@1nzc+1li44S5y "That they greenlit and funded so many ideas which should never have survived a single spitballing session is a testament to the dearth of intellectual and creative ability in that organization"
It is a testament to the dearth of intellectual and creative ability of MANAGEMENT. I bet that what I am about to say is very common at Ford because it happens to me and other engineers around. Managers skip the technical advice provided by the engineers and develop their "own solutions", which are shortsighted, suboptimal, and in many cases just plain wrong. Then engineers have to spend time and effort (a lot) making sure these "solutions" work, because managers refuse to change their decisions.
How many times engineers asked for more time and were denied because we had to meet the arbitrary deadlines? How many times engineers found issues with new products/parts, but we still went ahead with those to production? How many times managers didn't listen to the proper advice and increased complexity, outsourced critical manpower, selected the wrong supplier/part, hired the incorrect person for the job?
Engineers at Ford were overworked and fighting an uphill battle, but we still stood until 2019. That's when we realized we were not wanted anymore. In 2022, we were "untrainable". In 2023, we're 25% too many. The company fired lots of engineers, and we replaced them with foreigners outside NA, or friends and family good for nothing, or even more managers.
Some of the engineers were fired, but many left by their own: retired, quitted, found another job. The remaining are looking for another company, while reducing their workload and responsibilities. Managers believe that engineers are terrified for their jobs, and that's why we are not fighting their stupid decisions anymore. They couldn't be more wrong. We don't have time to fight for a lost cause. We now dedicate ourselves to polish our skills, update our resume and find another job.