The Automotive Leaders Podcast Podcast Por Jan Griffiths arte de portada

The Automotive Leaders Podcast

The Automotive Leaders Podcast

De: Jan Griffiths
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Prepare yourself, your team, and your business for the future of automotive. We are all evolving the products we make, have you thought about the leadership model to get us there? In-depth interviews with leaders, authors, and thought leaders, provide the insights you need. This podcast is brought to you by Gravitas Detroit.@gravitasdetroit Economía Gestión Gestión y Liderazgo
Episodios
  • Is USMCA at Risk? Colin Bird Breaks Down What Happens Next
    Apr 16 2026
    The USMCA review is fast approaching, uncertainty is building across the automotive industry, and leaders are asking a critical question: Is the agreement that binds North America together at risk?Colin Bird, the Consul General of Canada in Detroit, United States, brings clarity. This is not a collapse or a dramatic reset. It is a built-in review designed to test whether the agreement still works in a world that has fundamentally changed. The environment that shaped USMCA no longer exists. Supply chains are strained, global competition is intensifying, and China has accelerated ahead in the EV space.The real issue is not whether the agreement survives. The issue is whether North America can operate effectively under pressure. July 1 is not a breaking point. It’s part of a process meant to ensure the agreement stays relevant while the industry evolves at speed.Colin makes it clear that the real danger comes when North America starts putting up barriers within its own system. The automotive supply chain has been built over decades to operate seamlessly across borders. When tariffs or policy decisions disrupt that flow, it does not just impact one country. It makes the entire region less competitive at a time when global players are moving fast.This episode is about what matters now: certainty, coordination, and competitiveness. The industry doesn’t need more noise or political posturing. It needs alignment. Because if North America wants to win, it must act as one integrated system, not three separate countries.Themes Discussed in this EpisodeWhat the USMCA “review” really meansWhy July 1 is not a cliff, but a checkpointThe risk of disrupting a deeply integrated supply chainHow tariffs and policy decisions can backfire on North AmericaWhy China’s EV acceleration changes everythingThe critical role of certainty and predictability for investmentWhat leaders must focus on to stay competitive globally🎥 Watch the full episode on YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/@jangriffithsautomotiveleadersThis episode is sponsored by Lockton, click here to learn moreFeatured Guest: Colin BirdColin is the Consul General of Canada in Detroit, United States, brings deep, real-world expertise in international trade at a moment when it matters most to the automotive industry. With a background in government studies from Harvard and a law degree from the University of Ottawa, he has worked across the full spectrum of North American and global trade, from serving as counsel to the NAFTA Secretariat to leading trade law and policy on complex issues like aerospace and softwood lumber. He played a central role in the U.S.-Canada trade relationship while based in Washington, D.C., including during the transformation of NAFTA into USMCA. Colin has also represented Canada at the World Trade Organization and at the highest global forums, including the OECD, G7, and G20. Today, in Detroit, he operates at the heart of the North American automotive ecosystem, where trade policy directly impacts manufacturing, investment, and competitiveness across the region.About Your Host – Jan GriffithsJan Griffiths is the champion for culture change and the host of the Automotive Leaders Podcast. A former automotive executive with a rebellious spirit, Jan is known for challenging outdated norms and inspiring leaders to ditch command and control. She brings honesty, energy, and courage to every conversation, proving that authentic, human-centered leadership is the future of the automotive industry.Episode Highlights[02:43] Inside the Deal: Colin takes us back to the renegotiation of NAFTA into USMCA and why Detroit sits at the center of a deeply integrated, cross-border manufacturing system.[03:37] From Tension to Alignment: What began as a tough negotiation shifted toward shared goals: higher wages, stronger labor standards, and rebuilding North American manufacturing.[06:29] Review, Not Renegotiation: July 1 is not a breaking point. It is a structured review to ensure the agreement keeps pace with change.[08:11] The Need for Certainty: In a volatile environment, the industry is asking for predictability to support investment and long-term planning.[10:49] Reading the Political Noise: Colin explains how to interpret strong political language and separate negotiation tactics from real risk.[13:08] Industry Is Driving the Agenda: Automotive leaders across all three countries are aligned. Protect the agreement. Improve it. Do not disrupt it.[14:00] The Cost of Disruption: Breaking supply chains that took decades to build weakens North America and opens the door for global competitors.[16:30] Competing with China: The real competitive pressure is external. China’s acceleration in EVs raises the stakes for North America to act as one system.[18:45] Avoiding Self-Inflicted Damage: Tariffs and internal barriers do not strengthen local economies. They reduce overall competitiveness across the region.[21:10] A Fragile Global System: Colin ...
