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NISSAN in France. Best in France Case Study 15 December 2003 . Emiliano Leggieri, Tracy Lee, Yoshi Shiokawa, Tanya Svidler. The Nissan Company. One of the oldest and famous car manufacturers in the world. Established in Japan in 1933.
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NISSAN in France Best in France Case Study 15 December 2003 Emiliano Leggieri, Tracy Lee, Yoshi Shiokawa, Tanya Svidler
The Nissan Company • One of the oldest and famous car manufacturers in the world. • Established in Japan in 1933. • Expanded to other world markets, beginning with North America where it promotes its incredibly stylish Infiniti Brand. • In 1991 Nissan established a representation in Europe, with the key center in Netherlands. In 1999, the Nissan Europe moves headquarters to Paris, France. • The success of European project is due to strategic alliance with Renault. • The world sales in fiscal 2003 (ending March 31) were 6,828,588 Japanese Yen • Latest sale figures available: • Nissan Europe reports best ever September sales with a 20% increase against 2002 • Nissan Europe has registered its best ever September sales. - Total unit sales of 57,044 vehicles - Sales increased 20% over the same month last year. • Nine month period from January to September 2003: - Nissan Europe sold 400,913 units - 9.4% up from last year • Nissan France sold 3,596 units in September • Nissan France market share is 1.93% • 19.4% increase compared to last year. • Nine month period from January to September 2003: - Nissan sold 32,936 units in France - 25.5% compared to last year
Why Nissan came to France • Nissan believes that it is essential to expand international presence. • Dedication to international growth: • In 1934, first export of vehicles to Australia • Establishment of Nissan Mexicana, S.A. de C.V. in 1961 • Established two strategic manufacturing bases overseas in 1980s: • Nissan Motor Manufacturing Corp., U.S.A. in 1980 • Nissan Motor Manufacturing (UK) Limited in 1984. Today, Nissan operates manufacturing and assembly plants in 17 countries around the world. • Nissan signed an agreement with France's Renault SA concerning a comprehensive global alliance aimed at achieving profitable growth for both companies in 1999. • This way, Nissan entered European market with a variety of models that cater to all tastes • Renault agreement made France an extremely strategic location • Original headquarters of Nissan Europe -- in Netherlands • In 1999, moved them to Paris • France is important because it is at the heart of Europe • Strategic alliance with Renault gave many advantages
Nissan’s values Alliance with Renault brought many benefits, but also disadvantages. The difficulties included very different values of the two leaders Nissan standards: • Quality • Reliability • Development as a Company • Speedy delivery and quality leader Renault standards: • Very different in everything • Cost-control leader Result: - Nissan is determined to raise Renault’s standards - Nissan and Renault will both benefit from each other’s strengths through NRP: ►Nissan Revival Plan • Instill Nissans’ concept of PDCA in Renault: • Renault’s weakness is in ACTION, Nissan is working on improvement
Nissan’s plans • Nissan Revival Plan completed A comprehensive restructuring plan designed to achieve lasting profitable growth on a global level. Under the NRP, steadfast efforts were made to enhance product appeal and competitiveness besides cutting purchasing costs and indebtedness. • Bold three-year plan designed to revive the company • Finished one year ahead of schedule. Result: the all-new Altima won the North American Car of the Year Award in January 2002. • New 3-year business plan -- NISSAN 180 • Comprehensive three-year operational blueprint for Nissan's continuing revival, • Calling for growth, profit and zero debt. • Roll out new attractive products in various markets worldwide • Includes the all-new March launched February 2002 in Japan.
Nissan’s Products • Nissan offers a unique variety of vehicles that target all market segments, but are united by their reliability, safety and very high quality. Primera Nouvelle Micra Nissan 350z-pack Interstar Combi Tino Almera Primastar Combi Patrol GR Pick up X-trail Terrano
Nissan's clients • Catering to very wise range of customers ►►►Young, ambitious sporty people: → Nissan 350z-pack → Primera → Nouvelle Micra ►►►Older people with kids: →Tino →Almera → Primastar Combi ►►►Adventurous people of all ages: → Terrano → X-Rail • However, there are dramatic differences in expectations between Japanese and French customers: • Japanese change cars very quickly, every 5-6 years • French change cars every 10-12 years • Japanese are very careful with cars • French park “French style” – pushing their way through, causing scratches and other damage
Constraints in France • Dramatic difference in mentality of French and Japanese people in relation to work and cars. • French engineers: very intelligent, very logical, but completely out of touch with the end-customer • Japanese engineers: very close to customer, very detailed • Differences in management style: • French society—very small groups in control Hard to promote vehicles • French customer– very clever • Different countries have different specifics
Adaptation to France • Work in France through integration with Renault • Get maximum benefits from alliance with the French market leader: • Created 14 FTT units throughout the two organizations: • Function Task Team • Settle cultural differences through CCT units • Cross-Company Team • Compensation, appraisal and motivation: • Very complicated appraisal system • Employee must reach target to maintain salary • If target is reached, then there is also a bonus • Hiring: • Very good system for hiring representatives of different cultures • Heavy use of Japanese expatriates in France • Full scale of alliance has not been developed yet. • Training: • Seminars • Quality training • Work as a team on all tasks • Job Design: mixed assignments • Communication policies: • Mostly e-mail • Reporting difficult due to different fiscal year
Key Constraint Costs France is different from other locations in terms of operating costs due to alliance with Renault • Travel and communication costs—major constraint • Communication constraints • Language • Infrastructure
Key Benefits of being in France • Saving on production costs, as Renault allows the use of their French plants for production • Saving on real estate as Renault allows the use of their facilities in France • Successful integration of French managers into global organization: • Intelligent, experienced workers • Pay similar to other cultures • Market potential: • Good for other European countries • Sustainable market share in France, moderate growth.
Essential Advice • Take into account the mentality of French people • Consider all factors of working with French people • Consider nuances of French document processing system • Do a thorough market research
We Thank NORIHIDE AYABE Conformity Methods and Tools Department Senior Manager RENAULT Engineering Methods Department Address: TCR RUC 158, 1 rue du Golf, 78288 Guyancourt Cedex Tel: 33 01 30 03 31 77 E-mail norihide.ayabe@renault.com
Bibliography • References http://www.nissan-global.com http://www.nissan.co.jp http://www.nissan.co.fr http://www.firstcall.com http://www.edgar-online.com
Our Team • Emiliano Leggieri, 8 rue Eric Tabarly, Apt 2-412, Massy 91300, France • Tracy Lee, 8 rue Eric Tabarly, Apt 1-601, Massy 91300, France • Yoshihisa Shiokawa, 8 rue Eric Tabarly, Apt 2-313, Massy 91300, France • Tanya Svidler, 8 rue Eric Tabarly, Apt 2-113, Massy 91300, France