Audi's new CEO Gernot Doellner is hardly known to the public and even industry insiders are likely to have Googled him after it was announced that he will replace Markus Duesmann on Sept. 1
Doellner, 54, is a 30-year veteran of Volkswagen Group and a close associate of VW Group and Porsche CEO Oliver Blume.
Doellner has been sitting on the top floor of VW Group's headquarters in Wolfsburg since 2021 when he became VW Group's head of product strategy. His office was within sight of Blume's.
Doellner has had a close relationship with Blume for many years, although it was Herbert Diess, Blume's predecessor as VW Group CEO who brought Doellner to VW's headquarters from Porsche.
Doellner's role as the group's chief strategist was to work out the product planning for the coming years across the brands and, above all, coordinate the automaker's electric strategy.
Doellner had to look far into the future and was also closely involved in planning the brands' lighthouse projects such as VW brand's Trinity program for an advanced self-driving car.
Doellner is regarded as a conceptual thinker and as someone who can also make decisions when in doubt. This is what Duesmann is said to have lacked, allowing Audi to sink into lethargy.
Doellner also brings experience in structuring model launches from his time at Porsche. Audi urgently needs this.
The brand is about to launch the largest model offensive in its history. By 2025, 20 new models will be launched, ten of them fully electric. Blume knows that this must be successful. And he is relying on Doellner's expertise.
Unlike Duesmann who came from BMW, Doellner is a VW Group insider. He joined the automaker as a doctoral student in 1993 and worked his way up the executive ranks.