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Freelance Anniversaries: Nicolas Hunziker Porsche Art

Freelance Anniversaries: Nicolas Hunziker Porsche Art

I had an email today from my friend Heather, wife and business partner of motorsport artist and designer, Nicolas Hunziker, reminding me that the duo are celebrating ten years in business this month. The mail was well timed, as I am also celebrating a work anniversary today: my seventh year as a full-time freelance, working in and around the classic Porsche hobby.

I still remember parking my company car in the office car park for the last time, returning my work laptop and security pass and catching the train from Weybridge back to Banbury – I think I even kept the ticket stub. Mrs G picked me up in our old Landcruiser and we drove home through the leafy lanes, on a beautifully bright, sunny day. Still got the house, the Landcruiser, the Mrs and the sunshine (today, at least), but I no longer work for a company owned by a hedge fund and run by a revolving door of MDs, each of whom loved to send us on wild-goose research missions to find the secrets of future profit growth, but did nothing in response when we brought home the data.

It’s now seven years since I was a wage slave and I don’t miss a bit of it. What a joy it is to wake up in the morning, walk downstairs, put the kettle on and instantly be at work. I am truly grateful for what the last seven years have taught me and oh, to have learned it all so much earlier! I look forward to reaching my tenth anniversary and considering my own answers to the questions I just asked Nicolas. Here’s what my artist friend says after a decade of working for himself.

JG: How long did it take until you felt the new venture was going to work?

NH: I was fortunate as I was able to quit my job in advertising (I was writing and directing TV commercials) and take up painting full time, one year into my painting career. In the early days, I would deliver a painting without knowing when or where the next sale would materialise. The mortgage was late more than once, but Heather never discouraged me from pursuing my passion. She always stood by me and put her entrepreneurial spirit to work. And if it hadn’t been for the support of a few early patrons – support which continues to this day – I might not be where I am now.

JG: Can you share a high point from the last ten years? 

NH: I can think of several. Obviously getting the official nod from Porsche and McLaren, Gulf, Le Mans etc. to gild my paintings with their logos was huge. A couple of corporate commissions that stand out came from the Porsche Museum and PCNA. But one thing that has surprised me more than anything else is all the doors that my art has opened for me: My own racing activities, meeting people who I have long admired and now I’m lucky to call many of them friends.

JG: Has being in business changed your attitude to/experience of the classic Porsche world?

NH: Yes and no. On the one hand, I’ve had a peek behind the curtain through our apparel company where we were a Porsche OE apparel supplier. On the customer side, it’s been very rewarding to see how our creations have been accepted by the Porsche scene. We started our apparel line in 2011 but we still get a kick out of seeing someone wear one of our shirts walking around Goodwood, Le Mans Classic, Monterey or the local Cars & Coffee event.

JG: Have you learned any surprise lessons about people through your work?

NH: I don’t know if there were surprises, but I’ve learned the following:

1. Develop your own style.
2. Passion is the best inspiration.
3. Art opens doors.
5. Defy convention.
4. Art has value.

I love Nic’s approach to creativity: he is always thinking ahead. Hunziker Corp has some interesting projects in progress, all being documented online. Check out the Hunziker Art Car project (a 996 GT3 built through parts donations in exchange for artwork) and, of course, the famous Hunziker Driving Shoes, as worn by half the car guys in America, going by Heather’s Facebook shares.

Thinking about the questions I asked Nic to answer, my own answers would probably be that I knew it would work before I got started, as I had been data researching and writing full-time for ten years, working as a part-time Porsche freelancer since 2005 and already had an independent Porsche client base. There have been a few upsets in my seven years of freelance (mainly debtors going bust and causing a few headaches – not all financial), but I now recognise these as excellent learning experiences. The most recent upset was easier than the first, having learned how to spot, react and mitigate the effects of such occurrences and acting on my instincts early.

A better business radar is one good thing that has come straight from freelance, but it has not arrived at the expense of being harder with money. I started my freelance career working with people who charged for every single thing they did and I followed their example in the early days. I don’t do that so much nowadays: my attitude to earning has mellowed substantially. Going easier with this aspect has brought in many fun experiences and also taught me to say ‘no thanks’ more, and earlier. Time is the most valuable commodity for any creative, so better to draw a line under things as soon as warning flags are raised and move in a better direction.

