TOYOTA CITY, Japan—_Toyota Motor Corp_
(http://online.wsj.com/public/quotes/main.html?type=djn&symbol=TM) .'s
quality crisis is exposing—and
exacerbating—a long-simmering internal feud. The battle pits the
founding Toyoda
family against a group of professional managers, each blaming the other for the
 auto maker's woes.
Behind the scenes in recent weeks, the skirmishing has grown intense.
President Akio Toyoda, the 53-year-old grandson of the founder, has tried to
push out one of the nonfamily executives: his predecessor as president,
Katsuaki  Watanabe, now vice chairman.
Not long after the company made one of its massive safety recalls in
mid-January, Mr. Toyoda suggested to Mr. Watanabe, through an
intermediary, that
the former president leave the auto giant and instead run a Toyota
affiliate,  according to an executive who says he was told about the
move by Mr.
Toyoda.
Mr. Watanabe refused.
The standoff, which hasn't been reported before, is a dramatic example of
how  the old split between the two camps is bubbling to the surface amid
Toyota's  crisis. The feud is a distraction for a divided leadership as
officials struggle  to regain their footing after three months of attacks
unprecedented in the  company's 75-year history.


As quality issues plague Toyota, Joe White, Thorold  Barker and Evan
Newmark discuss the latest SUV setback as well as the struggles  of the Toyoda
family as it regains control of the Japanese  carmaker.



Toyota's Internal Feud
Read more about Toyota's past presidents.






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Mr. Toyoda and his allies have been saying openly that when he took the top
 job last year after a 15-year hiatus for the Toyoda clan, he inherited a
company  weakened by nonfamily predecessors who sacrificed quality for faster
growth and  fatter margins.
The problems arose when "some people just got too big-headed and focused
too  excessively on profit," Mr. Toyoda said at a Beijing news conference in
March.  He acknowledged the "ultimate responsibility for mistakes... lies in
me."
A week earlier, _Jim  Press—_
(http://topics.wsj.com/person/p/james-press/920) once the top Toyota
executive in the U.S. before he jumped to a  rival
auto maker—issued a statement declaring: "The root cause of their problems
is that the company was hijacked, some years ago, by anti-family, financially
 oriented pirates."
Those executives "didn't have the character to maintain a customer-first
focus. Akio does," said Mr. Press, who had a run-in with nonfamily Japanese
bosses several years ago.
A Toyota spokeswoman declined to comment on the infighting, saying: "We do
not discuss executive changes unless they are formally decided." She
declined to  comment on the statements by Messrs. Toyoda and Press, or
to make Mr.
Watanabe  available for comment.





Privately, the nonfamily managers have been waging their own campaign
within  the Toyota group. They say Mr. Toyoda never publicly opposed their
profit-growth  strategy when the company was widely praised for making
big money
and surpassing  General Motors Corp. to become the world's No. 1 auto maker.
They say Toyota's  current troubles are less a quality crisis and more a
management and  public-relations crisis of Mr. Toyoda's making, reflecting
their longstanding  warnings that he wasn't ready to run a global corporation.
"Is Akio ducking criticism of being a beneficiary of nepotism by accusing
us  and trying to justify his ascendancy to the top job?" one of Mr.
Watanabe's top  aides said. "One of our biggest social responsibilities is to
generate profits  and pay taxes. To criticize the company's effort to maximize
profits and thus  taxes is just complete nonsense."
Hiroshi Okuda, a nonfamily president who ran the company from 1995 through
1999, has told at least two associates since the recalls of cars involved
in  sudden acceleration incidents earlier this year: "Akio needs to go." The
77-year-old remains a key company adviser even though he gave up his board
seat  last year.
Toyota declined to make Mr. Okuda available for comment. The Toyota
spokeswoman declined to comment.


