Road Tested

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As Seen in CFO Studio Magazine Q3 2016 Issue Cover Story

CFO DAVID CHAMBERS WAS THERE WHEN FORD SOLD JAGUAR LAND ROVER TO TATA MOTORS, AND, WITH A HANDFUL OF OTHERS, HELPED BUILD A NEW COMPANY

BY JULIE BARKER – PHOTOGRAPHY BY MATT FURMAN

The BlackBerry chimed shortly after David Chambers had made his way from Nevada and into Utah while driving along Interstate 15. It was August 2008, and Chambers, Vice President of Finance and CFO of Jaguar Land Rover North America, then based in Irvine, CA, was on a family trip to Colorado Springs, CO. The summer trip was a break from the tumult of creating a new company — a startup, essentially — from the frames of three other carmakers: Ford Motor Company, Jaguar, and Jaguar’s sibling, Land Rover. When Chambers stopped his 2007 Ford Edge and checked his email, he had a message from the CFO of JPMorgan Chase’s automotive business: “I need you to call me.”

Chambers had a good idea what he would hear when he phoned. “We were working on our first financial services deal with them,” he says. It involved a contract that would give Chase exclusivity in the auto loan and leasing market for Jaguar Land Rover ( JLR) in the U.S. But automotive sales in July had been down more than 10 percent on average from a year earlier (with General Motors off 22.2 percent and Chrysler off 21.4 percent) and SUV sales, in particular, had plunged (54.4 percent at Ford). On top of that news, gas prices had struck $4 a gallon and overall consumer confidence had plummeted from 111.9 a year earlier to 51.9 in July. Chase’s CFO wanted a signed deal before any more damaging news spooked buyers.

“The banks were in as tough a position as we were back then,” says Chambers, but he worked out a deal with Chase, to this day JLR’s U.S. financial services provider. By its own analysis, without that agreement allowing buyers to finance and lease vehicles, JLR North America, then just two months old, would have seen 30 percent lower sales volumes and hence fewer dollars for investment, with shattering impact on the infant company.

Today, JLR North America is riding high with growing sales of both its Jaguar and Land Rover lineups. Moreover, while both did well in 2015, the Land Rover brand set a new high-water mark in the U.S. But back in the summer of ’08, the company had no track record.

Ford Motor Co. had acquired Jaguar in 1990 and Land Rover in 2000, but started shopping the brands in mid-2007. Ford needed to focus its investments in core brands and was looking for buyers for non-core brands. When Tata Motors of Mumbai, India, came forward, Chambers, then working for Ford as U.S. vice president of finance for these brands, was a key individual from North America working on the JLR sale.

“I had a lot of Ford loyalty, but I said it then and I’ll say it now: It was the right answer for both companies,” Chambers said recently in an interview at the JLR North America headquarters in Mahwah, NJ. “Within Ford, Jaguar Land Rover would have never gotten the capital it needed to survive — or to survive and thrive like we’re doing today — because the demands on Ford from a capital perspective were always going to be huge to support its core business.”

Today, JLR is effectively a British company, with headquarters in Coventry, England. The North American branch is a licensed distributorship. All the vehicles come from the U.K., but Chambers and a handful of top execs in New Jersey create the best go-to-market strategy for North America.

“I don’t think of myself as a hugely creative person, but I think of myself as an individual who can help influence within the business and sit with the operating teams and come to what I would call the right answer, with everybody walking away saying, ‘We did the right thing for the business,’” says Chambers.

Midwestern Sensibilities

Chambers, 51, grew up in Fremont, OH, population 18,000. He played sports, was active in Boy Scouts, and was known as the kid who always raised his hand in class. In looks and attitude, he seems typically Midwestern, even bearing a passing resemblance to Christopher Reeve’s Clark Kent of Smallville in the first two Superman movies.

Self-confident and never doubting he’d go to college, Chambers received a BS in Finance from Miami University in Oxford, OH, in 1987, worked a few years in banking, and returned to school for an MBA from Ohio State. There he met an executive from Ford and somewhat casually agreed to an interview with him. That led him into an industry he took to from Day One.

Chambers says that he loved that his bosses put him right to work as a financial analyst at Ford’s Dearborn, MI, world headquarters, and that the products were so tangible. (“Everyone knows Ford.”) He married a Dearborn girl (a second-generation Ford employee) and they have a son, 13.

Chambers rose through various finance jobs at headquarters and at the St. Louis manufacturing plant. Back in Dearborn, he worked his way up to director, car and truck pricing. Altogether, it was a thorough grounding in finance operations in the U.S. automotive industry. That being said, he found himself in new territory when the sale went through in June 2008.

