TOKYO — Not long after Shoichiro Toyoda assumed the helm of his family's namesake company, he took two Toyota Crown sedans to the U.S. to see how they performed in the market.
It was 1957, and the underpowered Crown was a big flop in the land of Corvettes and superhighways. Not only did the car need a down ramp just to acquire enough speed to merge, people thought the frumpy import was downright dangerous in bumper-to-bumper traffic.
"It was major regret," Toyoda later recounted of the Crown's premature debut in America.
But out of that setback was born a mindset that would power Toyota's triumphant return to America and its climb to become the world's biggest automaker.
"I want to tell people not to fear failure," Toyoda later said. "That kind of courage is essential."
This remembrance was one of many tales recounted on Monday, April 24, at an all-day memorial service for the late Toyota president and chairman, who died Feb. 14.
The mindset Shoichiro Toyoda championed early on is seeing a resurgence at Toyota Motor Corp. today as it transitions to a new leadership team and grapples with a rapidly changing industry and new competition.
Indeed, the memorial of the legendary Toyota chairman, always deferentially referred to as Dr. Toyoda, serves as a well-timed inspiration for rekindling the carmaker's killer instincts.
"We will carry on with the spirit of honorary chair Shoichiro and never relent in taking on challenges," newly appointed Toyota CEO Koji Sato pledged after the ceremony.
"Those great predecessors learned from mistakes, took on challenges and made improvements. Their efforts have made Toyota into what it is today."