's happened
over the last year and tell me the last time anyone has made the changes we've
had. And (we) have done it very importantly in a way that leads to a sustainable
business. It has taken longer to get it done, but I think it has been
respectfully done.”
Did GM lose its way over the last 10 years? “Sometimes people are not very
realistic about how you change a business that has been around 100 years, and
that you want to be around (another) 100 years,” Wagoner says.
“With the benefit of hindsight, would we have done some things differently?
Sure. But we've had some substantive issues we've been trying to address,” such
as health care, which “has been around for 50 years.”
A close confidante is Kathleen Barclay, vice president-global human resources.
“I've worked with Rick for 10 years, and I've seen a steady leadership style
that drives his strategy,” she says. “His confidence reaches out to the rest of
us. What you see with him is what you get; there's no B.S.,” she says.
“As serious as our problems have been, he's never waivered in his commitment to
employees. People can see that, and that translates into legendary loyalty.”
Barclay likens Wagoner to an orchestra conductor trying to get the best from his
players. “He doesn't like center stage,” she says. “There are very few ‘I's’ in
his vocabulary.”
Submitted By: Buickman
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