No other American car has the mystique and romance of the Corvette. It has been a legend for over forty years. Early in 1997 General Motors unveiled the fifth-generation Corvette. All Corvettes Are Red is the inside story of the people who made that Corvette, from drawing board to assembly line.
The gap between the fourth- and fifth-generation Corvettes (C4 and C5, in GM lingo) was the longest ever, and the Corvette program came close to dying. Just as serious design work was under way, GM suffered the worst losses in its corporate history, and the C5 program was put on hold. The Corvette was saved by a fiercely dedicated team of designers, engineers, and executives, who pulled together to keep their dream car alive. They overcame internal politics and company-wide budget cuts to produce a new Corvette that is better engineered, better built, and less expensive than its predecessors.
Author James Schefter was granted unprecedented access to every part of GM, including areas that were off-limits to many company vice presidents. He spent eight years witnessing the C5's journey from drawing board to clay model to prototype to production vehicle. He accompanied test drivers across scorching deserts and into snow-packed mountains. As a result All Corvettes Are Red is not just the most authoritative book ever written about the Corvette, it is the most revealing account of the inner workings of the U.S. automobile industry.
All Corvettes Are Red
By James SchefterSimon & Schuster
Copyright © 1996 James Schefter
All right reserved.ISBN: 9780684808543Chapter One
General Motors was dying. That was the message in the newspapers and magazines as business writers honed their obituary skills. The smell of corporate demise left a cold fear in the hallways of GM buildings in Detroit and its suburbs. Downsized, hattered, and adrift in a tattered economy, the world's largest corporation staggered under new blows. Wall Street had cut the giant's credit rating. Its stock price was plummeting. And its cars weren't selling.
If money were blood, the company would already be dead. It was hemorrhaging by the billions. Its top management was in disarray. A "car guy," an engineer who'd come up through the ranks, was in the chairman's seat for the first time in decades, and he'd been overcome by crisis. It was a crisis he'd inherited more than made, but it was his to resolve. He hadn't succeeded.
Now, in the autumn of 1992, chairman of the board Robert C. Stempel retreated behind the barricades and brooded. As the worst year in General Motors history groped toward winter, the man charged with producing miracles withdrew into executive paralysis. He couldn't bring himself to decide which plants to close or which new car programs to fund. He ignored interview requests from the media and let mail go unanswered. People close to him found him remote and distracted.
When he looked out the executive windows on the fourteenth floor of the General Motors headquarters on West Grand Boulevard in Detroit, Stempel could see a grim vision of the future. General Motors' headquarters, once a symbol of the American dream, was surrounded by a slum. Stempel could see burned and gutted houses and apartments, or vacant lots where charred debris had been cleared away, or claptrap homes where some of Detroit's most dismal poor existed in dreary poverty. A sea of misery surrounded the island of the General Motors Building. It mirrored the condition of Stempel's company.
Inside his office, and inside his head, Bob Stempel felt surrounded. The national economy had escaped from recession and had been slowly improving for more than eighteen months. But General Motors was losing money, losing market share, losing respect, and losing its way. Nothing Bob Stempel did seemed to work. Too often he did nothing. The day after Stempel ascended to the throne in 1990, Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait and in the uncertainty of wartime psychology, automobile sales dried up.
Then, faced with having to lay off thousands of assembly-line workers and close an unknown number of plants, Stempel agreed to pay laid-off union people 90 percent of their take-home pay for up to three years. Billions of dollars would be drained from the company's coffers to let folks stay home and be 100 percent nonproductive. When plants did need workers, Stempel couldn't transfer UAW members who lived more than fifty miles from the assembly line. The shackles Stempel accepted in dealing with the union almost killed GM. An editorial cartoon given wide national play even portrayed the chairman of the board as a crash dummy.
It was as bad or worse for others in GM's senior ranks. The foppish dandy pushed into the company presidency by Stempel, over the objections of some board members, had failed, too. Lloyd E. Reuss had fulfilled the dire forecasts about his management style and ability. He finally suffered a rude demotion by the board of directors in a spring 1992 rebellion. When Reuss fell as president, he took the chief financial officer with him, and triggered another of the bewildering reorganizations that cascaded over GM with every slip in market share, leaving the rank and file shaking their heads in bewilderment.
Now it was happening again. The events of spring 1992 were leading to an autumn coup.
At the General Motors Technical Center in Warren, Michigan, an industrial Detroit suburb a few miles northeast of GM's headquarters, the rumors of Stempel's impending demise flew freely. A new president, Jack Smith, had been in power for barely six months. There were signs that he knew what he was doing, hut the confusion and frustration at the working level remained. Smith had given unprecedented power to a Strategy Board composed of about eighteen senior executives from GM's North American Operations (NAO), the biggest and most important piece of the international GM empire. NAO, the core automotive business -- the cars, the trucks, and the parts that go into them -- of the company, would reportedly lose more than #10 billion in 1992.
Everything bad that happened at the top flowed quickly down to the car programs, where General Motors met the real world. New-car programs were being hit with delay after delay. A new Chevrolet Camaro intended to be a 1992 model wouldn't reach dealers until late 1993. And a new Corvette, intended to he introduced as a '93, had been hammered with so many budget cuts and executive-ordered delays that it was barely alive as a 1997 model.
The story of Corvette mirrored the story of General Motors. A new Corvette was long overdue. The model on the road, introduced in 1983, was a moneymaker. But its $100 million or so in annual profit was puny by GM standards. Teams of artists and engineers had been working secretly on a new design since 1988. They lived a roller-coaster existence. The budget for doing the new Corvette, up to $250 million, had been granted, trimmed, partly restored, cut again, even wiped completely from the books. As GM sank into its sea of red ink, the ripple effect on Corvette was like a tidal wave. On a Monday morning in mid-October, 1992, the tidal wave made landfall.
Like the company itself, Corvette was dying.
General Motors was all but out of control, managed by rumor, innuendo, press leak, and reflex. Nobody was fully in charge. Bob Stempel collapsed at a meeting in Washington and was hospitalized. Two months later he underwent open-heart surgery.
The press had a field day -- weeks of field days -- as tasty bits of inside information that could only have come from the board of directors were leaked to reporters at the Washington Post and then blazed from headlines and anchor desks across the country. The board members' treachery was known. Stempel's personal advisers warned him that directors J. Willard Marriott and Anne McLaughlin, both of them rich and with little feel for the automotive business, were feeding the Post. Stempel did nothing to stop them.
At lower levels in the company, people tried to cope. Corvette program manager Russ McLean -- the man charged with producing the current Corvette and with developing its replacement cement -- gathered a dozen of his key people in his office shortly after 8 A.M. on Monday, October 19.
"I want everybody to take a deep breath," McLean told them. "The Strategy Board met all weekend. There'll be an announcement about another reorganization in the next day or two.
"But the impact for us... well, all programs after '96 have been put on hold or canceled. Since we were a 1997, all I can say is for you to clear your calendars, stop everything, and go into a holding pattern. Right now, things are pretty confused...."
Automotive News, the most influential publication in the industry, called the General Motors shake-up one of the one hundred most significant events in the history of the automobile. To Corvette, it ranked in the top ten.
A midlevel Corvette manager, Pete Liccardello, replayed McLean's words again and again, looking for salvation. As a key engineering and administrative manager for the 1997 Corvette,...