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‘Ruffling feathers’: How VW fell out of love with Herbert Diess

When Volkswagen boss Herbert Diess’s strongest competitor, Elon Musk, parked his electric cars on the German group’s lawn by building a factory just 200km from its historic Wolfsburg headquarters, the Bavarian executive’s response was warmer than many expected.

Publicly, Diess told anyone who would listen that Tesla was “paving the way” and “good for the industry”. He was effusive in his praise of Musk’s achievements, even inviting the world’s richest man to lecture a hall full of VW managers and attempting to mimic his social media use. Privately, Diess joked that he wished Musk had moved his plant “100km closer” to VW’s home, so workers could see the American company on the horizon.

Although Diess had developed a reputation for gaffes, these provocations were deliberate. “He felt that if he was ruffling feathers he was going in the right direction,” says Bernstein analyst Daniel Röska of the manager’s attempt to transform a company that had been tainted by the diesel emissions scandal into an agile, electric pioneer. “It was a kind of an all or nothing strategy.”

Those efforts were brought to a screeching halt on Friday when, at the request of the Porsche-Piëch clan who remain VW’s largest shareholders, the company’s supervisory board held an extraordinary meeting and agreed to defenestrate Diess with almost immediate effect, hours after the executive had left for a summer holiday.

Beyond the auto world, Diess had become best known for a series of public blunders. He told the BBC in 2019 he was “not aware” of detention camps in China’s Xinjiang region, and continued to defend VW’s presence there. He was forced to apologise for using the phrase “EBIT macht frei” at a company event, referring to profit incentives but echoing a Nazi slogan.

Earlier this year he provoked outrage in Ukraine after suggesting that Europe should seek to negotiate with Russia, a view not uncommon in corporate Germany but rarely voiced on the international stage.

Back home, Diess gained notoriety for more domestic issues — particularly his skirmishes with VW’s powerful works council, which represents 60,000 employees at Wolfsburg and most of the additional 230,000 staff in wider Germany. He angered the organisation — which has effective control over the supervisory board via a loose alliance with the state of Lower Saxony, VW’s second-largest shareholder — by suggesting the group had 30,000 excess staff in the country. 

A selfie Diess posted on Twitter, posing with Tesla’s Elon Musk and VW’s electric iD3 vehicle © Herbert Diess/Twitter

Last year he also pointed out that while it took VW roughly 30 hours to produce an electric car, Tesla employees managed the same in just 10. This metric was disputed by unions. 

As a result of such confrontations, Diess sustained several bruises in his four-year tenure, including being relieved of direct responsibility for the group’s largest brand, the VW marque, in 2020, and of his role as head of VW’s China business last year. 

“He took decisions without being sentimental about his colleagues’ feelings,” said one person close to the executive. But Diess believed a combative approach was the “only way to move VW” and secure the group’s future, the person added.

Diess’s achievements, which included the rollout of VW’s first purpose-built electric vehicles as part of a €52bn push into the technology, won him an early contract extension from the supervisory board just last year.

“It was always a mixed picture,” said one person familiar with the supervisory board’s decisions. Until very recently, the person added, Diess’s management skills had “more strengths than weaknesses”.

But on Friday all members of the 20-seat board voted to oust Diess and the 63-year-old was not given a chance to plead his case. He was informed of the impending decision just a couple of days in advance, according to one person familiar with the events.

Neither the company, unions or shareholders would publicly confirm why Diess’s position was suddenly deemed untenable. But works council boss Daniela Cavallo had complained that VW’s software arm, for which Diess had taken personal responsibility, had not been performing well, forcing VW’s premium brands Audi and Porsche to rely on their own systems while they waited for the group-wide technology to catch up.

More importantly, Cavallo had pointed to VW’s lacklustre performance in China, which for decades has been the engine of the company’s growth and by far its largest and most profitable market. VW’s new electric vehicles, the ID range, have not sold as well in Asia as the company had hoped, in part, Cavallo argued, because of a failure to cater to local consumer preferences, such as the provision of in-car karaoke machines.

Oliver Blume of Porsche will take over from Diess as VW chief executive © REUTERS

In recent weeks, the Porsche-Piëch family came to believe that Diess’s contract extension had been a “mistake”, according to one person close to shareholders.