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    35 m
  • It's Q2: Are You Ready to Blow Up Your Playbook?
    Apr 2 2026
    Q1 was a wild ride. Tariffs. Geopolitical shocks. Supply chain chaos. And now Q2 is here, and the question no one's asking out loud is: are you walking into your quarterly review meetings with the same playbook you've always used?Are you making decisions the same way? Operating the same way? Thinking the same way?Because if you are, this episode is for you.In this solo episode, Jan Griffiths lays out five things every automotive leader needs to confront as we head into Q2 2026. This is not a pep talk. This is a reality check.The ground is shifting. Trade agreements are uncertain. Chinese competitors are moving faster than ever. And the old playbook, the one built on certainty, hierarchy, and control, is a liability.Jan covers the five forces shaping Q2 2026 and what you need to do about them: from the geopolitical storm still raging, to the reinvention mandate, to why trust is a P&L lever, not a soft skill. She also shares a personal update on her new role as Executive Advisor with Seraph, a global manufacturing and operations consulting firm.If you're heading into Q2 with the same mindset as Q1, this episode will challenge you to change that, now!Themes Discussed in this EpisodeThe geopolitical storm: tariffs, the Iran conflict, global oil crisis, chip shortages, and USMCA renegotiationWhy resilience without reinvention is just enduranceThe reinvention mandate: speed, process destruction, and AI as an accelerator, not a crutchTrust and transparency as competitive weapons, not cultural nice-to-havesWhy command-and-control leadership is a speed killer and authentic leaders are winningOver-customization and why stopping it could be the fastest path to speed and cost reductionThe WRI scorecard: OEMs will be judged on supplier relationships in MayJan's new Executive Advisor role with SeraphThree actions you can take this week to start Q2 differently🎥 Watch the full episode on YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/@jangriffithsautomotiveleadersAbout Your Host – Jan GriffithsJan Griffiths is the champion for culture change and the host of the Automotive Leaders Podcast. A former automotive executive with a rebellious spirit, Jan is known for challenging outdated norms and inspiring leaders to ditch command and control. She brings honesty, energy, and courage to every conversation, proving that authentic, human-centered leadership is the future of the automotive industry.Mentioned in this episodeListen to the Auto Supply Chain Champions Podcast powered by QADThe Automotive Leaders Podcast with Lori Lancaster, Vice Chairwoman at Emotiv MobilityThe North American Automotive Industry's Road to Resilience McKinsey reportGM and Ford should reconsider parts consolidation by John McElroyEpisode Highlights[00:01:26] Q2 Is Here. Now What?: The rules have changed permanently. Stop waiting for certainty. Clarity is not coming[00:02:20] The Geopolitical Storm: Tariffs, the Supreme Court EPA decision fallout, an Iran conflict, a global oil crisis, a looming chip shortage, and USMCA renegotiation in July.Jan also flags Canada allowing 49,000 Chinese OEM vehicles into the country, and what that means when they start crossing into the US.Upcoming guest: Colin Bird, Consul General for Canada, will join the podcast to discuss USMCA. Submit your questions to Jan on LinkedIn.[00:07:05] The Reinvention Mandate: Tear apart your processes and target a 50% reduction in cycle time. Chinese OEMs already launch vehicles in half the time legacy OEMs can. Jan references Terry Woychowski at Caresoft for the data and points to QAD’s framing, systems of record to systems of action, as the right mindset for agentic AI.[00:11:10] Trust and Transparency: Trust is a P&L lever. Approval processes built on decades of mistrust are killing speed. The WRI scorecard drops in May and will show which OEMs are walking the talk with suppliers and which ones aren’t.[00:14:35] Authentic Leaders Are Winning: Command and control is too slow. Jan references Lori Lancaster, Vice Chair at Emotive Mobility, on leaders who wait too long to ask for help. When people hide problems instead of raising them, it's a speed killer. Culture is the operating system.[00:16:50] Stop Customizing What Nobody Cares About: The McKinsey North American Automotive Road to Resilience report and Terry Woychowski at Caresoft make the case: the industry agonizes over components consumers don’t care about. Chinese OEMs don’t. Jan previews an upcoming conversation with the President of Horse North America on shared component strategy.[00:18:30] Personal Update: Jan has taken on an Executive Advisor role with Seraph, a global manufacturing and operations consulting firm focused on supply chain and operational improvement. She also shares an update on the Automotive Leaders YouTube channel.[00:20:15] Closing: Three Things You Can Do This WeekIdentify one decision that can be pushed downstream and push it down todayName one process that slows you down and kill itHave an honest ...
