Toyota: Was it bad HR, bad PR or just bad leadership?


There were plenty of good things that could have been said about the way Toyota handled its recent redundancies at the Altona plant in Melbourne.

First the company announced some months ago its intention to make job cuts and explained that the strong Australian dollar was the straw that was breaking the car maker’s back in what was an already tough market.  So, Toyota was upfront and transparent. All good!

Then, when it did make its announcement, the redundancy payout was four weeks’ pay for every year of service capped at 90 weeks when 75 weeks would have met legal requirements, and the company would be providing assistance for those affected to find another job.  In both areas, brownie points for generosity.

But instead of all these positives in what can never be a good news story, the nation was treated to a crude exercise in ponderous Orwellian behaviour by Toyota. The affected 350 workers were told to pack up their belongings and escorted to a reception centre where they were handed documentation that related to their redundancy that, astonishingly, included a score sheet setting out their personal failures in the areas of behaviour, skills and knowledge relative to their colleagues.

There was failure evident at Toyota, however.  Someone in a critical planning role had failed to join the dots.  If the company’s intention is to assist in getting 350 laid-off workers new jobs how, at the same time, can the company be saying publicly that they are no good?  What starts to reveal itself is a muddle-headed management malaise that raises a question about why so many workers had seemingly not come up to scratch.

Whatever else might be said, what happened was a disaster and damaging to the Toyota brand, a brand with a hitherto enviable reputation as a good employer. It suggests some serious flaws in Toyota Australia’s management and leadership were displayed publicly in the culling. The Human Capital online newsletter described the Toyota exercise as a “HR botch-job”. The Australian Financial Review headline called it “An unusual way to let go”, which was probably a nice way of saying “What a mess!”

A mess it was, but I would add that it was not necessarily a mess that can be dumped on HR professionals. What’s important to understand is whether the HR function at Toyota is structured in such a way that it can and does contribute to important strategic decisions. This is a perennial issue for many good HR practitioners. The HR function in many organisations remains largely impotent, often reporting into finance or other operational functions. If this was the case at Toyota then responsibility for this “HR botch-job” should be placed squarely with the Toyota executive team. We’ve been banging on for years that good HR can never happen without the support, respect and endorsement of the CEO. Good HR can never happen when it reports to the finance department.

I would suggest that it’s reasonable to expect that a company of Toyota’s size and resource-base would be able to deliver a coherent and coordinated communication of the key messages in a mass redundancy that could minimise the harmful effects on  workers and limit damage to the brand.  Neither of those two things happened and it’s not necessarily because HR bungled it.

The PR side to this exercise should have included credible and consistent narratives, one internal and the other external.

The internal communication needed to be directed at both the laid-off workers as well as those retained by the company.  People still working at the company are not stupid. They can see that if their colleagues are treated shabbily today, it might happen to them tomorrow.

The external narrative should not have included any information related to the reasons that workers were chosen in the cull that reflected negatively on those workers.  They are private matters and should have been communicated privately, if at all.  Without a doubt, communicators need to tell the truth –  but a mass redundancy is not a court of law.  There is no requirement to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth to the entire world, especially if negative repercussions on the affected workers are likely to result.

There are many circumstances in a big company where the human resources and public relations functions need to be authorised to talk to each other.  In the Toyota case, it’s by no means evident they did.

Serge Sardo is the chief executive of the Australian Human Resources Institute

Subscribe to receive comments
Notify me of
guest

28 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Shani Jones
Shani Jones
12 years ago

What if hr did have a say? Was it as bad as it seems? What if the union lied about what really happened? Maybe a bus was a safer way to get to the venue than having a shocked worker drive themselves? Maybe an outside venue was a better option than parading workers in front of their mates? Maybe it meant workers could be spoken to privately and given support? Has anyone actually talked to the company to get the facts? Has anyone heard from a worker about what they experienced? All I hear is what a newspaper says.

Peter Chapman Private HR Consultant
Peter Chapman Private HR Consultant
12 years ago

Pity no one has discussed that Toyota is a business that is in business for profit. I run a
small home based business. You have to move people on, just because Toyota
is a household brand they are not immune to making tough decisions.

Tony Wiggins
Tony Wiggins
12 years ago

“If you’re not making mistakes, then you’re not doing anything. I’m positive that a doer makes mistakes.” – John Wooden

Mike Chep
Mike Chep
12 years ago

I was considering not subscribing to AHRI into the future – however the comments, I have received in relation to the Toyota Redundancies posted by Serge as well as the responces by interested people have renewed my interest in AHRI – this was a good move. It really made you sit up and take notice

Linda Stojanovich
Linda Stojanovich
12 years ago

I thank Serge and all of the respondents to his article. I have in my previous role managed redundancies within Australia’s auto industry, and while mass redundancies are challenging and the ideal goal is to safeguard our employer and maintain dignity for the employees, there are a myriad of pitfalls that cannot always be foreshadowed and planned for. The media’s thirst for spinning events in Australian auto industry businesses into opportunities to portray them as ‘public enemy No 1′ is an additional complexity that acts detrimentally to an auto business’ ability to deliver an outcome that is not only positive… Read more »

More on HRM

Toyota: Was it bad HR, bad PR or just bad leadership?