The car boss struck a more conciliatory tone when speaking to workers last month, telling employees he believed VW would overtake Tesla in global electric sales by 2025 and pointing to Musk’s recent difficulties in getting plants running at full capacity. But “we started to realise he had not really changed”, the person added.

The board came to the conclusion that Diess’s nominated successor, Porsche chief executive Oliver Blume, was “maybe the more complete manager, [able to look] into the operational side of the business”, the person close to the supervisory board added. The 54-year-old has the added advantage of being born near Wolfsburg and having spent his career at VW group, unlike Diess, who joined from BMW in 2015.

Wolfgang Porsche and Hans Michel Piëch, who speak on behalf of the Porsche-Piëch family, said Blume had enjoyed their “express trust for many years”. He oversaw the rollout of Porsche’s electric Taycan, which is now more popular than the storied 911, they added.

However Blume’s appointment threatens to derail the long-awaited flotation of the Porsche brand — the most profitable in VW’s stable — later this year. Blume, who will retain his role at Porsche in Stuttgart even as he takes the top job in Wolfsburg from September, will be forced to split his time between running the world’s second-largest carmaker and preparing for what is likely to be Germany’s largest public listing in decades.

This arrangement flies in the face of VW’s stated aim for the partial flotation, to give Porsche more “entrepreneurial freedom”, Bernstein’s Röska argued.

“If you are trying to give Porsche AG more independence . . . this move does exactly the opposite” while adding to concerns about the VW group’s labyrinthine corporate governance structure, Röska said.

Nor will there be an entirely fresh start in Wolfsburg, where the day-to-day running of VW will be the responsibility of finance chief Arno Antlitz, a former McKinsey consultant who has been promoted to chief operating officer, and was aligned with Diess on the need for aggressive cost-cutting at the group’s German sites.

Late on Friday, Diess tweeted a picture of him smiling contently next to an electric VW minivan. Earlier, in a LinkedIn post, he had emphasised that VW’s recent difficulties were partly down to events far beyond Wolfsburg, citing semiconductor shortages, other supply challenges and rising raw material and energy prices.

But even more favourable economic circumstances did not shield his predecessors from VW’s disparate powerbrokers. Diess is the fourth boss in a row not to serve out their contract.

“There are too many different interests in this company,” the person close to the departing chief executive said. “It is a listed company but is very much in private hands.”

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VW Board Ousts CEO Herbert Diess After Pivot to Electric Vehicles

Key shareholders in

Volkswagen AG

VOW 0.37%

joined forces with labor leaders to oust Chief Executive Officer

Herbert Diess,

who was in the midst of a push to turn the German auto company into a top maker of electric vehicles.

Mr. Diess will be succeeded by

Oliver Blume,

CEO of VW’s sports-car maker Porsche AG and long an ally of the Porsche-Piëch family that controls a majority of VW voting rights. Mr. Blume will retain his job running Porsche, which is slated for an initial public offering this autumn.

The departing chief executive had repeatedly clashed with unions, which hold half the seats on the German equivalent of the company’s board of directors. Until now he had retained the support of the family, heirs to the VW Beetle inventor, Ferdinand Porsche.

Mr. Diess was informed around midday Thursday that the company’s core shareholders and labor representatives had decided to fire him. The broader supervisory board learned of the decision at a meeting at around 4:30 p.m. Friday local time, according to a person familiar with the proceeding.

The sudden ouster comes after renewed internal strife over the slow progress developing core software for the company’s new generation of electric vehicles. The delays have caused the launches of some models to be pushed back, raising doubts among the Porsche-Piëch family about Mr. Diess’s ability to deliver on his promises, people familiar with the situation said.

Herbert Diess is leaving VW as it struggles in developing core software for its new generation of electric vehicles.



Photo:

Ralph Orlowski/Reuters

VW’s leadership crisis has plunged the company’s electric-vehicle strategy into uncertainty and has raised questions about the company’s governance, which is dominated by a triumvirate of family shareholders, the German state of Lower Saxony and the country’s biggest trade union.

