JoeinTX
Platinum Member
The confusing, incestuous, and boggling aspects of the ag industry are hard to follow but they are not new. The auto industry is no different and in so, so many other industries you would be even more gobsmacked. The number of different suppliers and proprietors in any modern cell phone or laptop or TV (foreign or domestic) would blow your mind. I work for a German company contracted with an American company that has to abide by Korean import/export requirements for manufacturers in California and China who have to comply with international safety regulations. Makes you want to drink.
Henry Ford? Ford was the penultimate businessman. Efficiencies of scale. Max productivity. Selling to the greatest bidder. He would be perfectly at home in today's industry. Ford didn't care what color Model T you wanted because they were all black and that's the color you got. That was the extent of customer service in a time and place where they consumer had to take what they could get. He knew the market then, he could get it now.
As for FIAT. They are Europe's Ford. They've produced just about everything from one time to another......tractors, cars, airplanes, radios, home appliances, heavy equipment, engines.......through good times and many bad. And, yet, they've managed to survive while so very many have not. Ford would have no problem with part of his enterprise today with FIAT. None. It's been very good business.
FIAT's not selling out any of it's current ag line. They've spent too much time and money re-building it and marketing it. It's been too much of a success for them.
Besides, look at this scenario.........the "foreign" FIAT now controls: Chrysler/Dodge/RAM, New Holland, Case IH.....lump in the ghosts of International Harvester and Allis-Chalmers industrial. Old Man Ford would jump at that and all of the American workers involved in the varied enterprises would be gracious to be there.
Henry Ford? Ford was the penultimate businessman. Efficiencies of scale. Max productivity. Selling to the greatest bidder. He would be perfectly at home in today's industry. Ford didn't care what color Model T you wanted because they were all black and that's the color you got. That was the extent of customer service in a time and place where they consumer had to take what they could get. He knew the market then, he could get it now.
As for FIAT. They are Europe's Ford. They've produced just about everything from one time to another......tractors, cars, airplanes, radios, home appliances, heavy equipment, engines.......through good times and many bad. And, yet, they've managed to survive while so very many have not. Ford would have no problem with part of his enterprise today with FIAT. None. It's been very good business.
FIAT's not selling out any of it's current ag line. They've spent too much time and money re-building it and marketing it. It's been too much of a success for them.
Besides, look at this scenario.........the "foreign" FIAT now controls: Chrysler/Dodge/RAM, New Holland, Case IH.....lump in the ghosts of International Harvester and Allis-Chalmers industrial. Old Man Ford would jump at that and all of the American workers involved in the varied enterprises would be gracious to be there.