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The Fall of the House of Ghosn

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This is a WSJ special report on Nissan and the failure of Carlos Ghosn's management style at Nissan leading to deep discontent in management ranks and employees, and also in Japan. Ghosn failed to invest in Japan seeing it as an aging society, and preferred the U.S. for investment. This was an affront to many Japanese, not just Nissan employees. 

A big problem was that Ghosn's salary was larger than that of all nine top Nissan executives combined. Even during the 2008 financial crisis and cost cutting Ghosn's salary was understated by using accounting methods not approved by its auditor Ernst & Young. Under new Japanese rules oversight on compensation was given to Mr. Imazu who had to uncover the different shell companies that were used to shield the compensation and benefits going to Ghosn from public view. Lack of transparency and frugality was a major issue as one Nissan executive put it- "where is the transparency, and where is the frugality." New laws introduced in Japan in 2015 required release of compensation for any company executive making more than $800,000. Under these rules Japanese prosecutors were able to investigate the situation at Nissan. 

In the end when the CEO of Nissan, appointed by Mr. Ghosn announced the arrest and detention of Mr. Ghosn, the Japanese audience applauded, showing how deep the discontent was in Japan. On November 19, in a carefully managed operation that would make a detective type story Japanese prosecutors arrested Mr. Ghosn as his plane landed in Tokyo, and arrested his assistant Mr. Kelly on the same day after his plane landed and his car was taken off the road to a rest area.

Ghosn story has also its management lessons as this type of hard driving management with time spent jet-setting more than in contact with people and employees of the company is becoming unpopular. It is bad for employees and presents a rather unhealthy lifestyle, lacking any kind of role model for the rest of the company and society where the company is located. In this case not just Yokohama, but all of Japan, which resented the way it was treated.

Recent articles have highlighted the situation at other companies. The General Electric story about the failure at GE in the U.S. - also explored this week in the WSJ -tells a story of hard driving management style of some executives that is increasingly becoming unpopular. A more thoughtful management style, with mindfulness, not based on personality or ego, is more productive leading to better decisions after taking in all views and enabling participation of other top and middle managers.


Carlos Ghosn and the Nissan investigation in 2018

11/20/2018

Grouped Articles

Ghosn Probe Creeps Closer to Renault

WSJ 11/20/2018

The Fall of the House of Ghosn

WSJ 12/16/2018

Nissan and Renault Near a Deal to Resolve Corporate Governance Dispute

WSJ 06/19/2019

Nissan management under Carlos Ghosn and the Renault-Nissan alliance- discontent in Japan

12/18/2018

Grouped Articles

The Fall of the House of Ghosn

WSJ 12/16/2018

As Fiat Chrysler Pursues Renault Tie-Up, Nissan Weighs Stakes

WSJ 05/28/2019

Nissan and Renault Near a Deal to Resolve Corporate Governance Dispute

WSJ 06/19/2019

The Renault-Nissan alliance and perception that it favored Renault

12/18/2018

Grouped Articles

The Fall of the House of Ghosn

WSJ 12/16/2018

Nissan and Renault Near a Deal to Resolve Corporate Governance Dispute

WSJ 06/19/2019


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