In his first months at Jaguar Land Rover NA, Chambers created organizations for treasury, tax, accounting, compliance, dealer audit, and purchasing. This was “a great learning experience,” he says with Midwestern understatement. “Rarely do you get to come into a large organization — large from a revenue perspective — and get to basically start everything over again.” ( JLR North America’s starting team dwindled to 14 sales and marketing employees and Chambers when the group moved from Irvine in January 2009 to a Mahwah, NJ building owned by JLR.)

One of the challenges was to keep everything running while putting the right people in place and starting systems. He focused on the top post in each area and let those he hired decide on next steps. For example, he hired a director of accounting. That individual went out to Detroit and worked with Ford until he understood what the Ford accounting people did. “Then he came back and started working through, ‘What would my accounting organization look like?’ and we started building it from there,” says Chambers.

After getting through the stages of survive and stabilize, Chambers and the team’s next focus was to promote growth, especially for the popular Land Rover luxury SUV brand. A high-level committee, including Chambers, set Land Rover’s strategy at the end of the financial crisis. The record-setting 2015 results, up 37 percent, made Land Rover the fastest-growing brand in the U.S., fulfilling the promise of that plan.

At the end of 2014, Chambers; Joe Eberhardt, CEO of JLR North America; and the product marketing organization began meeting to create a plan for a next generation of Jaguar. New models were to be launched in 2015 (a new XF and a freshened XJ) and two models come out this spring (the 2017 Jaguar F-PACE, the brand’s first performance SUV, and the XE, a compact sports sedan). The high-level team took a look at customer concerns with the Jaguar brand and spent six months devising a strategy to dramatically increase the presence of Jaguar in North America, essentially the brand’s best opportunity for success.

With more competitive prices, Jaguar is attempting to broaden its market by appealing to millennials and lure buyers of, say, Audi and Volvo. In addition, the strategy addresses a key negative among potential purchasers: the outdated reputation for reliability problems. The team brought in consultants, debated adding costs, and looked at the levels of risk associated with each element proposed. They agreed to a “best in class” five-year, 60,000-mile warranty with complimentary scheduled maintenance on all models and named it Jaguar EliteCare. Chambers and Eberhardt ultimately took the new customer care plan to the U.K. where it was again debated and finally approved.

Although for competitive reasons he can’t detail all the adjustments JLR will make to balance out the strategy’s costs — including a big boost to the marketing/P.R. budget to communicate Jaguar EliteCare —Chambers says more than one traditional automotive payback is applicable. For instance, by having more competitive prices in the market and thus achieving more demand, “you’re likely to achieve better residual values on your products and then you’re going to incur less cost when you lease your product.”

He adds, “Conceptually, the comprehensive coverage should add perception of the vehicles’ value as well, but that one’s harder to quantify because you have to let it run through the system.”

Asking Questions

From his early days at Ford, Chambers started watching people he thought were good leaders and asking himself what they did that made them successful. He tried to see how they acted and reacted, and how they looked at things and were able to analyze the business. He was only three years or so into his career when he realized that he had to take charge of his career himself, that it was up to him to ask his boss how he was doing. Today, he asks his direct reports, “What can I do better?”

“I think you have to have that kind of mindset: be self-aware and be willing to take a risk and take on tough jobs. Those are the kinds of things that really help you.”

Chambers views himself as an influencer, and to be that, he has made an effort to develop the respect of people outside the finance organization: the operating teams.

As a thought leader, he believes it’s one of his duties to raise questions regarding any presentation he sits through. And as CFO, questions come naturally. “A finance person always asks why,” he says. “My team has a standing little joke about me that it’s impossible to get anything through without at least a question.” He uses questions, he says, to help mold his team. “I’m always going to ask the question ‘Why?’ It’s trying to help them see how I look at it.”

Curiosity is one of the traits he has identified as key to a good finance executive. He says that CFOs should be wondering: “‘What’s going to happen a year from now?’ ‘We want to do this now but what’s going to happen down here?’ ” he says.

Chambers believes that JLR North America’s finance organization can influence the success of the company by asking and answering questions no one has tried to solve before. Data analytics can help JLR see what the dealers are ordering versus what Jaguar and Land Rover are building, getting into specifics like the mix of powertrains (V8 vs. V6) or the regional differences in consumer preferences. He says the data is all there; it’s just a matter of bringing it together: “My personal view is that’s probably one of the biggest areas of opportunity…. We have the ability to influence up front, during the product development, but once the vehicles are here, mastering local market dynamics is where our opportunities are.”

Chambers is clearly pleased to have been part of assembling the people of JLR North America, defining and executing the strategies, and “getting to see my fingerprints on things that happen within the organization.” And now he can anticipate being able to invest in “untapped areas” in which larger competitors are involved. The company has come a long way since 2009 when it sold 38,000 Jaguar and Land Rover vehicles. In 2015, U.S. sales totaled 85,048 vehicles, a 123 percent increase since the sale to Tata Motors.

Chambers is proud of what he and the team around him have done and excited for the future, taking it one five-year plan at a time.

The SME CFO

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As Seen in CFO Studio Magazine Q3 2015 Issue

By William Craig Chief Executive and Financial Officer, Tarantin Industries

 

TO LEAD OR NOT TO LEAD!

Years ago, leadership was a military concept, but over time it has become part of mainstream business — though it is not always clear what leadership is, whether it can be taught, or whether it can be learned. The business world goes further than the military by making the distinction between leading, knowing what to do, and managing, or getting it done. For the Small/Middle Market Enterprise (“SME”) CFO, it may be a distinction without a difference.

Offline discussions at CFO Studio have raised the issue that a Fortune 1000 CFO’s job is not the same as an SME CFO’s. As organizations decrease in size, roles become less distinct, and nearly everyone, especially the CFO, wears more than one hat. Most CFOs are functionally jacks of all trades. The SME CFO, with fewer resources and the same deliverables, likely has more functions to handle on his or her own. Given the vagaries around what leadership in business means, and the many hats the SME CFO wears, what does it mean to discuss SME CFO leadership?

Many believe the best characteristics of a leader include intelligence, judgment, character, empathy, charisma, and the ability to inspire.

On the other hand, the most sought-after characteristics of a CFO include being a strategist, and —moving down the scale — a catalyst, a steward, and lastly, an administrator.

If we dig behind the words, we realize there exists a great deal of overlap between the characteristics of leader and CFO. While they align in many ways, the divergence is interesting, particularly in the administrator trait. An administrator manages the back-office and support functions. This is what many people think of when they describe a CFO, but it is actually the least important aspect of the position and is not at all part of the leadership profile. Administering is the same as managing, the art of getting things done. So in considering leadership and the SME CFO, being able to administer, or being able to manage, is the least important element of the role.

Understanding this perspective is crucial to the success of the SME CFO as a leader. The SME CFO needs to lead, and needs to grow as a leader, and needs to be a versatile leader, if his or her organization is going to succeed. The challenge is in not getting overwhelmed with administration and management such that the leadership opportunities are not utilized.

The SME CFO does not have the choice to lead or not to lead. All CFOs have the responsibility. They set an example, they focus on results, and they communicate in every direction. They need to know the difference between being efficient and effective, and when to manage and when to lead.

Equity Partners

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As Seen in CFO Studio Magazine Q3 2015 Issue

By Ed Schultz Partner, Highlands Business Group

 

HOW TO OPTIMIZE WORKING WITH PRIVATE EQUITY FIRMS

You have the opportunity to work with a private equity group (PEG), probably through the acquisition of your present company, or working on an interim assignment with the portfolio company. Congratulations, you are part of a $4 trillion worldwide industry! What is the best way to succeed with your new owners?

Get Their Measure

Understand the backgrounds of most PEG investors, and how it influences their attitudes and behaviors toward their portfolio companies. PEG partners and principals are typically finance or business generalists with backgrounds from other financial companies, such as investment banks, and/or they have grown other companies successfully and have decided to get into PEGs. While they may understand accounting, they see business strategy first and are not as concerned with the debits and credits much of the time. When they want to delve into the financial or other areas you are responsible for, they will need guidance.

2 Realize Their Stress Levels

It is important to remember that PEG executives answer to other members of their organization, such as their firm’s leadership. Additionally, their industry is quite competitive and returns are the only measure that their ultimate owners (who could be limited partners attached to other financial institutions or pension funds) review. Try to appreciate their pressures.

Know What They Are Looking for

Try to absorb as many due diligence and other reports as practicable to understand what the PEG partners have learned. Discuss these reports with them, as well as their goals for your company. As the economy changes and their portfolio evolves, their attitude toward your company may as well, and you need to understand the new landscape. Communicate frequently and learn.

Support Their Needs

PEGs are heavily into the details as they usually actively participate in not only board-level business, but also in the upper-level management of the company and will also deep dive at times. Some or all of the team that you encounter, particularly more junior members, will be analyzing and modeling. After you have added your own practical expertise to the combined efforts, try to incorporate their work into your planning so everyone is on the same path.

5 Help With Course Correction

Plans often go awry. Remembering the PEG’s own internal and external hierarchy, realize that a sudden negative variance in results can cause sleepless nights and additional work for all. This is where your experience and strong communication skills can be invaluable in improving the relationship between the PEG and your management. As the PEG looks for answers and corrective action, your efforts, insights, and creativity can go a long way in supporting their needs, and can improve the situation for the entire team.

Following these rules will put you on the road to success with your PEG owners.

Copyright 2017