7 minute read

Stellantis to axe UK dealers

DASHBOARD STELLANTIS TO AXE 138 UK DEALERS AS IT SEEKS TO STREAMLINE ITS BUSINESS

• Poor customer service cited in most cases • It’s all part of major ‘simplification’ plans • But despite cuts, dealers are still hugely important, says boss

by James Batchelor

@JRRBatchelor

Stellantis has rubber-stamped plans to axe 138 dealerships as part of wider plans to streamline its business amid a drastic shake-up in management.

In a media call on October 17, Stellantis UK group boss Paul Willcox and network development director Lee Titchner revealed ‘significant’ restructuring plans for Stellantis’s UK operations.

It includes senior management changes, simplification of dealers’ business models and a refreshed dealer network to encompass multi-franchising.

A key component of the changes involves a major new focus on customer experience.

In May 2021, dealers were put on a two-year notice period. Now the full scale of the restructure has been revealed, with 138 dealerships disappearing by May 2023 – and most of them are losing their franchises as a result of offering poor customer service. What’s more, Stellantis admitted there was no ‘endpoint goal’ to the eventual size of the network.

‘The impact of the 138 drop takes the investor count to 176,’ Titchner said.

‘We don’t have an endpoint goal. What we need is a mutual dependency – a commitment to customer experience and the drive to simplification.

‘That doesn’t mean we have an endpoint in sight with regard to the number of investors. It clearly needs to continue to reduce, but I think we can do that in a pragmatic way.’

‘SIMPLIFICATION’

Titchner explained that the coming together of ‘different businesses’ revealed differences in how brands partnered with new dealers, and now the company – which represents Peugeot, Citroen, Fiat, Abarth, Jeep, DS Automobiles and Alfa Romeo among others – desires ‘simplification’ in the way it does business.

‘We need one common strategy for Stellantis, and the main reason for that is we need to continue to drive simplification – one of the massive things for us moving forwards is to be able to have mutual dependency,’ he said.

‘What I mean by that is we need to be important to retail partners, and they also need to have the scale to be as important to us, too.

‘The only way to do that is to drive down our investor [dealer] count.’

He added: ‘We will continue to revisit our plan to drive that down further to consolidate the investors even more.

‘We need to be in a position where we’re talking about all the brands to our investors and that we don’t have specialists in one or two brands.

‘The aim is to have 20 per cent market share [car and van] by 2025 – we want to go out

‘WE WILL ALWAYS HAVE DEALERS’

THE media call also confirmed that Stellantis will continue to invest in digital elements of the customer journey and push an ‘omni-channel’ approach.

But UK group MD Paul Willcox ruled out – in the short term at least – turning some of its brands to purely online sales. ‘We don’t see a future without physical representation of the brands – we will always have retail partners.

‘But the scale of those partners and how we manage that obviously in five years’ time may be completely different.

‘Our expectation is we want to drive more engagement digitally, because that’s the way consumers are engaging with brands these days.

‘But the automotive industry is a little bit behind them and it’s become much more progressive.

‘We’re investing heavily as a group, both globally and regionally, in terms of developing these tools.’

He added: ‘I think it would be a big mistake to say we’re going to close our showrooms and we’re going online.

‘That would be too much of a revolution and I’m not the man to take that level of risk!’

and talk to our partners about the opportunity to have 20 per cent of the market, which is a compelling commercial proposal.’

Part of that will involve multi-franchising.

CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE

‘The way we will operate is brand-first,’ said Titchner.

‘What that means is that customers will buy from the brand [brands within Stellantis] and we will use the machine of Stellantis to drive the quality of customer experience.

‘One of the ways we will do this is to go multi-franchising – enabling our partners to have that one brand on each site, to drive that throughput and commerciality, but also to drive the customer experience.

‘What that doesn’t mean is that we will provide derogation of any of the brand values.

‘In driving that multi-franchising format, we will always deliver on brand expectation. You will never see one of our brands tucked into the corner – all of the branding will be done properly.’

During the call, it was revealed that Stellantis is also planning on having a handful of dealers that offer all its brands – called ‘Stellantis Houses’ internally.

Titchner said it wasn’t a ‘pre-requisite’ for dealers to be multi-franchise, or even a strategy to have Stellantis Houses, ‘but where the opportunity exists, we will explore it. There won’t be many of them, but they will exist’.

Willcox, who became Stellantis’s UK boss in June, said the firm is creating a Premium Brand division as well, to be headed up by current Peugeot MD Julie David. It will consist of Alfa Romeo and DS Automobiles, as it embraces the agency sales concept from next year.

Willcox said: ‘The new division will support the growth and the development of those brands. We need a strong elevation in terms of the customer journey and improving the customer experience.’

‘FRICTIONLESS’ OPERATION

Along with simplifying its dealer network, Stellantis will also streamline its operational structure in the UK to create a ‘frictionless relationship’ with its dealers.

‘We are significantly streamlining our interface with the network for our mainstream brands – Vauxhall, Peugeot, Citroen, Fiat and Abarth, and Jeep,’ explained Willcox.

‘We’re going to manage them with a new centralised operational function.

‘We want to take advantage of the scale and diversity of the brands, but also we want to streamline. We want to create a frictionless relationship with our partners. We’re going to manage the relationship with our retailer partners across brands, from sales, aftersales, quality of the customer experience and from a network development perspective.

‘We’re going to create a regional structure that will drive quicker decision-making.

‘It will create an environment where there’s common ownership of the objectives and the challenges that we face, and we strongly believe that will deliver a single point of contact and ownership of the issues that our retailers face.’

SWEEPING CHANGES AS MANAGEMENT SHAKE-UP UNVEILED

Stellantis UK has carried out a major management shake-up, as it seeks to streamline relationships with its dealers.

Part of it involves the creation of a new Network Operations department.

The move will ‘create a structure that integrates the multiple retailer contact points, simplifies policies and procedures, and improves communication whilst maintaining the integrity of the respective brands’, Stellantis said.

Along with pushing Alfa Romeo and DS Automobiles down the agency route from summer 2023, Stellantis will also create a new Premium Brand division consisting of the two firms, which will ‘support elevation of the customer experience’ so the ‘demands of these customers can be met more effectively’, it said.

Heading up the Premium Brand division will be current Peugeot UK boss Julie David.

Meanwhile, Stellantis’s mainstream brands – comprising Peugeot, Citroen, Fiat and Abarth, Jeep and Vauxhall – will remain as distinct organisations.

Current Vauxhall marketing director Adam Wood will move to head up Peugeot.

In his place, current interim Vauxhall boss James Taylor will formally take up the reins as managing director for the British brand.

DS Automobiles boss Jules Tilstone will move to Jeep as its MD, while current Alfa Romeo and Jeep boss Damien Dally will move to become Fiat and Abarth MD.

Fiat and Abarth’s current boss, Greg Taylor, will move to lead Citroen UK.

Network Operations will unite sales and vehicle flow functions, and bring in a ‘multi-brand regional structure’ for the mainstream brands.

Its aim is to ‘reduce complexity, simplify programmes and policies, and increase the standard and consistency of communication with our retailer partners’, said Stellantis.

It will be headed up by current Citroen UK MD Eurig Druce.

Other management appointments include Stephanie Howson as the new customer experience director, Richard Chamberlain as LCV business director, and Nick Richards as B2B director. The new used vehicles boss will be announced at a later date.

All appointments are effective from January 1, 2023. Paul Willcox, UK group managing director, said: ‘Our new management structure for our UK operations prepares us for the future and leverages our core strengths.’

This article is from: