Senior Appointment
Ford Motor Co
13 December 2007
Contact: Anne Marie Gattari Mark Truby
313.323.7809 313.323.0539
313.587.9256 (cell) 313.663.6887 (cell)
agattari@ford.com mtruby@ford.com
FORD NAMES JOE HINRICHS GROUP VICE PRESIDENT, GLOBAL MANUFACTURING
DEARBORN, Mich., Dec. 13, 2007 - Ford Motor Company President and CEO Alan
Mulally today announced that Joe Hinrichs has been named group vice president,
Global Manufacturing. The appointment is effective Jan. 1, 2008.
Hinrichs, currently vice president of North America Manufacturing, will lead the
worldwide integration of the company's manufacturing operations and its
engineering support for vehicle, powertrain and stamping. In his new role,
Hinrichs, 40, will drive alignment between manufacturing and product development
on a global scale, leveraging the company's worldwide product strategy. He will
continue to directly oversee North American manufacturing operations. In
addition, Hinrichs will have global responsibility for the company's Material
Planning and Logistics, Ford Production System, and Manufacturing Business
Office organizations.
'Joe has been successful in leading the restructuring of our North American
manufacturing operations and was a key participant in the recent contract talks
with the UAW,' Mulally said. 'In his new role, Joe will focus on delivering a
global manufacturing plan that allows us to improve our efficiency while
leveraging our scale worldwide. A global manufacturing footprint supporting a
global product plan that delivers the vehicles people want and value are key to
creating an exciting and viable company - that delivers profitable growth for
all.'
In his global role, Hinrichs reports to Mulally. In his North American role, he
will continue to report to Mark Fields, executive vice president and president,
The Americas.
'Our plants in North America are more competitive and our launches are stronger,
thanks in large part to Joe's leadership,' Fields said. 'Integrating
manufacturing around the world and aligning it with product development on a
global scale will make the entire business stronger.'
Hinrichs, who joined Ford in 2000 and has held a variety of top manufacturing
jobs, led Ford's successful effort to negotiate Competitive Operating Agreements
with the United Auto Workers across Ford's U.S. manufacturing operations while
driving improved quality. He also played a key role in this year's contract
negotiations with the UAW, which led to a new four-year U.S. labor agreement
that will help Ford become significantly more competitive and protects workers
and retirees.
'I am excited by the opportunity to bring our plants and engineering functions
around the world together into one, cohesive manufacturing operation,' Hinrichs
said. 'Integrating a global process plan and combining it with our global
product plan allow us to accelerate our ability to produce the vehicles
customers want around the world while continuing to improve quality.'
Hinrichs also will lead Automotive Components Holdings LLC, the Ford-managed
temporary business entity comprised of former Visteon Corp. plants and
facilities in the United States and Mexico. ACH is preparing its plants for sale
or closure by the end of 2008.
# # #
Ford Motor Company, a global automotive industry leader based in Dearborn,
Mich., manufactures or distributes automobiles in 200 markets across six
continents. With about 260,000 employees and about 100 plants worldwide, the
company's core and affiliated automotive brands include Ford, Jaguar, Land
Rover, Lincoln, Mercury, Volvo and Mazda. The company provides financial
services through Ford Motor Credit Company. For more information regarding
Ford's products, please visit www.ford.com.
This information is provided by RNS
The company news service from the London Stock Exchange