Canadian Manufacturing

Ford launching Smart Mobility subsidiary in Silicon Valley

by Dee-Ann Durbin, The Associated Press   

Canadian Manufacturing
Operations Research & Development Technology / IIoT Automotive


Ford Smart Mobility will build, design and invest in services like car-sharing or ride-hailing

Designed to compete like a startup company, Ford Smart Mobility LLC will design and build mobility services on its own, and collaborate with start-ups and tech companies. PHOTO: Ford Motor Co.

Designed to compete like a startup company, Ford Smart Mobility LLC will design and build mobility services on its own, and collaborate with start-ups and tech companies. PHOTO: Ford Motor Co.

DETROIT—Ford Motor Co. is establishing a Silicon Valley-based subsidiary to build and invest in new mobility options like car-sharing and ride-hailing services.

Ford Smart Mobility LLC will be chaired by former Steelcase CEO Jim Hackett, who has been a member of Ford’s board since 2013. Hackett resigned his board seat March 11 to lead the new company. Ford Smart Mobility plans to name a CEO in the near future.

The company will operate in Palo Alto, Calif., and Ford’s hometown of Dearborn, Mich.

Ford CEO Mark Fields said the company will be “separate but connected” to its parent. Fields said Ford won’t initially include the company in its financial reporting, but may do so once it’s more firmly established.

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“We wanted to make sure give it the freedom and the flexibility to move almost like tech companies do,” Fields told The Associated Press.

Ford Smart Mobility will build, design and invest in services like car-sharing or ride-hailing. Ford has already conducted more than 30 global experiments over the last 14 months, including GoDrive, a car sharing program with guaranteed parking in London, and Bridj, a van service in Kansas City that users can summon with a smartphone.

The research and design of autonomous vehicles and vehicle connectivity will remain with the parent company, Fields said.

Fields said Hackett, who spent 30 years at office furniture maker Steelcase, helped transform the industry, in part by predicting the end of traditional cubicles.

“Jim is a fantastic strategic thinker and has a very good network in Silicon Valley,” Fields said.

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