_Quality  Control_
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How Toyota's reliability compares to the competition. _See full graphic._
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Takahiro Fujimoto, a professor of economics at Tokyo University who has
studied Toyota extensively, says airing problems openly is very much part of
Toyota's corporate culture focused on kaizen, or continuous  improvement.
"But it's highly unusual for anybody inside Toyota to publicly  criticize
certain individuals by name," or to criticize in a way that it's easy  for
anybody to identify the targets.
The feud dates to the mid-1990s, when the family relinquished control of
the  chief executive's office for the first time since Eiji Toyoda, the cousin
of the  founder, became president in 1967. Non-Toyodas also ran the company
from  1950-67.
By the time Akio's uncle, Tatsuro, stepped down as president in 1995, after
a  stroke, the company was losing market share and risked posting its first
loss  since 1950. It was vulnerable to a weak Japanese economy, trade
friction with  the U.S., and a strong Japanese currency that crimped exports.
A series of non-Toyodas took the helm, beginning with Mr. Okuda in 1995 and
 ending with Mr. Watanabe in 2009. During their terms, the company revived
financially and emerged as one of the most admired and studied companies in
the  world.
The gist of the Okuda-Watanabe strategy was to take Toyota's globalization
efforts, launched under the previous generation of family management, to
new  levels. Even though the company had begun to build factories in the U.S.
and  other markets in the 1980s, it still was seen as largely insular and
Japan-focused.
In 1996, Mr. Okuda and aides unveiled a new strategy dubbed the "2005
Vision." They aimed to retool the auto maker over the coming decade, growing
rapidly while relying less on exports and more on factories producing locally
in  target markets, from Argentina to Thailand to the U.S. Mr. Watanabe was
one of  the authors of the plan.
To realize this 10-year vision, the executives devised interim "global
master  plans" to assign resources efficiently to different divisions, along
with  "global profit management" plans that required sales executives around
the world  to attain certain profitability goals.
The 2005 Vision also pushed Toyota to implement kakushin, or revolutionary
innovations, in vehicle design and manufacturing. That included efficiency
drives to reduce costs, not only through conventional means, such as
simplifying  designs and using cheaper materials, but also by changing the way
cars are  engineered. For example, engineers were pushed to combine functions
into fewer  parts and systems. Their aim: cut the number of components in a
car by half.
In 2002, the plan morphed into the "2010 Vision," aiming for 15% global
market share by the early 2010s, an ambitious jump from the 10% mark Toyota
had  at the time. Toyota has yet to achieve this goal. Its consolidated group
market  share rose to as high as about 13% in 2008, according to CSM
Worldwide, a  consulting firm that tracks auto makers.
The effects of those measures were phenomenal. Starting around 2000, the
company's global sales began growing by up to 600,000 vehicles a year, more
than  the annual overall volume achieved by Volvo.
During this 15-year non-family reign, Toyota achieved other milestones:
operating profit margins zoomed to an industry-leading high of 8.6%. In 2008,
Toyota displaced GM as the world's biggest auto maker by unit sales.
As part of his strategy, Mr. Okuda sought to diminish the family's role.
According to executives close to him, Mr. Okuda said founding-family
dominance  was an outdated concept—especially when the family
controlled less than
2% of  the stock in the publicly traded company.
At the peak of his power, Mr. Okuda publicly was frank about that belief.
"The Toyoda family will eventually become a 'shrine' to the company's
foundation, to which we will pay respect once a year," he told The Wall Street
Journal in a 2000 interview.
Asked then about future prospects for Mr. Toyoda, then a 43-year-old
general  manager, Mr. Okuda said: "Nepotism just doesn't belong in our
future." He
 elaborated: "Akio-class talents are rolling around all over Toyota, like
so many  potatoes."
At the time, Mr. Toyoda seemed to have been sidelined. When he was assigned
 to lead Toyota's Chinese operations in 2001, China was still a backwater
in  Toyota's global strategy. Mr. Okuda, by then Toyota chairman, likened the
job to  "mopping the floors"—a safe place for grooming a scion with more
ambition than  experience, according to a separate Journal interview in 2003.
But Mr. Toyoda fixed the troubled Chinese subsidiary and put it on a path
for  growth. He was then promoted in 2005 to the position of executive vice
president, where he had broad responsibilities, including quality, product
