Little Lotus Lands a British Heavyweight for CEO

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

In its quest to gain a loftier status among the sporty, well-to-do set, Lotus Cars spent the year poaching talent from other British automakers. China’s Geely, which holds a majority stake in the automaker, is expected to loosen the purse strings in pursuit of new models and a greater premium market share, but the human side of the operation needs to be in place before that occurs.

While former Bentley and Aston Martin execs have already hopped on board, the automaker now has a former top Jaguar Land Rover official in the big office, ready to put plans into action. He’s also no stranger to SUVs — a segment Lotus wants a piece of.

Phil Popham, who joined Land Rover in 1988 and finished his stint at the unified Jaguar Land Rover in 2014, was named the new CEO of Lotus on Friday. During his time at JLR, he rose through the ranks to become managing director of operations for JLR UK, then took the role of managing director for global operations. At Lotus, he joins other recent hires from the British auto industry, including new product strategy boss Uday Senapati, formerly of Bentley and JLR, who joined the company 10 days ago.

Marcus Blake, formerly of Aston Martin, showed up at Lotus earlier in the year to handle the automaker’s commercial operation.

Popham’s first day of work is October 1st, when he’ll relieve current Group Lotus CEO Feng Qingfeng in the the Lotus Cars CEO role. Feng has worn two hats since the departure of Jean-Marc Gales in June. Once Popham’s installed, maybe we’ll see Geely unleash the nearly $2 billion it’s setting aside for the automaker’s expansion.

“I am delighted that Phil has joined Lotus at this important time in our 70 year history,” said Feng in a statement. “We are growing the Lotus business not only at our headquarters in Hethel, Norfolk but also worldwide so the foundations are laid to become a globally competitive brand and a well recognised leader in the sports car market.”

Earlier this year, Lotus announced the hiring of 300 employees to handle the creation of two new sports cars, as well as an SUV (something no modern automaker can do without). The two cars should appear by 2020, with the SUV arriving within a four-year window.

[Image: Lotus Cars]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

More by Steph Willems

Comments
Join the conversation
2 of 15 comments
  • Pragmatic Pragmatic on Sep 14, 2018

    In its prime Lotus had no heavy weights (as CEOs or elsewhere). Now it seems its will be heavy weights at the top and on the road.

  • Zipper69 Zipper69 on May 01, 2020

    "He’s also no stranger to SUVs — a segment Lotus wants a piece of" Really? It was depressing as Porsche, Jaguar, Bentley and even the august Rolls-Royce jumped into that segment to produce flabby bolides that only the Russian Mafia, Saudi princes and NBA players support. Lotus is/was all about Chapman's famous quote "First add lightness" - clearly not something an SUV is likely to have.

  • Merc190 I would say Civic Si all the way if it still revved to 8300 rpm with no turbo. But nowadays I would pick the Corolla because I think they have a more clear idea on their respective models identity and mission. I also believe Toyota has a higher standard for quality.
  • Dave Holzman I think we're mixing up a few things here. I won't swear to it, but I'd be damned surprised if they were putting fire retardant in the seats of any cars from the '50s, or even the '60s. I can't quite conjure up the new car smell of the '57 Chevy my parents bought on October 17th of that year... but I could do so--vividly--until the last five years or so. I loved that scent, and when I smelled it, I could see the snow on Hollis Street in Cambridge Mass, as one or the other parent got ready to drive me to nursery school, and I could remember staring up at the sky on Christmas Eve, 1957, wondering if I might see Santa Claus flying overhead in his sleigh. No, I don't think the fire retardant on the foam in the seats of 21st (and maybe late 20th) century cars has anything to do with new car smell. (That doesn't mean new car small lacked toxicity--it probably had some.)
  • ToolGuy Is this a website or a podcast with homework? You want me to answer the QOTD before I listen to the podcast? Last time I worked on one of our vehicles (2010 RAV4 2.5L L4) was this past week -- replaced the right front passenger window regulator (only problem turned out to be two loose screws, but went ahead and installed the new part), replaced a bulb in the dash, finally ordered new upper dash finishers (non-OEM) because I cracked one of them ~2 years ago.Looked at the mileage (157K) and scratched my head and proactively ordered plugs, coils, PCV valve, air filter and a spare oil filter, plus a new oil filter housing (for the weirdo cartridge-type filter). Those might go in tomorrow. Is this interesting to you? It ain't that interesting to me. 😉The more intriguing part to me, is I have noticed some 'blowby' (but is it) when the oil filler cap is removed which I don't think was there before. But of course I'm old and forgetful. Is it worth doing a compression test? Leakdown test? Perhaps if a guy were already replacing the plugs...
  • Crown No surprise there. The toxic chemical stew of outgassing.
  • Spamvw Seeing the gear indicator made me wonder when PRNDL was mandated.Anyone?Anyone?1971
Next