" Jaguar and Land Rover may be household names synonymous with four-wheeled drives and luxury sports models, but behind the scenes its UK operation is in a state of flux, revolutionising its business operations and finance processes.

By Christopher Argent, Founder, GENCFO

Michael Mills

Finance and Transformation Director

Jaguar Land Rover UK

Having undergone a major financial transformation between 2018 and 2020 which turned a traditional finance function into a future-proofed contemporary operation with specialist hubs and centres of excellence, the UK business realised it needed to pivot again, but on a much bigger scale.

“We’re at the leading edge of a competitive automotive sector,” says Michael Mills, Finance and Transformation Director, Jaguar Land Rover UK.

“It’s a traditional sector but it’s becoming very fast moving and therefore we need to move quickly, otherwise we’ll be dinosaurs in the dust.”

Changing responsibilities and demands

A fast-changing volatile world during and after the pandemic along with shifting customer demand brought the need into sharp focus.

Growing consumer awareness around environmental, social and ethical responsibilities also had an impact.

Michael says customers are adopting electric vehicles ‘quicker’ than anticipated, for example.

A significant part of Jaguar Land Rover’s transformation was also repositioning the brands as ‘the creators of the world’s most desirable luxury vehicles’, products and services that ‘hit the mark’ environmentally and sustainably.

But it’s also about ensuring certain products like electric vehicles are available to meet increased demand. And of course, this response has to align to the wider business strategy.

“As part of our transformation, the UK operation is moving from a Business to Business (B2B) commercial model to a Business to Consumer (B2C) one, which will mean more direct contact and interactions with customers,” Michael explains.

“My focus is in ensuring we have the processes, systems and infrastructure required for this level of change in place to deliver on these new capabilities and guarantee a superb customer experience.”

Roles and responsibilities will inevitably change as a result of this huge shift: teams will become much more customer-focused and staff will need to deal with more calls and emails as well as online interactions through social media channels, all this whilst adjusting to large volumes of transactions.

Updating Jaguar Land Rover UK’s processes

“There will be a lot more data flowing through the system because we’ll have moved from managing a few partnerships to suddenly managing hundreds of thousands of customer relationships directly,” says Michael.

“Customer data will become a big part of this transformation.”

To aid with this, two software programs have been implemented: a data fellowship programme which upskills and trains current employees around data and data literacy and the other is a data intelligence tool which analyses vast swathes of raw data, providing key insights and trends to drive strategy.

The business is also updating several of its existing systems and upgrading online digital capabilities to optimise website and app content, better understand online customer behaviour and help get its message to wider customer demographics using targeted, segmented data profiling and analytics. New payment platforms are needed, too.

“You need different systems depending on payment methods. As you move from a one-time purchase to a subscription model, the systems which underpin these options are very different.”

“Also, the volume of transactions will significantly escalate, so the infrastructure needs to be there: how do I invoice, re-invoice or refund customers at scale, to give the customer a seamless experience where they’re not waiting three weeks for their money back?”

Michael’s transformations

It’s fair to say that Michael has driven huge change across the business since he took up his role in 2018.

While the first major financial transformation was about turning the finance function into a future-focused operation and creating centres of excellence, the latest one has a wider scope, aligning with business strategy which affects every area of the business directly.

Although global events from the pandemic to rising inflation has ‘dampened’ the businesses’ ability to ‘turbo-charge’ its transformation programme – Jaguar Land Rover has had to offset ever-increasing costs and prioritise specific areas – there have been opportunities too.

“Previously, UK customers couldn’t buy a vehicle online, now they can. So we’ve increased investment in our IT infrastructure.”

“As we’ve become more agile, we’ve had to work more efficiently and make faster decisions before opportunities are lost.”

“In doing so, we’ve given team members more responsibility and there’s been a real sense of empowerment.”

Dealing with problems in an agile way

Supply chain issues are a prime example: to keep parts coming through, the business has empowered more team members to make quick financial decisions themselves. “More traditional finance policies probably wouldn’t have allowed this, but we’ve had to adapt.”

“This has meant providing individuals with greater spending power by increasing their spend limit from say X to X Plus.”

“It’s about asking, ‘how do we react far quicker than we previously have in order to ensure we can keep parts coming through? How do we keep the supply chain moving when you have suppliers in financial distress?’”

“When opportunities arise, we need to be able to act quickly to secure that supply.”

Michael and the team are all too aware that the level of global and economic change which has led to these transformations isn’t temporary by any means.

“We’ve all realised that this level of change and volatility is pretty much a given now, and it’s the new normal,” he says.

“Our transformation drives have had to be sustainable and future-focused for this reason. I like to think we’re now in a good position to withstand any future risk.”

Power Profile

Who is his hero?

"I’m a rugby fan and I’ve followed Jonny Wilkinson throughout my childhood, I’ve seen him evolve as a person and as a leader. He’s recognised the power of a team working together and that inspires me."

What music inspires him?

"I have quite an eclectic taste. I like hip-hop and garage, so high tempo music. I also like the odd power ballad too."

Author

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Christopher Argent, Founder, GENCFO
GENCFO Team

Chris is the founder and MD of GenerationCFO.com and creator of the Digital Finance Function Model and a contributor to many articles on our platform. Chris focuses on the shift toward digital transformation in accounting and finance, shows you what good looks like, then helps to get you there!

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