John F. Martin for General Motors
Alicia Boler Davis
The General Motors (GM) assembly plant in Detroit, Michigan, is a busy place. Inside the sprawling factory, cars move through a giant assembly line. People work alongside thousands of machines to put each car part in place, from the engine and seat belts to the metal exterior. GM has more than 120 such factories around the world. They crank out 9 million vehicles every year!
Alicia Boler Davis knows these factories well. She started her career as an engineer at GM. She went on to become the first African-American woman to manage a GM factory in Texas.
Today, Boler Davis is the company’s vice president of global manufacturing. A big part of her job is to make sure each of GM’s plants produces cars safely and efficiently.
General Motors (GM) has many huge assembly plants. The largest is in Detroit, Michigan. It’s a busy place. Cars move through a giant assembly line. People work with thousands of machines. They put each car part in place. That includes everything from the engine to seat belts. GM has more than 120 similar factories. They’re found around the world. They make 9 million vehicles every year!
Alicia Boler Davis knows these factories well. She started her career as an engineer at GM. She went on to manage a GM factory in Texas. She was the first African-American woman to ever do so. She’s a vice president at GM today. She runs a part of the company that builds cars. She makes sure GM’s plants make cars safely and easily.