MISC

2009年1月1日

Honda: Serendipity or strategy from 1997-2007?

The Second Automobile Revolution: Trajectories of the World Carmakers in the 21st Century
  • Denise J. Luethge
  • ,
  • Philippe Byosière

開始ページ
112
終了ページ
128
記述言語
英語
掲載種別
DOI
10.1057/9780230236912_6
出版者・発行元
Palgrave Macmillan

Serendipity or strategy? What Las Vegas bookie could have set the odds that one day in Detroit, the ‘motor city’, a robot called Asimo, developed by Japanese automobile giant Honda, would conduct the Detroit Symphony Orchestra to ‘The Impossible Dream’ from the Broadway musical Man of La Mancha? Yet, such an event took place on 15 May 2008 in order to stimulate interest in mathematics and science among America’s youth. It is a sign of the changing times that with Takeo Fukui at the helm, Honda is back on the track of its innovative, creative and risk-taking roots that exemplified the life of its founder, Soichiro Honda. But not all is rosy at Honda: February 2008 saw the announcement of the closing of its motorcycle plant, opened in 1973 in Marysville, Ohio, despite having a US market share of 25 per cent. Honda also announced the closing of its motorcycle plant in Hamamatsu in order to consolidate heavy motorcycle production under one roof in Kyushu. However, on the other hand, in February 2007 Honda decided to open its aircraft headquarters in Greensboro, North Carolina, close to the site where the Wright brothers pioneered at Kitty Hawk, to manufacture the Hondajet targeted at an increasingly wealthy customer base in North America and Europe. These two major strategic decisions are strong indications that current CEO and Honda visionary Takeo Fukui is taking the company back to what founder Soichiro Honda envisioned as a global technological innovator pursuing new frontiers.

リンク情報
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230236912_6
ID情報
  • DOI : 10.1057/9780230236912_6
  • SCOPUS ID : 84887449115

エクスポート
BibTeX RIS