Andy Palmer
Andrew Charles Palmer is an English engineer and businessman. He was president and CEO of Aston Martin from 2014 to 2020. In 2017, he was appointed chairman of the productivity and skills commission of the new West Midlands Combined Authority. Palmer was previously the chief planning officer, executive vice-president and member of the executive committee of Nissan Motor Company. Reporting directly to Nissan's president and CEO, Carlos Ghosn, Palmer shared the chief operating officer role with two Nissan executives. Palmer was also chairman of Infiniti, and president of Nissan Motor Light Truck Co, a member of the board of directors of Nissan Investment Company, and of Nissan's joint ventures with India's Ashok Leyland. He has been called an "engineer-turned-marketing guru raw instinct."
Early life
Palmer was born in June 1963 in Stratford-upon-Avon, England. Palmer entered a technical apprenticeship with UK Automotive Products Limited in 1979 at the age of 16. He received a master's degree in Product Engineering from the University of Warwick, in July 1990, and a doctorate in Engineering Management, from Cranfield University, in April 2004. Palmer is a Chartered Engineer and a Fellow of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers and a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering. Palmer holds a Diploma in Industrial Management from Coventry University. Palmer is a member and former board member of SAE International, a Companion of the Chartered Management Institute, and, according to Car and Driver, "the real deal."Academic career
Palmer holds a Masters in Engineering from Warwick University and a PhD in Industrial and Manufacturing Science from Cranfield University. He is also an alumnus of Coventry University and London Business School for management studies. He holds Honorary Doctorates from Coventry and Cranfield Universities and is a Professor at Coventry University, Industrial Professor at Warwick University and a guest Professor at the Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology.Business career
"Senior auto execs love to portray themselves as car guys," wrote Car and Driver, "but this expertise often goes no deeper than the ability to shoot the breeze in the paddock of an upmarket historic race. Palmer was the real deal, somebody who could cut it in the pit lane with wrenches and screwdrivers. The 56-year-old Brit saw every level of the car industry, beginning at the very bottom as a long-haired, 16-year-old technical apprentice with AP Brakes, and rising all the way to become Nissan's global development boss under Carlos Ghosn."Palmer started his professional career in 1983 as a project engineer of UK Automotive Products Limited. In 1991, he became manual transmission chief engineer of Rover Group.
Nissan
Palmer joined Nissan in 1991 as business administration manager at the Nissan Technical Centre Europe, where he became Deputy managing director in 2001 after managing vehicle design and testing.In September 2002, Palmer moved to Japan, where he became program director for Nissan's Light Commercial Vehicles.
Adding to his duties as Program Director, Palmer was named President of Nissan Motor Light Trucks Company Limited in 2003. After establishing the LCV business unit within Nissan in April 2004, Palmer was promoted in April 2005 to Corporate Vice-President in charge of the unit. In February 2009, Palmer was appointed Senior Vice-President, and entered Nissan's Executive Committee. In October 2010, Palmer's responsibility was extended to include Global Marketing, Brand and Communications. In April 2011, he was named Executive Vice-President.
In his position as Chief Planning Officer of Nissan, Andy Palmer was "responsible for global product planning, global program management, global market intelligence, global IS, global Infiniti business unit, global marketing communications, global corporate planning, zero emission vehicle planning and strategy, global battery business unit, and global sales."
At Nissan, Palmer is credited with pioneering ground-breaking technologies, through his support of the Zeod hybrid Le Mans project and Bladeglider sports car concept.
Palmer was described as the "main proponent of electric vehicles" at Nissan and led on the development of the successful LEAF electric car.
Aston Martin
Palmer became chief executive of Aston Martin in October 2014. He has gained wide recognition for bringing the iconic, albeit perennially loss-making Aston Martin brand on the path of success and profitability."From a very early age I wanted to be the CEO of a car company," Palmer told Autocar, "but when I decided to take this one from Nissan, I was pretty sure people would say I was mad."
Arriving at Aston Martin in 2014, Palmer put in a one-two-three punch of new equity, a solid expansion plan, and inevitable cost reduction. He "put funding in place to launch one new model at least every year," sanctioned a new logistics center and a new factory in Wales to build the DBX SUV, while himself leading by frugality: "Flying back from the 2015 Geneva auto show, Palmer was spotted in economy class." In Geneva, Palmer had presented Aston Martin's "Second Century Plan," and he unveiled the DBX cossover concept he had commissioned when only a few days on the new job.
In Palmer's first year at Aston Martin, a decline of retail sales was reversed, with a year-on-year 11% growth. Under Palmer's early leadership between 2014 and 2017, EBITDA had quadrupled and the company returned to profit.
Drawing on his time working in Japan, Palmer imported various elements of Japanese corporate culture at Aston Martin, including a greater emphasis on teamwork and minimising internal politics.