Have I met inspirational people? Most definitely: valuable lessons have been learned from good friends all over the world. Have I inspired other people? One or two would say yes. Do I still feel the same passion? Yes, I maintain a deep love for the cars and people of this excellent hobby, but no doubt the movement is different today compared to seven years ago. A new generation has taken the world of classic Porsche in many different directions and we oldies accept that this is how all things go eventually. Some of the hot new trends are nothing new at all, but no point losing sleep over it. Things that don’t excite us so much are the best things ever for other folks, and that is OK.

As layers pile on top of layers, the core just gets buried slightly deeper, so we must dig harder to find it. The passion, support and encouragement I get from my hardcore Porsche friends (i.e. most of the people I work with) deliver all the energy one needs to press on. These people have shaped my last seven years and continue to exert a huge influence. I guarantee that if you are thinking of starting something new, it is your similarly passionate friends who will help get you through it. That said, all final decisions on what to do next are yours alone to make.

Freelance Advice (if you need it)

For anyone considering leaving their job and trying something new and different, I urge you to go for it, especially if you have a unique skill that is sought after. Do your research well and include contingency plans for all realistic worst case scenarios (not zombie attacks or nuclear holocausts) before walking away from the wage packet. With due diligence done and dusted, stop worrying and think and talk positive.

Walk away from anyone negative. They will kill what you are about to embark on. Avoid all negativity: negative people have nothing to offer the entrepreneur. They are not realists, they are buzzkill and you have already done your homework. Put your headphones on and walk away. Do not let buzzkillers inside your energy fence (I just made that up: please use it unwisely).

Add a few marketing skills to package the products/skills you intend to sell and then work your butt off doing something you love. It is so easy to work doing something that just flows in and around you. It is also incredible fun, most of the time. When it’s not fun, know you are learning something important. Also, never forget that the lesson may be to quit and do something different: I have changed tack many times in the last seven years.

Verify the market you are aiming to work in, nail the skills required (night school, online, private tuition or whatever) and as soon as you are ready to start, go for it. Worst case scenario: you get another job when the money runs out. Best case: there is no limit. You are the limit. I know so many of you have wonderful talents: let them shine brightly, follow the light and see where it leads!

Credits

ps: I have a few people to thank for their unflinching support over the last seven years (even over the last twelve years) but none of them would want to be mentioned in public: that’s just not how we do things. I am sure they know who they are – I talk to most of them daily! One or two people not so often nowadays, but the feeling is still the same. Thank you.

Gianmaria Bruni joins Porsche Works Driver Lineup

Gianmaria Bruni joins Porsche Works Driver Lineup

The talented Gianmaria Bruni has called time on his 11-year career with Maranello and signed to race with Porsche for the second half of the 2017 season and beyond.

I hadn’t been keeping tabs on works drivers since the shakeup before normal Ferdinand service was interrupted by some French lawyers and assumed Dr Walliser was done with his reshuffle, but,  at the end of last year, John Dagys at Sportscar 365 had suggested that Bruni was as good as strapped in a Porsche seat.

Walliser apparently mentioned to Dagys in December how well Bruni would fit within Porsche’s GTE-Pro squad. The story on Sportscar 365 is that Ferrari finally agreed to release Bruni from his contract last week, but only if he would not be racing against his former team – AF Corse – in WEC this year. Porsche has therefore confirmed him on an IMSA deal for the second part of 2017, following an introductory testing programme in June.

What happens after that could be very exciting for Bruni, who is still only 35 but has been super successful through a glittering GT racing career to date, with three Le Mans wins to his credit, as well as two GTE-Pro titles and more wins at Sebring and Spa.

“We’re delighted to welcome Gianmaria Bruni, one of the world’s top GT pilots, into our squad,” said Dr. Walliser. “He fits perfectly into our strong circle of works drivers and will join us for the second half of the season.”

This is exciting news for the Porsche driver lineup: Forza Weissach, indeed.

Porsche confirms Bamber, Tandy and Lotterer for LMP1

Porsche confirms Bamber, Tandy and Lotterer for LMP1

It was not the biggest surprise in motorsport this week, but Porsche has finally confirmed that André Lotterer will race as one of its LMP1 works drivers in 2017, alongside Earl Bamber and Nick Tandy. Weissach has stopped short of putting the new kids/three Le Mans champions in a car on their own: instead, Neel Jani will race with Lotterer/Tandy, while Bamber joins Bernhard/Hartley for the season.

