Hall of fame

Alison Jones

Alison Jones [NEW]

Senior vice president, global circular economy, Stellantis

The most successful car firms this decade will be those that can hunt down the new opportunities offered by the pressing need to recycle. It’s therefore a measure of how highly regarded Alison Jones is within Stellantis that she has been given this responsibility for the 14-brand organisation.
Her promotion in June 2022 to oversee Stellantis’s circular economy strategy is her first global position at the firm after a stellar period guiding first the PSA Group brands in the UK and then the combined Stellantis brands from 2021.
In her role as senior vice president, she reports to Philippe de Rovira, one of Stellantis’s top executive team, and takes responsibility for working out how to generate revenues of €2 billion (£1.7bn) by 2030 from extending the life of vehicles and then finding value in their parts when they’re finally scrapped.
In announcing Jones’s posting, Stellantis praised her “great leadership style, robust business knowledge, continuous commitment on transformational topics and strategic vision”.
Jones built the foundations for that vision during nearly 20 years at the Volkswagen Group, leaving in 2019 as UK head of the Volkswagen brand. In successfully navigating the UK car market, she has followed fellow Stellantis executive Linda Jackson – now head of the Peugeot brand globally and celebrated in our Hall of Fame (see right) – in earning herself a globally significant position.


Helen Foord

Helen Foord [NEW]

Head of government affairs, McLaren Automotive

Helen Foord became McLaren’s focal point for liaising with the government in April 2022. Her move to the specialist car maker came after 15 years of working for Stellantis and, pre-merger, PSA. There, she pressed the case to the government on issues that affected the group’s two Vauxhall plants in the UK as well as other, more general automotive issues. Foord took on the wider Stellantis remit in January 2021 following the merger of PSA and FCA, which further enlarged a role that had already expanded in 2017 when PSA bought Vauxhall-Opel. She joined Vauxhall’s former owner, General Motors, in 2006, moving from energy watchdog Ofgem.
Since 2022, Foord has also been president of ESCA (European Small Volume Car Manufacturers Alliance), which lobbies European institutions and member states on behalf of its members to ensure the interests of smaller car makers are represented alongside the mainstream automotive industry.
Foord becomes a member of the Hall of Fame after winning the Government Affairs category twice before, in 2020 and 2018, while she was working for Stellantis and PSA.


Danella Bagnall

Danella Bagnall

Vehicle Programme Quality Director, Jaguar Land Rover

Danella Bagnall won the vehicle development category in our first ever Great Women in the British Car Industry initiative back in 2016, the year after she became JLR’s chief engineer for the Evoque, the first female within JLR hold the chief engineer position. In that role she launched the Evoque convertible before switching to oversee the Jaguar F-Pace. She topped the category again in 2020 following her promotion to her role current overseeing vehicle quality, a key position as JLR looks to match and beat rivals on key metrics such as reliability.
That came after three years spent in China leading engineering for the firm there, with responsibility for China-specific models such as long-wheelbase versions of the Jaguar XE and XF. Born in Coventry, Bagnall followed her parents into the automotive industry, first in as a technical apprentice at Austin Rover then moving to Land Rover in 1992. She specialized in body engineering, helping to launch the outgoing, aluminium-based Range Rover and Range Rover Sport.


Michelle Roberts

Michelle Roberts

Marketing Director, BMW

Michelle Roberts first won the marketing category in 2018, the year she was also promoted to lead BMW Group marketing in the UK. In 2020 she cemented her position with another category win in our biennial awards for high-flyers. In her position, Roberts is the only women to sit on BMW’s UK board and she also represents UK and Europe on BMW’s Global Marketing and Customer Board, reflecting her influence on the company.
Roberts, a fluent German speaker, joined the firm via a newly instigated graduate scheme in 2000, moving to project manager for the BMW 5-series and 6-series in 2007. In 2011 she joined Mini as corporate communications manager. Her breakout role was to manage BMW’s large-scale sponsorship of London 2012 Olympic games, before switching to head of marketing for Mini. She then moved to BMW’s Munich HQ as head of international brand and communication management. Roberts holds a degree in German and business studies from the University of Sheffield, gained in 2000.


