Ford is leaning back on human expertise after finding that artificial intelligence alone was not enough to solve persistent vehicle quality problems.
The automaker has rehired about 300 veteran engineers in recent years to help train AI systems, review vehicle designs, and identify potential issues before production begins. The strategy comes after Ford concluded that its AI tools lacked the practical knowledge built through decades of engineering experience, according to Fox Business.
Ford Brings Veteran Engineers Back Into the Process
Ford executives said the company initially believed AI could improve product quality by analyzing design requirements and automating parts of the engineering process. Instead, it found that the technology performed only as well as the expertise used to develop and train it.
The company acknowledged it had underestimated the value of experienced engineers who had worked through multiple vehicle development cycles, particularly as many veteran employees left before their knowledge could be transferred into AI systems.
To address that gap, Ford brought experienced engineers back into its vehicle engineering division. Rather than working on day-to-day production, they now conduct mandatory weekly design reviews to identify potential failures before vehicles reach the factory floor.
Company leaders said the veteran engineers also play a key role in improving the machine learning and AI systems used throughout the design process.
Quality Gains Follow the Shift
The renewed focus on experienced engineering talent appears to be paying off.
Ford ranked first in the 2026 J.D. Power U.S. Initial Quality Study, marking the company’s first overall victory in the annual ranking since 2010.
Several of its models also performed strongly. The Ford F-150, Mustang, and Super Duty each led their vehicle segments for a second consecutive year, while the Escape, Explorer, Expedition, and Maverick all finished among the top three in their categories.
Ford executives also said improving quality has reduced warranty and recall expenses, contributing to lower costs for the company.
AI Still Needs Human Expertise
Ford’s experience highlights a challenge many companies face as AI becomes more deeply integrated into business operations. While AI can accelerate analysis and automate routine work, its effectiveness depends on the quality of the human expertise behind it.
For Ford, improving vehicle quality ultimately required combining AI tools with engineers who possess years of practical manufacturing and product development experience, rather than relying on automation alone.