Palmer's tenure at Aston Martin saw the launch of four core car models with nine derivatives; the DB11, Vantage, DBS Superleggera and DBX. Palmer also oversaw Aston Martin's move towards a mid-engined car bloodline, culminating in the launch of the Valkyrie expected in late 2020.
Aston Martin goes public
After being credited with "completing a turnaround for the once perennially loss-making company", in October 2018 Palmer announced the company's IPO on the London Stock Exchange. Following the initial float, the company faced challenges during the 2019 automotive downturn.Following the IPO, analysts suggested Palmer had the "toughest job in the industry" and that alongside Brexit and the global automotive slump "blame probably lies with Aston's private equity owners and its multiple advisers for seeking too high a price and encouraging the company to go to market with an excessively hubristic and overwrought script."
The Sunday Times wrote that Palmer has "fought for the past year with one hand tied behind his back. Aston's private equity shareholders, the Italian fund Investindustrial and Kuwait's Investment Dar, sold about 25% of their shares in the listing, raking in £1.1bn. But, reluctant to be diluted via a share issue, they did not allow Aston to raise any fresh capital. That meant it brought in new investors, but no new money, and so started life as a public company already up to its neck in debt.
Car and Driver questioned: “But could Palmer have altered his destiny? Even 20/20 hindsight struggles to discern a clearer path. The IPO was the only obvious way to defuse tensions between the existing investors who were clamoring to get their cash back. It's hard to imagine simple changes that could have sold many more cars or even a much quicker launch for the DBX."
To stabilize the company, Palmer led Aston Martin through two debt raises, a Rights Issue and private placement, raising £536 million.This took place as Palmer navigated the company through the COVID-19 outbreak, which had a severe impact on demand throughout the automotive industry.
Palmer departs
On his departure from Aston Martin, Palmer was praised by Auto Express for producing Aston Martin's "best ever line up" and for "leaving the company in a better place than when he joined." Car and Driver agreed: "Palmer leaves Aston looking stronger than it ever has, and that wasn't enough to save him."UK Government
Palmer advises the UK government in export matters as an ambassador for the GREAT Britain campaign. In 2016, Palmer was asked to be an advisor to the UK Prime Minister in the area of Skills and Apprenticeships. Palmer serves as an Honorary Group Captain of the Royal Air Force.Palmer Foundation
In September 2018, Palmer announced a charitable foundation to fund apprenticeships targeting young people from disadvantaged background. On Twitter, Palmer said "this commitment reflects my own experience as an apprentice at a time in my life when it's time to give back." According to an Aston Martin statement, "the charitable foundation will operate independently of the apprenticeship scheme at Aston Martin Lagonda, which earlier this month welcomed its biggest ever intake of 50 apprentices and 26 graduates."Recognitions
- In 2012, Palmer was designated No. 1 in the "Top 50 Most Influential British People in the Global Automotive Business 2012" and selected to Auto Express Hall of Fame.
- In 2013, Palmer was named the automotive industry's most influential, and the world's third most influential chief marketing officer by the CMO Influence Study, conducted by marketing firm Appinions for Forbes magazine.
- Under CMO Palmer, Nissan's Interbrand score entered the top 100 in 2011, and moved to 65 in 2013. Among Interbrand's Best Global Green Brands 2013, Nissan took No. 5. Interbrand credited Palmer with "elevating marketing to a science."
- Palmer was appointed Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George in the 2014 New Year Honours for services to the British automotive industry.
- In 2014, Palmer was voted one of EVO's "25 most important people of the car industry."
- In 2016, Palmer was selected for the first Cranfield University "Distinguished Manufacturing Alumnus/a of the Year Award".
- In 2018, Palmer was presented with the Lifetime Achievement Award by Auto Express.
- In 2018, Palmer won an Automotive News "All Star" award in the luxury car category
Controversy
- At the 2011 Tokyo Motor Show, Palmer said that "it's complete bullshit" to assume that electric vehicles move the CO2 issue to the powerstation. Palmer conceded that EVs could pollute even less if electricity generation would be made greener across the globe.
- In October 2013, Palmer made headlines by calling the Toyota 86 and the jointly developed Subaru BRZ "midlife crisis cars."
- In March 2014, Palmer drew attention after Global NCAP tested a number of India's best-selling cars and found their safety lacking. "I think the people who criticise these cars for not meeting US or European crash standards are living in a dream world," Palmer was quoted by Autocar. "We are talking about cars built to transport people who would otherwise be four or five-up on a motorcycle. These people today can't afford more, and if we fit safety systems we will drive the prices up and they'll choose the motorbike again. A car with a body and individual seats is much safer than a bike." A Nissan car was not among the tested vehicles.
Personal life