Nissan Technical Center North America, Inc. · Farmington Hills, MI United States
Company Description
Phone: 248-488-4123
Fax: 248-488-3901
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The customer is always right at Nissan Technical Center North America (NTCNA). The company is part of Nissan North America 's operations, and its mission is to combine engineering, design, and technology to create Nissan and Infiniti cars specifically for the North American market. Engineers at NTCNA design and test vehicle systems including body, chassis, electrical, exterior trim, heating, ventilating, and air conditioning, emmissions, and safety. The company also oversees Nissan's North American research and development operations in Michigan as well as those at Nissan operations in California, Ohio, and Tennessee. Additionally, NTCNA has a proving ground testing track outside Phoenix. To read the full description, subscribe now.
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Key Nissan Technical Center North America, Inc. Financials
| Company Type | Subsidiary Headquarters |
| Fiscal Year-End | December |
| Employees | 500 |
Nissan Technical Center North America, Inc. Executives
2 executives listed for Nissan Technical Center North America, Inc.'s Farmington Hills, MI location.
| Title | Name & Bio | Contact |
| President | Motohiro Matsumura | Network |
| VP Component Engineering | Robert Sump | Network |
Competition
Competitive Landscape for Nissan Technical Center North America, Inc.
Demand is driven by employment and interest rates. The profitability of individual companies depends on manufacturing efficiency, product quality, and effective marketing. Large companies have economies of scale in purchasing and marketing; smaller companies can compete by focusing on specialized markets. The industry is capital-intensive: average annual revenue per employee is nearly $2 million. US-based automakers compete with numerous foreign rivals, including companies such as Toyota, Honda, and Nissan that have extensive auto assembly operations in the US. Through stateside manufacturing capacities and exports to the US, foreign carmakers collectively have about half of the US market. US auto manufacturers' financial positions have deteriorated dramatically in recent years. The "Detroit Three" (Chrysler, Ford, and GM) have suffered from import competition and high cost structures. High gas prices, few small car offerings, and near record-low consumer demand during the late 2000s recession drove Chrysler and GM into bankruptcy, where their debts were restructured. Chrysler and GM also received billions in loans from the US and Canadian governments. Ford, which has joined GM and Chrysler in various government incentive programs but has not received direct federal investment, avoided bankruptcy largely due to more than $20 billion in secured and unsecured loans it took out in 2006. To read the full description, subscribe now.Top Nissan Technical Center North America, Inc. Competitors
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