Romain Dumas returns to GTs with new colleagues

The news was announced at the 2016 Night of Champions, along with some other surprising appointments. Romain Dumas returns to the works GT roster, but his next race seat was not announced this evening. Instead Porsche announced two new GT pilots for next year: Dirk Werner and Laurens Vanthoor. Werner is a name most Porsche fans will know, as he raced 911s for a fair while (2004-2009) before heading off to race with BMW in North America. As well as being the 2006 Carrera Cup Deutschland champion, Werner is a two-time Grand AM GT champ and also claimed the Porsche Cup in 2009.

Vanthoor is a proper GT legend. Still only 25 years old, he’s already won the Macau Grand Prix, won the FIA GT championship and won the 24 Hours of both Spa and the Nürburgring. Two weeks ago he won the FIA GT World Cup in Macau (albeit in somewhat controversial circumstances) and he has also won the 12 Hours of Sepang and the 24 Hours of Dubai. When you think that newly-promoted Sven Müller is just one year younger than Vanthoor, it makes you wonder what Müller’s been up to. Then you remember that he’s just won Carrera Cup Deutschland and Supercup titles in the same year, so there’s every reason to look forward to seeing what Müller can do in the new RSR.

Robert Renauer wins 2016 Porsche Cup

The main award at the annual Porsche motorsport prizegiving is always the Porsche Cup, given to that year’s most successful Porsche privateer. The 2016 Porsche Cup winner is Robert Renauer from Germany, who scored an impressive 7,355 points this year driving Porsches in ADAC GT Masters, European Le Mans and the 24-Hour International Endurance series. Wolfgang Porsche presented Renauer with his prize: a 911 Carrera worth €120k. Runners-up Christian Ried and Spain’s Daniel Diaz Varela win €30k and €25k respectively.

Porsche 911 RSRs chase FIA GT and IMSA titles

Porsche has committed to a two-car assault on the first FIA GT manufacturers’ title, but so far has named only three drivers for the two GTE-Pro RSRs: Michael Christensen, Fred Makowiecki and Richard Lietz. Two of this trio will spend some additional time in America, Lietz and Fred Mako teaming up with the IMSA pairings of Pilet/Werner and Estre/Vanthoor for longer events such as Daytona and Sebring.

The full list of factory drivers is below and seems a good combination of youth and experience. Hats off to the team chiefs for some interesting choices: here’s to a great year ahead.

LMP1 – 919 Hybrid #1
Neel Jani (32) Switzerland
André Lotterer (35) Germany
Nick Tandy (32) Great Britain

LMP1 – 919 Hybrid #2
Earl Bamber (26) New Zealand
Timo Bernhard (35) Germany
Brendon Hartley (27) New Zealand

GT Works Drivers
Jörg Bergmeister (40) Germany
Michael Christensen (26) Denmark
Romain Dumas (38) France
Kévin Estre (28) France
Wolf Henzler (41) Germany
Richard Lietz (33) Austria
Frédéric Makowiecki (36) France
Sven Müller (24) Germany
Patrick Pilet (35) France
Patrick Long (35) USA
Laurens Vanthoor (25) Belgium
Dirk Werner (35) Germany

Young Professionals
Matteo Cairoli (20) Italy
Mathieu Jaminet (22) France

Porsche Juniors
Matt Campbell (21) Australia
Dennis Olsen (20) Norway
Thomas Preining (18) Austria

Photo Credit: Brittany Tandy @brittanymx

Wolfgang Hatz leaves Porsche

Wolfgang Hatz leaves Porsche

News came yesterday of the sad but inevitable departure of Wolfgang Hatz from Porsche and the Volkswagen Group. The talented engineer – Head of R&D at Porsche since 2011 – has tendered his resignation, which the Supervisory Board has accepted.

Volkswagen’s Head of Engines and Transmissions Development had weathered the storm surrounding the VW diesel emissions scandal since the story broke by taking temporary leave from the company in September last year. There is no doubt in my mind that the former Porsche and now VW CEO, Matthias Müller, was standing by Hatz, intending to bring back his right hand man once the investigation into the emissions fraud had proved Hatz’ innocence.