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    24 m
  • Why Reinvention Is Critical for Automotive Suppliers Right Now
    Mar 19 2026
    Reinvention in the automotive industry is no longer optional. It is survival. In this episode, Jan Griffiths sits down with Lori Lancaster, Vice Chair of Emotiv Mobility, to break down what reinvention really looks like when you are living it, not talking about it from a distance. The old playbook is cracking, and incremental improvement will not get us where we need to go. Yet many leaders are still holding on, waiting for direction instead of stepping up to create it.Lori did not wait. She made the decision to step back from the EV hype, resist the pressure to go all in, and focus instead on the real constraint holding the industry back. Infrastructure. That shift required courage. It meant challenging conventional thinking and refusing to follow the herd. Instead of chasing what everyone else was doing, she looked at where the real opportunity was and made a strategic move to meet it.That decision led to a bold reinvention of the business. By taking core automotive manufacturing capabilities such as process discipline, scale, and precision, Lori and her team expanded into energy and transformer production while exploring emerging mobility spaces like eVTOL. This was not diversification for the sake of it. It was a deliberate move to stabilize the business, reduce reliance on automotive cycles, and position the company for what comes next.But reinvention is not just about strategy. It is about leadership. Lori grounds her approach in servant leadership, accountability, and clarity of purpose. She makes it clear that transformation only works when people understand the why, when they are engaged in the journey, and when leaders create an environment of trust. Without that foundation, even the best strategy will fail.The message is simple and direct. If you are waiting for certainty, you are already behind. If you are waiting for direction, you have missed the point. Reinvention belongs to leaders who are willing to see what is coming, make the hard calls, and move forward without a safety net.Themes Discussed in this EpisodeReinvention as a survival strategyWhy incremental improvement is no longer enoughBreaking free from OEM dependency and legacy thinkingThe real barrier to EV adoption: infrastructure, not vehiclesDiversification beyond automotive to stabilize volatilityTranslating automotive manufacturing discipline into new industriesLeadership courage in high-risk, uncertain decisionsServant leadership vs command-and-control in transformationAccountability through clarity of purpose and shared visionCulture as the foundation for successful reinvention🎥 Watch the full episode on YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/@jangriffithsautomotiveleadersThis episode is sponsored by Lockton, click here to learn moreFeatured Guest: Lori LancasterLori is a seasoned automotive and advanced manufacturing executive known for leading organizations through complex industry change. Over the course of her career, she has overseen large-scale operations supporting major OEMs, helping guide companies through supply chain disruption, operational transformation, and the shift toward electrified mobility.She began her career as a critical care nurse at Massachusetts General Hospital, an experience that shaped her leadership style and approach to decision-making in fast-moving, high-pressure environments.About Your Host – Jan GriffithsJan Griffiths is a champion for culture transformation and the host of the Automotive Leaders Podcast. A former automotive executive with a rebellious spirit, Jan is known for challenging outdated norms and inspiring leaders to ditch command and control. She brings honesty, energy, and courage to every conversation, proving that authentic, human-centered leadership is the future of the automotive industry.Mentioned in this episodeDakkotaeVTOL (Electric Vertical Take-Off and Landing)Episode Highlights[01:26] Reinvention is survival, not strategy: Jan opens with a hard truth. The legacy automotive model is breaking, and incremental improvement is no longer enough to compete.[02:36] Defining leadership: servant, not command-and-control: Lori shares her leadership philosophy. Lead by example. Serve the team. Hold people accountable without losing trust.[03:47] Challenging old-school leadership norms: Jan calls out the industry’s past. Command-and-control once ruled. Lori explains how she chose a different path and why it works.[04:18] Engagement and buy-in drive accountability: Lori breaks down the real meaning of accountability. It starts with listening, aligning on vision, and helping people understand the why.[06:00] The industry’s biggest trap: incremental thinking: Jan challenges the status quo. Automotive is great at small improvements, but that mindset is now holding companies back.[07:18] From healthcare to automotive: A powerful personal reinvention. Lori shares how starting in healthcare shaped her ability to lead in high-pressure environments.[09:11] Building Emotiv Mobility: The ...
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    30 m
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