“The hope of the supervisory board must be for new group CEO Blume to have more success in guiding the software strategy of the group,” Daniel Roeska, analyst at Bernstein Research, said in a note to clients. “However, it will take months to come up with a new plan, and creating unrest as the group is heading into a challenging 2023 is the wrong time, in our view.”

Mr. Diess couldn’t be reached to comment. Mr. Diess has said that before joining VW, he had turned down a job offer from

Elon Musk,

which has fueled speculation that he could join

Tesla Inc.

if he left VW.

Auto-industry CEOs around the world are wrestling with how best to transition to new technologies—much of which isn’t core to their companies’ expertise and requires different thinking, cost structures and skill sets.

Car executives are under pressure to get ahead of new rivals, many of them in Silicon Valley, which have deeper pockets and are unencumbered by a capital-intensive legacy business focused on making gasoline-powered vehicles.

In Detroit, the leadership at

General Motors Co.

and

Ford Motor Co.

have outlined bold moves in recent years to transform their operations, including the creation of new supply chains for batteries and the hiring of new kinds of talent. Ford this year took the unusual step of splitting its gas-engine and EV operations into two separate divisions, a move that executives have said will help it be more agile in its shift to new technologies.

Meanwhile, investors are aggressively betting on the EV space, trying to figure out who will be the next Tesla.

With gas prices on a wild ride, many consumers are exploring whether buying an electric vehicle could save them money in the long run. WSJ’s George Downs breaks down four factors to consider when buying a new car. Photo composite: George Downs

Mr. Diess has defined the industry’s challenge as shifting from banging metal into cars to developing the skills, resources and vision to create software-defined cars, vehicles that in many ways have more in common with an iPhone than a conventional car. His attempt to catch up with Tesla was hampered by difficulties turning VW into a developer of software, which is the heart of modern electric vehicles and future self-driving cars.

In recent weeks, people familiar with the company said it had rebooted its plan to develop a unified operating system for its cars after trouble delivering the code led VW’s Audi and Porsche brands to postpone the launch of new premium electric models.

It couldn’t be determined whether Mr. Blume would continue to pursue Mr. Diess’s strategy of keeping core software development in-house or whether he would turn to

Alphabet Inc.’s

Google or

Apple Inc.

as some rivals have.

In March, Mr. Blume said he and his management team met senior Apple executives for a meeting at which they discussed a range of potential projects. Mr. Blume disclosed no further details, and it couldn’t be determined what was discussed.

Ferdinand Dudenhöffer,

director of Center for Automotive Research in Duisburg, Germany, said it was to be expected that Mr. Blume would present a new software strategy for the company.

“This big issue of the software-defined car is a huge challenge for conventional auto makers,” Mr. Dudenhöffer said. “Either auto makers will become tech companies like Google, Apple and Microsoft, or they will become dependent on the tech giants.”

Mr. Diess survived several challenges to his position. In December, following a clash with labor representatives, directors stripped him of some of his responsibilities and reshuffled his management team. But this week’s move to push him out came suddenly and wasn’t linked to any single incident, people familiar with the decision said.

At the supervisory-board meeting on Friday afternoon,

Hans Dieter Pötsch,

chairman of the supervisory board and a key ally of the Porsche heirs, presented a deal reached previously with top officials of the IG Metall trade union in a smaller meeting.

The families and union leaders agreed to remove Mr. Diess in the belief that Mr. Blume, 54 years old, who became CEO of Porsche in 2015, would lead with more consensus among management and VW stakeholders, people familiar with the decision said. Mr. Blume, an engineer by training, has long been a favorite of the Porsche-Piëch families and union leaders as a successor to Mr. Diess. But Mr. Blume has repeatedly said he was happy at Porsche.

Once the controlling families decided Mr. Diess had to go, they approached Mr. Blume, people familiar with the family said, and urged him to take the job. Mr. Blume agreed, they said.

“Blume is seen as someone with a more congenial personality and management style,” one of the people said. “He speaks to his colleagues on the executive board differently and has had success at Porsche.”

According to the people with knowledge of the decision, the Porsche-Piëch family concluded that Mr. Diess’s personality led to repeated conflict within the company and that he didn’t appear to have the software problems under control. While not the only issue that weighed on the family’s mind, the software troubles began to affect new models and eroded the confidence that Mr. Diess could get the issues under control.