Müller’s loyalty is spot on, but a return was always going to be difficult. No evidence of any wrongdoing on Hatz’ part has been found, but the political situation at Volkswagen continues to frustrate the CEO’s preferred course. Currently embroiled in horribly complex negotiations with the powerful unions who sit on Volkswagen’s management board regarding the future of Volkswagen production in Germany, power plays at board level have blocked Hatz’s return.

Looking at how reappointment would be perceived in the media, and how that would then affect VWs public image while the emissions issue rolls on without a confirmed fix, that is probably sensible. Seen from an engineering point of view, it is not the best news. No doubt Hatz is a valuable asset and a much respected colleague, but the arguments against Hatz – presumably led by the unions – have apparently won the day.

Wolfgang Hatz

Wolfgang Hatz at Volkswagen & Porsche

Wolfgang Hatz worked as an engineer and project leader in engine development for BMW AG and BMW Motorsport from 1983 until 1989. Joining Porsche at the end of the 1980s, Hatz worked on the Porsche F1 engine amongst his projects before leaving Stuttgart and heading for Opel, becoming Technical Director of Motorsport there, before moving to Fiat in 1997 as Head of Engines and Transmissions Development.

Hatz served four years with Fiat, before joining the Volkswagen Group in 2001 to oversee Engines and Transmissions Development at Audi. He assumed overall charge of VW Engines and Transmissions in February 2007. Business analysts had pondered whether Wolfgang could ever return to his position in VW management, given the scale of the issue facing Volkswagen. Now this has been answered, big question number two is, where will we see him next?

What next for Wolfgang?

Hatz is respected and admired, and this VW story is fading news inside the engineering community. With so much happening around powertrains in the wake of dieselgate and future opportunities offered by increased connectivity, a man with so much experience is bound to have many options, so we have not seen the last of Wolfgang’s talents in vehicle production and motorsport. VW can’t be any fun at the minute, so escaping the unions and dieselgate drudgery is a good thing: he should write a book about his adventures in racing while he has a bit of time.

Succeeding Hatz is Dr Michael Steiner, who takes the reins of Porsche R&D with immediate effect. A Weissach man for almost fifteen years, Steiner has most recently been busy overseeing Complete Vehicle Engineering/Quality Management. Before this, he was head of Panamera development and came to Porsche following seven years at Mercedes.

Filling Hatz’ shoes is a hell of a challenge: time will tell whether Steiner is up to it. His predecessor headed development on some of the greatest Porsche cars ever manufactured, including the 918 Spyder, the 919 LMP1 Hybrid and the Mission E concept car which enters production at the end of 2020.

Hatz welcomed the new broom, saying: “I look back fondly on my time at Porsche AG and am very happy that Michael Steiner is taking over as my successor.” Meanwhile, the rest of us (including his good friend, Matthias Müller) watch another another talented engineer signing out of Stuttgart for the very last time. No doubt Weissach has many more talented engineers to call upon, but every time one of the old guard heads off to pastures new, the badge moves closer to complete assimilation.

Porsche drops Tandy & Bamber from LMP1 Le Mans Squad

Porsche drops Tandy & Bamber from LMP1 Le Mans Squad

If the first eleven months of Nick Tandy’s 2015 were the best of his life, December is swinging the pendulum back. Following a disgraceful lack of recognition in this year’s Autosport awards, further disappointment arrived at the annual Porsche Night of Champions in Stuttgart, where the 2016 Porsche LMP1 programme was confirmed as a two-car push for all nine WEC rounds, including Le Mans, with the regular driver squads running unchanged.

Porsche cuts 2016 LMP1 Le Mans Squad

Despite Porsche’s best-ever year selling cars with more than 200,000 Porsches delivered in the first eleven months of 2015, both Porsche and Audi have agreed to cut their Le Mans teams to just two LMP1 cars a piece for “maximum cost efficiency”. The decision means no LMP1 for the 2015 Le Mans winners, despite their superior pace in the 2015 event: Bamber’s debut race at Le Mans.

