Dive Brief:
- BMW has a new head of IT after CIO and SVP Alexander Buresch moved over to lead BMW Group Financial Services, effective Aug. 1. Franz Decker will take over for Buresch, leaving his role as President and CEO of BMW Brilliance Automotive.
- “It has been an incredible journey, shaping the digital transformation of the #BMWGroup, by implementing technical innovations, born by the IT industry in exactly that period,” Buresch said in a LinkedIn post Sunday. Buresch was tapped for the CIO role in 2019 and is a longtime BMW Group employee.
- As part of the changing roles, Decker will now spearhead BMW Group IT, which drives digital transformation for the global organization with a “clear focus on stable, secure IT systems and consistent customer orientation,” according to a June announcement. The group has six IT and software hubs with employees across 60-plus countries.
Dive Insight:
Carmakers are executing business strategies against a backdrop of economic uncertainty and shifting U.S. trade policy. The industry’s biggest players are sharpening their technology strategies to mitigate some of the pressure, working to simplify processes and save money.
The BMW Group remains on track to meet its full-year outlook, while tariffs weighed on financials as expected, executives said during the company’s Q2 2025 earnings call last week. The company credited its IT hubs and research and development network in part for helping to ease the strain.
As part of BMW’s IT hub in Romania, for example, employees in its purchasing and supplier network gained access to AIconic Agent, built on the BMW Group’s central access point AI Assistant, late last year.
“Our multi-agent system AIconic significantly increases employee efficiency and productivity while setting new standards for AI usage,” Markus Kronen, head of Gen AI in purchasing and supplier network at the BMW Group, said in a May blog post. The system features 10 agents that specialize in quality, purchasing and supplier data, purchasing process support and other areas.
BMW has relied on tech partners to further its ambitions, including AWS, Nvidia and several startups. The company was one of the thousands of customers to utilize the AWS Generative AI Innovation Center, which connects businesses with Amazon AI expertise to troubleshoot implementation challenges.
The German car manufacturer is changing technology leaders during a wave of executive appointments across sectors. The shift also comes at a time when the CIO has gained C-suite influence as technology becomes increasingly core to broader business strategies. BMW is also not alone in seeing a path for the CIO outside of IT. Puma tapped former Adidas CIO to become its COO last week, reflecting technology expertise’s elevated role beyond back-office tech.