There were plenty of good things that could have been said about the way Toyota handled its recent redundancies at the Altona plant in Melbourne.

First the company announced some months ago its intention to make job cuts and explained that the strong Australian dollar was the straw that was breaking the car maker’s back in what was an already tough market.  So, Toyota was upfront and transparent. All good!

Then, when it did make its announcement, the redundancy payout was four weeks’ pay for every year of service capped at 90 weeks when 75 weeks would have met legal requirements, and the company would be providing assistance for those affected to find another job.  In both areas, brownie points for generosity.

But instead of all these positives in what can never be a good news story, the nation was treated to a crude exercise in ponderous Orwellian behaviour by Toyota. The affected 350 workers were told to pack up their belongings and escorted to a reception centre where they were handed documentation that related to their redundancy that, astonishingly, included a score sheet setting out their personal failures in the areas of behaviour, skills and knowledge relative to their colleagues.

There was failure evident at Toyota, however.  Someone in a critical planning role had failed to join the dots.  If the company’s intention is to assist in getting 350 laid-off workers new jobs how, at the same time, can the company be saying publicly that they are no good?  What starts to reveal itself is a muddle-headed management malaise that raises a question about why so many workers had seemingly not come up to scratch.

Whatever else might be said, what happened was a disaster and damaging to the Toyota brand, a brand with a hitherto enviable reputation as a good employer. It suggests some serious flaws in Toyota Australia’s management and leadership were displayed publicly in the culling. The Human Capital online newsletter described the Toyota exercise as a “HR botch-job”. The Australian Financial Review headline called it “An unusual way to let go”, which was probably a nice way of saying “What a mess!”

A mess it was, but I would add that it was not necessarily a mess that can be dumped on HR professionals. What’s important to understand is whether the HR function at Toyota is structured in such a way that it can and does contribute to important strategic decisions. This is a perennial issue for many good HR practitioners. The HR function in many organisations remains largely impotent, often reporting into finance or other operational functions. If this was the case at Toyota then responsibility for this “HR botch-job” should be placed squarely with the Toyota executive team. We’ve been banging on for years that good HR can never happen without the support, respect and endorsement of the CEO. Good HR can never happen when it reports to the finance department.

I would suggest that it’s reasonable to expect that a company of Toyota’s size and resource-base would be able to deliver a coherent and coordinated communication of the key messages in a mass redundancy that could minimise the harmful effects on  workers and limit damage to the brand.  Neither of those two things happened and it’s not necessarily because HR bungled it.

The PR side to this exercise should have included credible and consistent narratives, one internal and the other external.

The internal communication needed to be directed at both the laid-off workers as well as those retained by the company.  People still working at the company are not stupid. They can see that if their colleagues are treated shabbily today, it might happen to them tomorrow.

The external narrative should not have included any information related to the reasons that workers were chosen in the cull that reflected negatively on those workers.  They are private matters and should have been communicated privately, if at all.  Without a doubt, communicators need to tell the truth –  but a mass redundancy is not a court of law.  There is no requirement to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth to the entire world, especially if negative repercussions on the affected workers are likely to result.

There are many circumstances in a big company where the human resources and public relations functions need to be authorised to talk to each other.  In the Toyota case, it’s by no means evident they did.

Serge Sardo is the chief executive of the Australian Human Resources Institute

Subscribe to receive comments
Notify me of
guest

28 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Shani Jones
Shani Jones
12 years ago

What if hr did have a say? Was it as bad as it seems? What if the union lied about what really happened? Maybe a bus was a safer way to get to the venue than having a shocked worker drive themselves? Maybe an outside venue was a better option than parading workers in front of their mates? Maybe it meant workers could be spoken to privately and given support? Has anyone actually talked to the company to get the facts? Has anyone heard from a worker about what they experienced? All I hear is what a newspaper says.

Peter Chapman Private HR Consultant
Peter Chapman Private HR Consultant
12 years ago

Pity no one has discussed that Toyota is a business that is in business for profit. I run a
small home based business. You have to move people on, just because Toyota
is a household brand they are not immune to making tough decisions.

Tony Wiggins
Tony Wiggins
12 years ago

“If you’re not making mistakes, then you’re not doing anything. I’m positive that a doer makes mistakes.” – John Wooden

Mike Chep
Mike Chep
12 years ago

I was considering not subscribing to AHRI into the future – however the comments, I have received in relation to the Toyota Redundancies posted by Serge as well as the responces by interested people have renewed my interest in AHRI – this was a good move. It really made you sit up and take notice

Linda Stojanovich
Linda Stojanovich
12 years ago

I thank Serge and all of the respondents to his article. I have in my previous role managed redundancies within Australia’s auto industry, and while mass redundancies are challenging and the ideal goal is to safeguard our employer and maintain dignity for the employees, there are a myriad of pitfalls that cannot always be foreshadowed and planned for. The media’s thirst for spinning events in Australian auto industry businesses into opportunities to portray them as ‘public enemy No 1′ is an additional complexity that acts detrimentally to an auto business’ ability to deliver an outcome that is not only positive… Read more »

More on HRM