Porsche axes 2016 WEC GTE-Pro Team

Maximum cost efficiency has also led Weissach to axe its factory GTE-Pro campaign for the full WEC season. Richard Lietz and Michael Christensen will instead defend their 2015 GTE-Pro titles in a 911 (991) RSR run by Proton Dempsey Racing. While Proton runs the old 911, Porsche will develop a new RSR for the regulation changes effective next season, which allow GTE-Pro cars to run 20 more horsepower and 10 fewer kilos. Though the old RSR might find the new regs tough going, anything can happen in racing. No doubt Lietz & Christensen will apply all of their talents as reigning World Champions.

Extra RSRs planned for Le Mans

They’ve lost their LMP1 seats, but it’s hoped that Tandy and Bamber will drive at Le Mans. Their participation has yet to be confirmed, but Porsche hopes to receive two more GTE-Pro entries for the 24 Hours. Fun-loving Pilet and Tandy with newest works driver, Kévin Estre, would take one 911, while Bamber, Fred Mako and Jörg Bergmeister would get the other. Porsche would also have cars in GTE-Am, so its promo machine should take maximum value from being the only manufacturer to have entered three of the four Le Mans categories.

2016 Le Mans versus Formula 1

The 2016 Le Mans 24-Hours takes place on the weekend of 18/19 June, and coincides with an F1 race for the very first time. The FIA says that the start of the Baku Grand Prix will be scheduled so as not to clash with the end of the 24 Hours.

ACO’s plans to extend the Le Mans pit lane to sixty garages – four more than are currently available – would allow a few more cars in the race, so it’s hard to imagine Le Mans saying no to the reigning champions. It is therefore quite likely that we will see Tandy and Bamber on the grid in France, although I suspect that if a competitive LMP2 drive turns up for either, they will do their best to be in it. Let’s wait for the entry list.

“We’ll cut everything not essential” – Matthias Müller

“We’ll cut everything not essential” – Matthias Müller

As Volkswagen owners worldwide begin receiving their recall paperwork for the emissions débacle, the new CEO Matthias Müller has given the clearest indication yet of the scale of changes that are coming at Volkswagen. In a speech to 20,000 Volkswagen employees at Wolfsburg’s Hall 11, Müller made it clear that the Volkswagen of the future would be a very different organisation.

“Apart from the enormous financial damage which it is still not possible to quantify as of today,” said the Chairman, “this crisis is first and foremost a crisis of confidence. Our most important task will be to win back the trust we have lost with our customers, partners, investors and the general public. Only when everything has been put on the table, when no single stone has been left unturned, only then will people begin to trust us again.”

Volkswagen shares plummet by $60 Billion

Meanwhile, Volkswagen shares continue to nosedive, with a staggering $60 billion now wiped off the company’s value since the scandal broke. Even more staggering is the number of industry commentators who continue to insist that this is a fuss about nothing – either they have an errant line of code in their programming or this is costing VW PRs more than a few VIP perks. As more than half the value of Volkswagen AG has now evaporated, Müller is right to let his people and the global stock markets know that cuts are coming.

Suzuki Motor Company is the most recent bulk shareholder to abandon ship: Porsche SE buying back a 1.5% Volkswagen shareholding owned by the Japanese firm. As Porsche spends on share buybacks, ex-Porsche CEO Müller looks to slice billions off Volkswagen’s costs. “It is not possible to quantify the commercial and financial implications at present. That is why we have initiated a further critical review of all planned investments. Anything that is not absolutely necessary will be cancelled or postponed. And it is why we will be intensifying the efficiency program. To be perfectly frank: this will not be a painless process.”

Credit Suisse estimates $87 Billion Emission Scandal Cost

A number of analysts have put their best interns on the job that Volkswagen says is currently impossible: quantifying the scale of the financial implications. Possibly the best/worst one was a Credit Suisse report estimating the total cost (not including long term damage to reputation) at somewhere between $25 billion and $87 billion, with shares dropping another 20%. Volkswagen insists the numbers are nonsense, and the top estimate does seem completely ridiculous, but the lowest number is at least what it will run to, including settling the lawsuits and discounting replacement car prices for those affected. This will put a huge strain on Volswagen’s finances.

No doubt the shares will bounce back from wherever they bottom out, but another 20% would take Volkswagen to a third of its pre-dieselgate value. The VW emissions affair is certainly not a fuss over nothing and it is very relevant to the future of Porsche.