Linda Jackson

Linda Jackson

CEO, Peugeot

Linda Jackson won Autocar’s inaugural Great Women in British Car Industry initiative in 2016 and again in 2018 amid her five-year stint as CEO of the Citroen brand. Her promotion to the Citroen job 2014 and subsequent success in leading a global car brand made Jackson the epitome of everything the initiative stood for – celebrating the achievements of women working within what is still largely a man’s world.
In January 2020 she was promoted to oversee brand portfolio development for the PSA Group, a key job that addressed the differentiation of brands in the upcoming merger with FCA group. Once that had gone through Jackson was promoted again in January 2021 to head Peugeot, the flagship brand in the resulting Stellantis group.
Jackson made the jump to Citroen CEO following a stint as head of Citroen in UK and Ireland, a role she’d successfully held since 2010. Jackson started in the automotive industry at Jaguar in 1977 as an accounting clerk, and climbed through the ranks of MG Rover Europe, serving as CEO of France for three years. In 2005 he moved to Citroen UK, joining as chief financial officer for the brand and going onto to do the same job for Citroen France.


Josephine Payne

Josephine Payne

Director Craiova Vehicle Operations and Site, Ford

Jo Payne oversees the entirety of Ford’s successful plant in Craiova, Romania, where it currently builds the Puma small SUV and in the future will build a small van, with electric versions planned for both. She was promoted to this position in April 2021 after less than a year as assistant plant manager. Prior to that she was charge of the adjacent engine plant in Romania, where Ford builds the one-litre EcoBoost and 1.5-liter EcoBoost petrol engines at a rate of around 250,000 a year. She was promoted to the position in 2018 after a year-long position responsible for the ramping up of the 1.5-litre diesel at Ford’s Dagenham plant in London. Before that she was Ford’s global manufacturing manager for powertrain based in the US leading a team of over 250. She joined Ford at Liverpool’s Halewood plant in 1996 as a controls engineer, and gradually built up her experience of engine and gearbox manufacturing from there. She has overseen projects in Bridgend, Dagenham, Valencia (Spain), Chihuahua (Mexico), Taubate (Brazil) as well as delivering Ford’s first petrol/diesel flexible line in Chennai, India. She holds a master’s degree in electronic engineering from the University of Southampton.


Sue Slaughter

Sue Slaughter

Purchasing Director Global Material Cost, Supply Chain Sustainability, Ford

Sue Slaughter won her place in the 2022 Hall of Fame for her work within Ford’s purchasing division. Her 2018 win came in the year she became chief purchasing director for Ford of Europe, having moved back to the UK from Cologne, Germany, where she was chief operating officer for Ford’s joint venture gearbox maker Getrag Ford Transmissions. She also won her category in 2020 while the same European purchasing role.
Slaughter is now in charge of Ford’s global strategy for supply chain sustainability and cost, a key role that balances the twin concerns of car companies as they move into the electric era. One of her roles for example is to scrutinize the working practices of companies mining battery raw materials.
Essex-born, Slaughter joined Ford as a business trainee from school in 1987 and rose through the ranks of business planning and logistics, before making her mark in purchasing. Before moving to the Getrag role in 2015 she was the director in charge of purchasing for global B-cars (Fiesta), moving from a similar global role for C/D cars (eg Mondeo) based in America. Slaughter is also chair of the Responsible Business Alliance (RBA).


Angela Shepherd

Angela Shepherd

CEO, Mercedes-Benz Retail Group

Angela Shepherd heads up the Mercedes-Benz Retail Group, owned by Mercedes-Benz itself, which consists of eight new, approved-used and aftersales centres with four additional service centres in and around London, including the flagship Brooklands showroom.
Shepherd first won the sales category back in 2016 when she was network operations director for Mercedes in charge of overseeing its dealers, a position she’d held since 2014. She next topped the category in 2020, after she’d been promoted to lead the Retail Group in December 2019.
Prior her network operations role she was head of training for the company. Shepherd started at Mercedes back in 1990 as a graduate trainee after gaining a BA in modern languages (she’s a proficient German speaker) and communications from the University of Wales in Swansea. Her longest held position in the company has been as customer services director from 2003 to 2013 when she moved the company from 26th to third in the JD Power dealer service satisfaction rankings. While Shepherd has had to shrink the Retail Group during her stewardship as part of a wider strategy within Mercedes, it remains a core element of the brand’s sales push in the UK.

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