
Ford announced it would invest $1 billion over five years in a previously unheard of startup. Argo AI, led by Google and Uber, now combined with Ford’s existing team to develop a fully self-driving car.
Ford has become the latest major company to have made a high-priced investment in self-driving cars.
Almost a year ago, General Motors spent $1 billion to acquire Cruise Automation. And last August, Uber spent $680 million on Otto, a self-driving car startup led by former Google engineers.
Argo AI is a startup that hadn’t even been publicly announced. And Ford hasn’t acquired all of the startup, it’s only the majority stockholder. Argo AI engineers will have equity in the company, which should help it attract talent. Other companies have tried similar arrangements amid intense competition for qualified engineers.
When Google spun off its self-driving car project as Waymo in December, CEO John Krafcik said the arrangement would help it to better align incentives for employees.
Argo AI plans to have 200 employees by year’s end. They will be split between Silicon Valley, Michigan and Pittsburgh.
Argo AI CEO Bryan Salesky spent three years working at Google’s self-driving car program. He left in 2016. His cofounder, Peter Rander, spent nearly two years working on Uber’s autonomous vehicle team in Pittsburgh.
Experts have long warned that legacy automakers such as Ford risk being disrupted by tech companies like Google. Tech companies have the software expertise that is necessary to build a safe self-driving car.
The doomsday scenario for automakers is to turn into Nokia, which was a global leader in cell phones — until Apple unveiled the iPhone. Nokia wasn’t able to keep up during the smartphone revolution and watched as SiIlicon Valley titans Apple and Google sucked up their profits.
Ford is clearly willing to spend a lot of money to avoid such a fate.
A Ford self-driving car in action