.
Jan-Åke Jonsson: Difference between revisions
(PwtRTJXUJZC) |
Red marquis (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''Jan-Åke Jonsson''' has been the managing director of [[Saab Automobile]] AB since April 1, 2005. | |||
Born in Valdemarsvik, Sweden, on September 18, 1951, Jonsson received a Bachelor degree in Business Administration from Uppsala University and first joined [[Saab-Scania]]'s Automobile Division in Nyköping in 1973. He held a variety of positions in Systems Development until becoming a Director for Aftersales & Services of Saab in Trollhättan in 1990. Jonsson held a variety of senior managerial position with Saab, including two years as Vice President for Sales and Marketing for Saab USA, in Atlanta, GA (1991-1993), until he replaced [[Peter Augustsson]] at the helm of Saab Automobile in 2005. In 2010 he Received the Swedish Business Award for Outstanding Achievements of the first magnitude from the West Swedish Chamber of Commerce and Industry for decisive action for the western Swedish industry, regarding the way he led Saab Automobile through a restructuring process and protracted sale negotiations that continued for over a year. | |||
==See Also== | |||
{{Saab}} | |||
== External links == | |||
* [http://media.gm.com/eur/gm/en/company/c_people/jonsson.htm Jan-Åke Jonsson corporate profile at GM Media] | |||
[[Category:Saab]] |
Latest revision as of 00:18, 19 June 2010
Jan-Åke Jonsson has been the managing director of Saab Automobile AB since April 1, 2005.
Born in Valdemarsvik, Sweden, on September 18, 1951, Jonsson received a Bachelor degree in Business Administration from Uppsala University and first joined Saab-Scania's Automobile Division in Nyköping in 1973. He held a variety of positions in Systems Development until becoming a Director for Aftersales & Services of Saab in Trollhättan in 1990. Jonsson held a variety of senior managerial position with Saab, including two years as Vice President for Sales and Marketing for Saab USA, in Atlanta, GA (1991-1993), until he replaced Peter Augustsson at the helm of Saab Automobile in 2005. In 2010 he Received the Swedish Business Award for Outstanding Achievements of the first magnitude from the West Swedish Chamber of Commerce and Industry for decisive action for the western Swedish industry, regarding the way he led Saab Automobile through a restructuring process and protracted sale negotiations that continued for over a year.
See Also
Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination
| ||
SAAB | ||
Spyker Cars | Saab | Spyker MF1 Team | Spyker Squadron Current: 9-3 · 9-3X · 9-5 · Turbo X · 9-4X Planned: 9-1 Historic: 92 · 93 · Sonett · 94 · GT750 · Sport · Formula Junior · 95 · 96 · 97 · 600 · Toad · 99 · 90 · 900 · 900 NG · 9000 · 9-2X · 9-7X · 9-3 BioPower · 9-5 BioPower Concept: 92001 · Quantum · 98 · EV-1 · 9-X · 9-3X Concept · Aero-X Concept · 9-3 SportHatch · Monster · 60 · Catherina · 9-4X BioPower Concept · 9-1X Concept · 9-X BioHybrid Concept · 9-X Air BioHybrid Concept Saab Two-Stroke engine · Ford Taunus V4 engine · Triumph Slant-4 · Saab B engine · Saab H engine · Saab V8 | ||
name of founder/s | Corporate website | A division of Spyker Cars N.V |