Hours before his ousting, Mr. Diess, who will step down on Sept. 1, posted a holiday message to workers ahead of the summer breaks.

“After a really stressful first half of 2022 many of us are looking forward to a well-deserved summer break,” he wrote on LinkedIn. “Enjoy the break—we are in good shape for the second half.”

Mr. Diess joined VW in 2015 from

Bayerische Motoren Werke AG

, initially as chief of the VW brand. In that role, he began to lay the groundwork for VW’s electric-vehicle strategy, a plan that has seen VW’s brands, including Porsche, Audi, Seat, Škoda, Lamborghini and Bentley, develop core electric models with a plan to shift fully to EVs this decade.

Under Mr. Diess’s leadership, VW embarked on a plan to build battery cell manufacturing companies around the world to power its new generation of EVs. It recently announced that it would create a new company in the U.S. under the Scout brand to build rugged, off-road electric trucks and SUVs. The move is part of a focus to rebalance the company’s heavy reliance on the Chinese market, where it makes 40% of sales.

While union leaders have acknowledged Mr. Diess’s strategic vision and his achievement in transforming VW’s culture for the EV age, they have questioned his ability to execute, as highlighted by the software problems.

Daniela Cavallo,

the head of VW’s works council, has said Mr. Diess had failed to involve employees in key decisions. She criticized him on his warning to the supervisory board last year that 30,000 jobs at its flagship plant were at stake if VW failed to accelerate its EV shift.

In a statement, Ms. Cavallo said the VW group “wants to emerge strengthened from the historical change in the world of mobility in a leading position. However, it is also our aim that, despite the great challenges, job security and profitability remain equal corporate goals in the coming years.”

Mr. Blume joined Volkswagen in 1994 and has held management positions for the brands Audi, Seat, Volkswagen and Porsche.

“Oliver Blume has proven his operational and strategic skills in various positions within the group and in several brands and has managed Porsche AG from a financial, technological and cultural standpoint with great success for seven years running,” Mr. Pötsch said. VW said Mr. Blume would continue as chief executive of Porsche after a possible IPO.

Write to William Boston at william.boston@wsj.com and Georgi Kantchev at georgi.kantchev@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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VW CEO Diess disagrees with Tesla CEO Elon Musk, saying L3 autonomy requires Lidar (plus VW EV Pickup, summer OTA, and more)

In a wide-ranging AMA on Reddit today, VW CEO Herbert Diess provided answers to a ton of questions from the Reddit community, some of which were news to us. Importantly, he clarified Volkswagen’s position on Autonomy and ID.4 charging update timelines while waxing eloquent on a low-price VW EV and everyone’s favorite, the Microbus.

On Lidar, Diess surprisingly took a different tack than his friend, Tesla CEO Elon Musk, who is adamant that Robotaxis can be made from only vision systems. Tesla’s CEO said he would be shocked if Tesla does not achieve Full Self-Driving that is safer than human drivers this year (five years ahead of everyone else).

Diess remarked that Lidar, or more specifically redundant perception, was integral to getting to Level 3 autonomy, saying:

Lidar technology is still expensive, but todays the only way to offer redundant perception to the 360 camera systems which are a must. Safety is really crucial in autonomous driving. For level 3 driving you need redundant perception.

Later on he clarified that Level 3 autonomy “requires” redundant Lidar perception. Volkswagen has partnered with MobileEye for its Lidar systems, which have been dropping in price.

Yes, definitely level 3 requires redundant Lidar perception.

As for the when, Diess was a little less specific than Tesla’s “this year” timespan.

autonomous driving is the biggest gamechanger for the automotive industry. we will be able to drive our customers safe and comfortably. This will be a gradual process from taking over responsibility on open highways in good weather conditions getting to more complex environments and weather situations worldwide. So this will be a long process of competition for a long period to come. We are building up competencies to become a serious competitor in this race.

On software in general, Volkswagen has been making huge investments.

