Extreme Toyota Radical Contradictions That Drive Success at the World's Best Manufacturer

Edited by Emi Osono · Norihiko Shimizu · Hirotaka Takeuchi
John Wiley & Sons May 2008

Specifications

ISBN-13
9780470267622
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons
Publication
May 2008
Format
Hardback , 320 pages
Jurisdiction
International ? Countri(es) for reference only

Details

Extreme Toyota offers the first real, comprehensive inside look at what makes one of the world?s best companies run. With unprecedented access to the inner working of Toyota, the authors spent six years researching the company, interviewing hundreds of executives and employees, and discovering the company's secret of success. What they uncovered will surprise you and change the way you think about business. Simultaneously rigidly traditional and seriously innovative, it is precisely those internal contradictions that make the company so successful and admired.
 
Reviews
 
"Heavily footed and studded with graphs and charts, this insider's view of one of the world's leading manufacturers is somewhat academic in tone yet has enough anecdotes to make it interesting." (Library Journal, May 15, 2008)
 
 

Table of Contents

Preface.

Chapter 1 Extreme Toyota: An Organization Powered by Creative Contradictions.

An Amazing Track Record.

The Hard Side of Toyota.

The Powerful and Mysterious Soft Side.

How Toyota Is Like a Failed, Stagnant Company.

Management Orchestrated Contradictions, Opposites, and Paradoxes.

Embracing Contradictions as a Way of Life.

Conclusion.

Chapter 2 Six Opposing Forces That Drive the Company’s Expansion—and Keep It from Breaking Apart.

Forces of Expansion.

Forces of Integration.

Six Forces Working Together.

Resource Base.

Six Forces in Action: Case of the Lexus.

Conclusion.

Chapter 3 The Force of Impossible Goals.

Meet Every Customer Need.

The Finest Cars, the Finest Dealers.

Bypassing Japan to Make a Global Car.

Conclusion.

Chapter 4 Eagerness to Experiment.

Experimentation Hardware: The Eight-Step and A3 Processes.

Experimentation Software: Values.

Conclusion.

Chapter 5 Local Customization.

The Underdog Even at Home.

Customizing the IMV in Asia.

The Challenges and Benefits of Local Customization.

Customizing the Yaris for Europe.

Customizing the Scion for the United States Youth Segment.

Customizing the Tundra for the United States.

Disseminating Local Best Practices throughout the World.

Conclusion.

Chapter 6 The Founders’ Philosophies.

Tomorrow Will Be Better than Today.

Everybody Should Win.

Customer First, Dealers Second, and Manufacturer Last.

Genchi Genbutsu.

Conclusion.

Chapter 7 Toyota’s Nerve System—A Human Version of the World Wide Web.

Open and Lateral Dissemination of Know-How.

Freedom to Voice Contrary Opinions.

Frequent Face-to-Face Interaction.

Making Tacit Knowledge Explicit: The Toyota Way 2001.

Formal and Informal Support Mechanisms.

Conclusion.

Chapter 8 Up-and-In Human Resource Management.

Stable, Long-Term Employment.

Emphasis on Training, Training, and More Training.

Power in Teamwork.

Action Orientation.

Learning-Based Evaluation.

Conclusion.

Chapter 9 Toyota’s Resource Base.

Investing in Efficiency.

Cultivating Organizational Capability and People Required for Growth.

Making a Long-Term Commitment to People.

Conclusion.

Chapter 10 A Company Always in Danger.

Organizational Growth Pains.

Employee Complacency.

Cultural Rigidity.

Workforce Diversity.

Insular Approach to the Capital Markets.

Rise of New Competitors.

Conclusion.

Chapter 11 What Your Organization Can Learn from Toyota: Ten Powerful Contradictions.

Embrace Contradictions.

Conclusion.

Appendix A Selected Auto Industry Figures and Comparisons.

Chapter 1—Extreme Toyota.

Chapter 2—Six Forces.

Chapter 3—Impossible Goals.

Chapter 9—Resources.

Appendix B Literature Review.

Literature Review Methodology.

Notes.

References.

Index.

About the Author

Hirotaka Takeuchi, Emi Osono, and Norihiko Shimizu are business school graduates from the University of California, Berkeley, The George Washington University, and Stanford University, respectively. They are professors at one of Japan's top business schools, Hitotsubashi University, Graduate School of International Corporate Strategy (www.ics.hit-u.ac.jp). Takeuchi works closely with Professor Michael E. Porter of Harvard University, with whom he coauthored Can Japan Compete? (2000). All three authors are also frequent speakers at conferences and seminars around the world.
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