Eiji Toyoda

Please add an image!
Birth Date:
12.09.1913
Death date:
17.09.2013
Length of life:
100
Days since birth:
40413
Years since birth:
110
Days since death:
3883
Years since death:
10
Extra names:
豊田 英二
Categories:
Industrialist
Nationality:
 japanese
Cemetery:
Set cemetery

Eiji Toyoda (豊田 英二 Toyoda Eiji, 12 September 1913 - 17 September 2013) was a prominent Japanese industrialist, who was largely responsible for bringing Toyota Motor Corporation to profitability and worldwide prominence during his tenure as president and later chairman.

Career

Eiji Toyoda studied mechanical engineering at Tokyo Imperial University from 1933 to 1936. During this time Toyoda's cousin Kiichiro established an automobile plant at the Toyoda Automatic Loom Works in the city of Nagoya in central Japan. Toyoda joined his cousin in the plant at the conclusion of his degree and throughout their lives they shared a deep friendship. In 1938, Kiichiro Toyoda asked Eiji Toyoda to oversee construction of a newer factory about 32 km east of Nagoya on the site of a red pine forest in the town of Koromo, later renamed Toyota City. Known as the Honsha ("headquarters") plant, to this day it is considered the "mother factory" for Toyota Motor production facilities worldwide.

Toyoda visited Ford's River Rouge Plant at Dearborn, Michigan, during the early 1950s. He was awed by the scale of the facility but dismissive of what he saw as its inefficiencies. Toyota Motor had been in the business of manufacturing cars for 13 years at this stage, and had produced just over 2,500 automobiles. The Ford plant in contrast manufactured 8,000 vehicles a day. Due to this experience, Toyoda decided to adopt US automobile mass production methods but with a qualitative twist.

Toyoda collaborated with Taiichi Ohno, a veteran loom machinist, to develop core concepts of what later became known as the 'Toyota Way', such as the Kanban system of labeling parts used on assembly lines, which was an early precursor to bar codes. They also fine-tuned the concept of Kaizen, a process of incremental but constant improvements designed to cut production and labor costs while boosting overall quality.

As a managing director of Toyota Motor, Toyoda failed in his first attempt to crack the U.S. market with the underpowered Toyota Crown sedan in the 1950s, but he succeeded with the Toyota Corolla compact in 1968, a year after taking over as president of the company. During the car's development phase, Toyoda, as executive vice-president, had to overcome the objections of then-president Fukio Nakagawa to install a newly developed 1.0-liter engine, air conditioning and automatic transmissions in the Corolla.

Appointed the fifth president of Toyota Motor, Toyoda went on to become the company's longest serving chief executive thus far. In 1981, he stepped down as president and assumed the title of chairman. He was succeeded as president by Shoichiro Toyoda. In 1983, as chairman, Eiji Toyoda decided to compete in the luxury car market, which culminated in the 1989 introduction of Lexus.

Toyoda stepped down as chairman of Toyota in 1994 at the age of 81.

Honours

Japanese
  • April 1971 – Medal of Honor with Blue Ribbon
  • November 1983 – Grand Cordon of the Order of the Sacred Treasure
  • November 1990 – Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun
Non-Japanese
  • March 1985 – Order of Prince Henry of Portugal
  • December 1990 – Knight Commander of the Order of the White Elephant of Thailand
  • April 1991 – Grand Officer of the Order of the Crown of Belgium
  • April 1992 – Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Crown of Thailand
  • September 1993 – Honorary Companion of the Order of Australia (AC)
  • May 2001 – Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Direkgunabhorn of Thailand

Source: wikipedia.org

No places

    loading...

        No relations set

        No events set

        Tags