We are building up capabilities to become self sufficient in car software, through organic growth, major acquisitions, partnerships to build up own IP and recruiting tech talents. Last year we hired around 1000 software engineers. To acquire IP we started a partnership with Bosch. To advance our image recognition capabilities we acquired the Hella Aglaia team. More to come. Currently we are investing 2 billion for software per year & CARIAD is already delivering the software updates over the air, preparing new launches and features together with our brands.

On the simplification of multiple brands and vehicle platforms to become more like Tesla, Diess replied:

Volkswagen will remain a multi brand mobility company working worldwide and being present in many segments. To reduce complexity we are focusing on platforms, even more in the future. One hardware platform SSP, unified battery cells & one shared software stack with CARIAD will ensure that we leverage our economies of scale fully. Being present in volume and premium markets and addressing many of our different customer preferences. But yes, in some segments we are still too complex in our product offering. We are making good progress in reducing complexity. Already with our MEB platform 70 percent of the car value is shared between Audi, Skoda, Cupra and Volkswagen.

The €20k VW ID.1 or ID.2 Electric car?

What the world needs right now is a low-cost EV, and Diess has confirmed that VW is working on something like the ID.Life concept we saw at IAA last year.

[Redditor]: When will we see a EV sedan that has a 300 mile range for under $25k?

[Diess]: price is a challenge. We are working on electric cars around 20k euros for entry segments.

Plug and Charge and Bi-directional charging update for Volkswagen ID.4

While the VW ID.4 has been given high marks for its hardware, owners are growing impatient about the software updates promised. One particular promised update, Plug and Charge with Bidirectional charging, has been a sore spot with vague promises for owners since last year. Now we learn VW is targeting summer for that update.

We will have a major OTA update for the ID.4 coming this summer, which will add features like Plug&Charge and Auto Hold, as well as a higher capacity onboard charge capability

And perhaps more interestingly, the update will come out in Vehicle to Home (V2H) form, allowing customers to do things like power their appliances from the car – or power the whole house in a blackout. It will be interesting to see the output and how it compares to the Hyundai E-GMP platform output of 2-4kW.

Bidirectional charging will be available this year for all ID. Models with 77 kWh battery, also via OTA update. In the beginning we will only offer Vehicle-to-home. This means you can run your dishwasher with electricity from abroad 😉

Diess later clarified this would be on all ID.4 77kWh vehicles sold:

Yes, we will offer Plug & Charge on MY23 ID.4s and on earlier cars with an OTA update. Just tested it together with Elke (https://www.linkedin.com/in/elke-temme/) – really convenient, high time for introduction.

Volkswagon pickup? Diess thinks that’s a good idea.

Diess played innocent when the idea of a Volkswagen Pickup for the USA was proffered.

[Redditer] Hello Herbert, we like the VW designs a lot. My question is, will there be an electric pickup truck like the ford f150 lightning for the usa?

[Diess] Good idea!

VW already makes ICE pickups and sells them outside the United States, so the company isn’t a total newbie when it comes to the form factor. But a new entrant into the US electric pickup market would be good for all involved, especially if they are made in Chattanooga.

Diess on the future

The VW CEO was asked what the future held for VW and the car industry, specifically 25 years from now.

25 years are very difficult to predict. Advancements in technology are coming fast. My guess: All cars will be able to drive autonomously, very safe, probably no accidents at all anymore. Emission free, very comfortable – cars will take you where you want to go and when you want to go. Still there will be precious brands for different customer preferences, still cars will be the most important means of transport. But totally safe, convenient and sustainable.

Electrek’s Take

It is hard not to like an automotive CEO who does an AMA answering questions from customers and fans genuinely – spelling and grammar mistakes included. (Cut him some slack!)

As for self-driving, Diess has a steep learning curve but seems to have a realistic expectation of what VW can accomplish. The CEO continues to impress us with his clear vision of the EV/Autonomous future. In the short term however, he needs to get those ID.4 updates out the door.

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VW CEO Herbert Diess invites Elon Musk to talk on how Tesla innovates quickly

Herbert Diess, CEO of VW, invited Tesla CEO Elon Musk to call in to an internal conference with 200 VW executives in an effort to spur further innovation from his company.

The VW executive conference happened in Alpbach, Austria and included a lecture by Erin Meyer, a business author and professor of business, and “surprise guest” Musk, who joined via videoconference. Musk’s comments were first reported by Handelsblatt and later confirmed by Diess.

