First female CEO for General Motors

  • Dec 11, 2013
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  • By Team Zigwheels
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General Motors choose Mary Barra, its product development chief and a 33-year company veteran, as its next CEO

Mary Barr becomes first woman CEO of GM

Mary Barra, 51 will become the first female head of General Motors by replacing Dan Akerson on January 15. Akerson, 65, chairman and CEO, moved up his retirement plans by several months because his wife, Karin, is battling an advanced form of cancer.


"I need to spend all my time and energy in fighting this disease with my wife," said Akerson. He had originally planned to stay into the spring or summer.


Since February 2011 Barra has held what many say is the most important job at GM, senior vice president for global product development. Barra, who joined GM in 1980, is currently in charge of design, engineering and quality for all of GM's vehicles across the globe and has shepherded most of the company's recent new vehicle introductions.


Under her command, GM rolled out brawny new full-size pickup trucks, the Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra, and the Chevrolet Impala full-size car, which earned the highest score for a sedan in testing by Consumer Reports magazine. Its quality scores also rose in surveys conducted by J.D. Power and Associates. She also led development of the new Chevrolet Corvette and several new Cadillac models.


Akerson took over GM in September 2010, as the company prepared to go public about a year after emerging from bankruptcy protection. During his tenure GM has made billions of dollars in profits and is sitting on $26.8 billion in cash. Its profit margins in North America are a healthy 9 per cent. He and Barra have revamped GM's lineup of cars and trucks.

General Motors


But Barra still needs to trim GM's costs and win over buyers in markets such as India and South America. One big step in getting there: producing more vehicles that can be sold in multiple markets, such as the Chevrolet Cruze compact car.


The choice of Barra was unanimous, Akerson said, because of her breadth of experience, management and people skills and her understanding of GM's operations. The GM board considered only internal candidates.
"This is an executive who has a vision of where she wants to take the organization," he said, adding that Barra took over product development when it was in chaos not long after GM emerged from bankruptcy protection.

Akerson hinted at the move earlier this year when he told a women's business group in Detroit that a 'car gal' would run one of the Detroit Three automakers someday soon. But Akerson made it clear that Barra was picked for her background and accomplishments, not because of her gender.


Barra, who grew up near Pontiac, Michigan, is the daughter of a die-maker who retired from GM after 39 years. GM's previous two CEOs, Akerson and Ed Whitacre, came from the telecommunications and finance industries and lacked the auto industry experience that Barra has, said Erik Gordon, a professor at the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business.


"There's nobody with more years of honest ‘car-guy’ credentials than she has," Gordon said. "She's the one to do the breakthrough," Gordon said. Women have held top positions in auto marketing design and engineering, but never made it to the CEO spot, Gordon said. "The fact that none of them has run a major car company makes no sense," he said.


The GM board decided to separate the positions of chairman and CEO. Barra will get a board seat, but director Theodore (Tim) Solso will succeed Akerson as chairman. Solso, a GM board member since June 2012, is the former chairman and CEO of engine maker Cummins Inc.


Barra started with GM as an electrical engineering co-op student when she attended what is now Kettering University in nearby Flint. She previously ran GM's human resources operations. Before that she was a plant manager and executive director of engineering. She holds a master's degree in business administration from Stanford University.

Barra was among four internal candidates for the position, including Chief Financial Officer Dan Ammann, North American President Mark Reuss and Vice Chairman Steve Girsky.

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