A transition plant director specialized in automotive leads a single site or a multi-site scope facing the shift to electric, a supplier tension, or a performance drift under the pressure of IATF 16949 requirements and OEM demands. They know just-in-time cadence, the Tier 1/Tier 2 logic, and the quality-cost-delivery trade-offs specific to the industry — and start within days, not months.
Callback within 2 business hours · 3 targeted profiles within 72h · 100% industry
They lead the industrial performance of a site — OEM, Tier 1 supplier or Tier 2 subcontractor — on the indicators that matter in the industry: line OEE, service rate to OEMs, cost of non-quality, IATF 16949 audit compliance. Within the first 100 days: mapping of lines under tension, review of ongoing customer penalties, and root-cause diagnosis of the drift — often a specific bottleneck rather than a general problem.
The French automotive industry is going through a rare industrial shift: converting combustion-engine lines to electric and hybrid, reorganizing supply chains after semiconductor and raw-material tensions, and constant OEM pressure (manufacturers like Renault or Stellantis, major suppliers) on production costs against Asian competition. A transition plant director steps in when a site must shift production to new electric references without breaking service on existing lines, when a repeated non-conformity threatens a framework contract with an OEM, or when the position becomes vacant during a period of supplier tension. An acquisition or divestiture of a supplier site — frequent in the industry right now — also often requires an outside pilot to secure industrial continuity during the integration.
The typical profile combines 15 to 25 years in plant management within the automotive industry or at a Tier 1 supplier, with direct knowledge of IATF 16949 standards and the quality requirements of major OEMs. They have often led an electric-line conversion themselves or managed a critical supply crisis, giving them an immediate read on shop-floor indicators with no acclimation period. They understand the Tier 1/Tier 2/Tier 3 cascade logic and can negotiate with an OEM as well as with a subcontractor under pressure. Their ability to make fast calls — shutting down an unprofitable line, reorganizing a team, committing to an automation investment — without waiting for multiple rounds of approval, is what shareholders look for when time is tight.
From the first weeks: a factual audit of the site on the indicators OEMs care about — service rate, quality PPM, compliance with electric-conversion milestones — and a clear map of ongoing contractual risks. The executive must give them direct authority over the production management team during the assignment: a transition plant director whose authority stays diluted loses their ability to quickly unblock a line under tension. In return, they receive regular, factual reporting, with costed milestones aligned to commitments made to OEMs. The assignment ends with a documented industrial plan — line by line, reference by reference — and a management team autonomous on the continuation of the work underway, handed over to the permanent successor or to the executive themselves.
Illustration of the type of assignment led — example for educational purposes, not a reference to an actual client.
The context: a Tier 1 supplier shipping to several European manufacturers must convert a legacy line producing combustion-engine parts into production of electric vehicle components, under a deadline set by a major customer's launch schedule, without interrupting current deliveries on existing references.
The stakes: hit the series-start milestone or face contractual penalties, while preserving the service rate on the combustion lines still active for 12 to 18 months.
The assignment: a transition plant director is brought in to run the dual operation — progressive conversion on one side, continued production on the other — and secure quality validations for the new process with the OEM.
How it unfolded: the first weeks precisely map available capacity and critical switchover points; the following months sequence the conversion line by line, directly managing the hard points — tooling validation, team training on new standards, handling initial non-conformities. The assignment typically lasts 9 to 12 months, the time needed to stabilize the series start and hand pilot duties to the permanent management team.
Expected outcome: the start milestone met, the service rate preserved throughout the transition period, and a trained team able to manage the ramp-up of the new reference.
Converting a line to electric or hybrid under a tight deadline; supplier tension threatening the service rate; repeated non-conformity with an OEM; a vacant position during a critical period; industrial integration or separation following the acquisition of a supplier site. In every case, the mechanics stay the same: an expert calls you back within 2 business hours, you receive 3 targeted profiles within 72h, and the manager starts with a costed assignment letter, followed by the firm's founder through to handover.
Because the industry has its own codes: IATF 16949, the Tier 1/Tier 2 cascade, OEM contractual penalties. A profile who already knows them doesn't lose weeks learning them.
Yes: it's one of the most frequent scenarios today — dual operation run in parallel, with precise sequencing of switchover points.
Callback within 2 business hours, 3 targeted profiles within 72h, start generally within one to two weeks — faster in a supplier crisis situation.
Cost is scoped from the first conversation based on criticality, duration and scope. It compares to the cost of a contractual penalty or a missed milestone.
Recruitment takes 4 to 6 months — incompatible with a series-start milestone set by an OEM. Transition management mobilizes within days, for a defined duration.
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Callback within 2 business hours · 3 targeted profiles within 72h · 100% industry