Akio Toyoda: Testimony to House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform
February 24, 2010 - Prepared Testimony of Akio Toyoda, President, Toyota Motor Corporation, to Committee on Oversight and Government Reformt
Thank you Chairman Towns.
I am Akio Toyoda of Toyota Motor Corporation. I would first like to state that
I love cars as much as anyone, and I love Toyota as much as anyone. I take the
utmost pleasure in offering vehicles that our customers love, and I know that
Toyotas 200,000 team members, dealers, and suppliers across America feel
the same way. However, in the past few months, our customers have started to feel
uncertain about the safety of Toyotas vehicles, and I take full responsibility
for that. Today, I would like to explain to the American people, as well as our
customers in the U.S. and around the world, how seriously Toyota takes the quality
and safety of its vehicles. I would like to express my appreciation to Chairman
Towns and Ranking Member Issa, as well as the members of the House Oversight and
Government Reform Committee, for giving me this opportunity to express my thoughts
today.
I would like to focus my comments on three topics Toyotas basic philosophy
regarding quality control, the cause of the recalls, and how we will manage quality
control going forward.
First, I want to discuss the philosophy of Toyotas quality control. I myself,
as well as Toyota, am not perfect. At times, we do find defects. But in such situations,
we always stop, strive to understand the problem, and make changes to improve
further. In the name of the company, its long-standing tradition and pride, we
never run away from our problems or pretend we dont notice them. By making
continuous improvements, we aim to continue offering even better products for
society. That is the core value we have kept closest to our hearts since the founding
days of the company.
At Toyota, we believe the key to making quality products is to develop quality
people. Each employee thinks about what he or she should do, continuously making
improvements, and by doing so, makes even better cars. We have been actively engaged
in developing people who share and can execute on this core value. It has been
over 50 years since we began selling in this great country, and over 25 years
since we started production here. And in the process, we have been able to share
this core value with the 200,000 people at Toyota operations, dealers, and suppliers
in this country. That is what I am most proud of.
Second, I would like to discuss what caused the recall issues we are facing
now. Toyota has, for the past few years, been expanding its business rapidly.
Quite frankly, I fear the pace at which we have grown may have been too quick.
I would like to point out here that Toyotas priority has traditionally
been the following: First; Safety, Second; Quality, and Third; Volume. These
priorities became confused, and we were not able to stop, think, and make improvements
as much as we were able to before, and our basic stance to listen to customers
voices to make better products has weakened somewhat. We pursued growth over
the speed at which we were able to develop our people and our organization,
and we should sincerely be mindful of that. I regret that this has resulted
in the safety issues described in the recalls we face today, and I am deeply
sorry for any accidents that Toyota drivers have experienced.
Especially, I would like to extend my condolences to the members of the Saylor
family, for the accident in San Diego. I would like to send my prayers again,
and I will do everything in my power to ensure that such a tragedy never happens
again.
Since last June, when I first took office, I have personally placed the highest
priority on improving quality over quantity, and I have shared that direction
with our stakeholders. As you well know, I am the grandson of the founder, and
all the Toyota vehicles bear my name. For me, when the cars are damaged, it
is as though I am as well. I, more than anyone, wish for Toyotas cars
to be safe, and for our customers to feel safe when they use our vehicles. Under
my leadership, I would like to reaffirm our values of placing safety and quality
the highest on our list of priorities, which we have held to firmly from the
time we were founded. I will also strive to devise a system in which we can
surely execute what we value.
Third, I would like to discuss how we plan to manage quality control as we go
forward. Up to now, any decisions on conducting recalls have been made by the
Customer Quality Engineering Division at Toyota Motor Corporation in Japan.
This division confirms whether there are technical problems and makes a decision
on the necessity of a recall. However, reflecting on the issues today, what
we lacked was the customers perspective.
To make improvements on this, we will make the following changes to the recall
decisionmaking process. When recall decisions are made, a step will be added
in the process to ensure that management will make a responsible decision from
the perspective of customer safety first. To do that, we will devise
a system in which customers voices around the world will reach our management
in a timely manner, and also a system in which each region will be able to make
decisions as necessary. Further, we will form a quality advisory group composed
of respected outside experts from North America and around the world to ensure
that we do not make a misguided decision. Finally, we will invest heavily in
quality in the U.S., through the establishment of an Automotive Center of Quality
Excellence, the introduction of a new position Product Safety Executive,
and the sharing of more information and responsibility within the company for
product quality decisions, including defects and recalls.
Even more importantly, I will ensure that members of the management team actually
drive the cars, and that they check for themselves where the problem lies as
well as its severity. I myself am a trained test driver. As a professional,
I am able to check on problems in a car, and can understand how severe the safety
concern is in a car. I drove the vehicles in the accelerator pedal recall as
well as the Prius, comparing the vehicles before and after the remedy in various
environmental settings. I believe that only by examining the problems on-site,
can one make decisions from the customer perspective. One cannot rely on reports
or data in a meeting room.
Through the measures I have just discussed, and with whatever results we obtain
from the investigations we are conducting in cooperation with NHTSA, I intend
to further improve on the quality of Toyota vehicles and fulfill our principle
of putting the customer first.
My name is on every car. You have my personal commitment that Toyota will work
vigorously and unceasingly to restore the trust of our customers.
Thank you.