management, purchasing and global sales.
Even as he climbed the ladder, Mr. Toyoda said little in top management
meetings, according to some nonfamily executives. As Toyota made progress, the
 non-family executives began dismissing Mr. Toyoda and treated him as a
not-so-bright spoiled rich kid, say several non-family managers.
Executives close to Mr. Toyoda dispute the notion that he was overpowered
by  top management. While the company's financial reports were improving, a
number  of vehicle recalls signalled that its famed quality was slipping, and
Mr. Toyoda  began to sound the warning bell. On Dec. 2, 2005, the end of
the year when Mr.  Okuda's 10-year vision was coming to fruition, Mr. Toyoda
gave an unpublicized,  internal speech questioning the new direction.
Talking to engineers and mid-level executives, Mr. Toyoda said the rapid
expansion exceeded the company's ability to assure the quality and
reliability  of each model. He called on the engineers, seated inside
an auditorium at
 Toyota's global headquarters, to shift their mindset and attain the
"resolve to  make a big turn from emphasizing volume to quality,"
according to a
summary of  the speech reviewed by the Journal.
Top executives at the time say Mr. Toyoda never took such complaints
directly  to them.
In 2008, the question of family vs. nonfamily management came to a head as
Mr. Watanabe was preparing to retire as chief executive. Mr. Okuda, then a
board  member, angled for a close aide, another nonfamily executive, to take
the job.  Shoichiro Toyoda, a former president who remained an influential
adviser,  weighed in for Akio, his son, according to senior Toyota
executives.
In January 2009, the company announced Akio Toyoda would replace Mr.
Watanabe  as president in June. Taking charge at 53 years old, Mr.
Toyoda became
Toyota's  youngest chief executive since his grandfather became president in
1941 at age  47.
The younger Mr. Toyoda declared as one of his first priorities undoing many
 of his predecessor's policies. He began by signaling to underlings that he
 didn't share Mr. Watanabe's informal goal of hitting two trillion yen or
more in  annual operating income. He immediately killed the "global profit
management"  plan, associates say.
The reality of Toyota's quality problems—the main battleground inside the
company today—is a bit ambiguous.
Two separate surveys conducted by J.D. Power & Associates show the Toyota
brand quality has actually improved over the past decade, measured by a
decline  in the rate of owner complaints. This occurred even as the number of
vehicles  the company recalled around the world skyrocketed in that time.
The surveys also show that Toyota rivals improved faster. In 2000, Toyota's
 luxury brand Lexus placed first in quality rankings for used-car owners,
while  the Toyota brand ranked fourth. By 2009, Lexus fell from the top spot,
ranking  behind Buick and Jaguar, while the Toyota brand again placed
fourth. In quality  rankings for new-car owners, the Toyota brand in 2000 tied
with BMW for fourth.  In 2009, Toyota ranked sixth.
Mr. Toyoda's supporters blame the slippage in relative quality rankings—as
well as the sharp rise in recalls—on the company's previous non-family
managers.  It takes two to three years to develop a new car, so the models
experiencing  problems were developed before Akio Toyoda took the helm
last June.
The nonfamily executives acknowledge they made some mistakes. One says a
large number of inexperienced contract engineers hired from outside agencies—
an  effort to save money as they tried to boost engineering capacity—led to
at least  some of the increase in quality glitches.
But the non-family managers blame Mr. Toyoda's management style—both
external  and internal—as much as anything for letting the defects turn from a
fixable  problem into a full crisis.
Mr. Toyoda's in-house detractors say the president has created an informal
team of loyalists, making it tough for managers trying to communicate
through  the formal channels. One nonfamily manager says the current executive
structure  operates like a "shadow management team," doubling up information
and  management.
In terms of handling the American public, politicians and press, they say
Mr.  Toyoda was slow to address publicly the controversy. And when he did
finally  speak out, they say, his statements were widely criticized as vague
and  halting.
Mr. Toyoda's supporters say, on the contrary, he's been clear and direct
about the direction he wants to follow. At a press conference last month, Mr.
 Toyoda said the previous expansion push may have caused it to scrimp on
quality,  compromising its just-in-time production system, for example. "I
would like to  make sure we re-embrace those basics and rebuild the foundation
of Toyota and  its production system," he said.
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