The focus of the conference was to get VW executives on-board with the massive changes VW will need to make to confront the changing auto industry. Diess recognized that VW “did many right things in the past, in the old world Volkswagen is strong, but there is no guarantee for the new world.” He wants VW to make “faster decisions, less bureaucracy, more responsibility”.

As examples of this, Meyer spoke about Netflix’s transformation from DVD to streaming to content production, and Diess spoke with Musk about the reasons Tesla is more nimble than its rivals. Musk reportedly answered that Tesla is more nimble due to his management style and because he is first and foremost an engineer, with an eye for supply chains, logistics and production.

Diess gave the example that Tesla was better able to handle the current global chip shortage than the rest of the auto industry because their software teams rewrote Tesla’s software in just 2-3 weeks, allowing use of different chips.

The two CEOs have met in the past, and seem to get along with each other. Musk stated that he thinks VW can succeed in the transition to electric vehicles, and both consider the other company as their “strongest competitor.” Diess also stated that he plans to visit Tesla’s Gigafactory Berlin in Grunheide soon.

Other automakers have suffered difficulty in the past in getting top executives on-board with the transition to electric vehicles. One prominent example was former BMW CEO Harald Kruger, who became CEO in 2015. He came in with a vision to expand BMW’s electric offerings, but was faced with significant internal resistance from upper BMW executives, according to sources within BMW’s electric division. In 2019, Kruger resigned as CEO, citing his failure to spur BMW’s EV transition.

Electrek’s Take

Here at Electrek, we’ve always been on “team electric.” While there is a lot of discussion of “competing” electric vehicles (Tesla Model Y vs. VW ID.4, for example), the real competition is not electric cars, but gas ones. The electric vehicle industry, and we as electric vehicle advocates, need to present a united front against inefficient, polluting gas vehicles. Same team – we’re on team electric, not team pollution.

So we’re glad to see that Herbert Diess, the head of Voltswagen, the largest car company in the world, which sells more gas-powered cars than anyone else, is of similar mentality. Inviting an upstart competitor to an internal conference is no small statement, especially after many years of the wider auto industry dismissing (and finally begrudgingly accepting) Tesla and EVs in general.

Of course, Diess is also doing this because he sees the writing on the wall, knows the industry is transitioning, and wants to ensure that VW can move quickly enough to survive the shift. He thinks that a slow transition to EVs could cost VW 30,000 lost jobs. But to his credit, VW has been perhaps the most serious of the major automakers about transitioning to EVs (partially after being forced to due to Dieselgate), and Diess speaks loudly about EV tech and climate change quite often.

While we did not hear a recording of the conference and thus don’t know Musk’s full comments, we would not put the whole reason for Tesla’s success solely down to Musk’s “management style” (ego much, Elon?). While a strong CEO who refuses to compromise on innovation certainly can contribute to a company’s ability to move quickly, Tesla benefits from many other factors independent of its CEO.

Tesla is a Silicon Valley company, grown within Silicon Valley culture from the beginning. This culture emphasizes innovation, new ideas, iconoclasm and so on. It’s also a smaller company which began with the “startup mentality” of shaking up the industry – and everyone working at Tesla came to the company with that goal in mind. These lead to natural benefits when it comes to nimbleness, and giant, old companies like VW will inevitably have a harder time with innovation because they are not suffused with this culture throughout their company, as Tesla is, and because they have so many sunk costs in the capital-intensive apparatus of running a global auto manufacturer.

But VW CEO Diess at least wants to turn his ship quickly as possible. And bringing in outside moral support, especially from his company’s “strongest competitor” is quite admirable. It is also admirable of Musk to accept the invitation. Tesla’s mission statement is to “accelerate the world’s transition to sustainable energy,” and working with a competing automaker to strategize about their future is a great example of that. While Musk has at times been dismissive of some EV efforts, we’re glad to see him put his mouth where Tesla’s mission statement is and work alongside the largest manufacturer in the world to better electrify transportation.

We can only hope for further collaboration, across the auto industry, to get us to electric transport as quickly as possible. Same team, everyone.

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