Currently reading: Apple's axed car project is still reshaping automotive

Hyundai Group executive Manfred Harrer was closely tied to Project Titan – this is what he learned

In the months after the Dyson car project wound down in 2019, Autocar was invited in for a full debrief and to see the prototype that had already cost £2.5 billion to develop.

Even though the car was ready to go, Dyson baulked at the further cost needed to take it into production and laid bare just how hard it is for a start-up, however well funded, to industrialise a new car and see money roll back in. No wonder Tesla gets so much credit.

Apple kept its own car programme – Project Titan – in development for five years after the Dyson car was axed, but it too was killed off as bosses failed to see how it could ever see a return on its investment. Low-margin, high-cost, hugely regulated cars are not phones or laptops.

Secrecy has always surrounded the Apple project and it was never spoken about publicly. News of automotive names involved in the project were typically limited to LinkedIn profile updates showing Apple as their employer.

Among them was Manfred Harrer, now head of vehicle development at the Hyundai Motor Group (HMG). His CV shows he was senior director of product design engineering while at Apple, but with the NDA still surely fresh in his mind, Harrer isn’t keen to break the wall of silence around it.

Still, here’s a senior exec sitting in front of me who has worked at Apple, a firm lauded for its ability to blend hardware and software. With the car project off the table (I tried!), I ask: more generally, what can the car industry learn from Apple?

“It’s customer first. It’s so customer-centric,” recalls Harrer. “And the attention to detail is extreme.” Such an approach “is kind of inspiring”, and while it’s one that HMG follows, Apple takes it further, which shows “you can do even more”.

That’s just what Harrer is doing. He says: “If there’s something you think is a given, challenge it. You can question it. You can think it through. It’s my personal learning that we can do more on this.”

He admits the amount of extra regulation for cars, compared with consumer electronics products, can make it harder for an automotive engineer to adopt such an approach but, even so, “how the customer looks, thinks and experiences the product” is where car makers really need to focus and can “squeeze out more”.

The ubiquity of smartphones in daily life is impossible for automotive engineers to ignore when developing cars, particularly interiors and usability. Harrer says “it’s not only the size of a screen any more but the responsiveness of the apps”, the data and services behind them, and the ability for updates and bugs to be fixed.

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“Our children are growing up with this… It doesn’t matter if it’s Samsung or Apple: to bring this experience to the car is the expectation.”

While the world isn’t getting an Apple car, its impact on automotive development is being felt.

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Mark Tisshaw

mark-tisshaw-autocar
Title: Editor

Mark is a journalist with more than a decade of top-level experience in the automotive industry. He first joined Autocar in 2009, having previously worked in local newspapers. He has held several roles at Autocar, including news editor, deputy editor, digital editor and his current position of editor, one he has held since 2017.

From this position he oversees all of Autocar’s content across the print magazine, autocar.co.uk website, social media, video, and podcast channels, as well as our recent launch, Autocar Business. Mark regularly interviews the very top global executives in the automotive industry, telling their stories and holding them to account, meeting them at shows and events around the world.

Mark is a Car of the Year juror, a prestigious annual award that Autocar is one of the main sponsors of. He has made media appearances on the likes of the BBC, and contributed to titles including What Car?Move Electric and Pistonheads, and has written a column for The Sun.

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