Leading OEMs are navigating tighter profitability, escalating EV development costs, and intensified competition from lower-cost global players.
Industry coverage across Asia points to a notable shift:
Japanese automakers are showing greater openness to collaboration — including partnerships that may have seemed unlikely in the past.
This evolution reflects the scale of today’s transformation.
Software-defined vehicle architecture, AI-enabled systems, semiconductor strategy, and next-generation EV platforms demand significant capital, deep technical capability, and disciplined execution. Strategic cooperation helps manage risk while accelerating development timelines.
This is not a departure from Japanese automotive philosophy.
It is an extension of it.
Japanese OEMs have long prioritized long-term resilience, structured planning, and measured execution. Collaboration is simply a mechanism to protect those principles in a capital-intensive era.
For suppliers, this shift raises the bar.
As OEM alignment increases, supplier expectations become more structured — not less.
• Engineering maturity
• QAV rigor
• Program phase discipline
• Cross-functional readiness
• Organizational alignment
At TKD² Group, we recognize that success within Japanese supply chains requires preparation, precision, and consistency.
Engagement is never reactive.
It is intentional.
#Honda #JapaneseOEM #AutomotiveStrategy #SupplierDevelopment #QAV