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Meanwhile, competitors like BMW, Audi and Toyota focused on their core business. For Schrempp, the automobile was a vehicle designed to produce profits, profits and more profits. There is no evidence that Schrempp was interested in the character of an engine.
Mikulic, the engineer, is a reserved person and would never discuss this. But he does smile to himself when asked whether he is held in higher esteem in the company now that Zetsche is in charge. He also mentions that he and Zetsche test-drove a new hybrid car only a few days ago.
An engine, the OM 651, is set up in front of Mikulic's office. The sculpture-like machine is the pride of the company's engine developers: a four-cylinder diesel engine with the torque of an eight-cylinder gasoline engine. It consumes less than five liters of fuel (76 mpg in fuel efficiency) in the C Class.
This high-tech engine apparently symbolizes what Mercedes developers call "green luxury." For them, it represents environmental sustainability without the need to dispense with luxury. The OM 651 symbolizes a sea change.
Banking on Greener Technologies
CEO Zetsche is banking on fuel-efficient engines, battery operation and fuel cells. Reducing emissions is not a fad, says Zetsche. "Whoever sets the tone here may not be at the head of the pack economically in 2009 and 2010, but will be viable in 2015 and beyond—while others will not."
The question is: How can Daimler survive in the interim period, while it invests billions in alternative engines that will not produce any profits initially?
One of Zetsche's answers to the problem is that the company will have to cut costs even further. This will spark growing conflicts between the executive board and the works council. For instance, the board is sticking to its plan to build a new plant in Hungary, but works council chairman Klemm wants to see this decision reexamined. Why build a new factory, he wonders, when existing plants are not even operating at full capacity?
Zetsche's counterargument is that the company's plant in Rastatt, in southwestern Germany, can only survive if there is another plant in a low-wage country like Hungary. Only mixed calculation, says Zetsche, will make it possible to continue building the A and B Class in Germany.
Based on this logic, it would make the most sense economically to eventually produce compact cars exclusively in Hungary, and Mercedes would be forced to close a plant in Germany.
No, no, Zetsche says defensively. The company has invested billions in Rastatt. Closing the plant makes no sense, for economic reasons. "We aren't nomads, who can set up their tents here one day and someplace else the next."
Nevertheless, the company will employ fewer and fewer people in its German plants. Productivity is going up while car sales are going down. Even if sales increase again to pre-crisis levels in three years, it will not be enough to secure jobs. This is Zetsche's dilemma.
The Rejected Suitor
There is another area where the Daimler CEO is making no progress. Zetsche and BMW CEO Norbert Reithofer have met many times to examine the possibility of close cooperation. The two companies are a natural fit for each other. But BMW has more or less rebuffed Zetsche, agreeing only to an arrangement in which it would join forces with Mercedes-Benz to purchase parts.
BMW feels strong enough to survive the crisis on its own. This could be a fallacy, however, because BMW faces essentially the same problems as Daimler. Meanwhile, Zetsche finds himself in the unfortunate position of the rejected suitor—not exactly the sort of role the head of Daimler wants to be in. He isn't complaining, though, but instead is talking to other manufacturers about joint ventures and possible stakes in those companies. Many options seem possible. Zetsche cannot yet paint the big picture showing what the company will look like in a few years. Daimler plans to survive this major crisis, and the only question is: In what form?
The Daimler CEO doesn't see this uncertainty as a flaw. The company, says Zetsche, has "allowed itself to be guided by dreams for too long, while neglecting the hard work." But success, he adds, is based on "one percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration."
Perhaps the company headquarters next door will be renovated after all, when things begin to turn around. To make sure that the building doesn't seem too gloomy until then, the company is keeping one engine running, so that the Mercedes-Benz star on the roof will keep on rotating.
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