James Vowles, Williams Team Principal: ‘The Plan to make Williams F1 World Champions…Again’
Posted by
Charlie Stebbings
When we recorded this show the day before James flew out to Baku, we did not expect Williams to be up on the podium delivering in real life what James was theoretically describing to us on the show. Podiums are of course part of the development plan, but not yet.
When James came to see us at Business of Sport HQ last week, we talked through both what he has done to position the team for future success, and what he still needs to do. In a sport that requires so many minds pulling together, utilising a vast array of talents, the prospect of building what is popularly termed as ‘winning culture’ could seem daunting; where do you even start? For James, it was recognising that even in a sport of technology and science, people and culture are what makes you win.
This weekend’s result would place Williams ahead of where James has set expectations. But don’t get me wrong, this result in Baku will have been celebrated in the halls of Grove, because no matter how long term the strategy for success is, these wins you pick up on the way are integral to showing the team that what they’re doing is on the right path, and from James’
On today’s show we discuss:
1. Rebuilding Williams from the Ground Up:
- Why James left the comfort of Mercedes to take on the challenge of reviving one of Formula One’s most historic but struggling teams.
- How he discovered Williams was “a bankrupt organisation” on arrival and why he likens it to running a 50-year-old startup.
- The long-term plan to make Williams both competitive and profitable again by 2028, balancing heavy investment with financial discipline
- How James is instilling accountability, long-term thinking, and a “break everything” mindset to push the team beyond survival.
2. The Culture of Performance:
- The importance of ego-free leadership from drivers like Alex Albon and Carlos Sainz in shaping a winning environment
- The real split between car and driver performance and why drivers remain the best “sensors” for development.
- What James learned from working with Schumacher, Rosberg, and Hamilton, and how those lessons are applied to Albon and Sainz today.
- Why humility, confidence, and resilience separate the very best drivers from the rest
3. The Business of F1:
- The realities of cost caps, sponsorship, and commercial growth in modern F1.
- Why Williams’ sponsorship strategy is about authentic partnerships, not stickers on a car and how deals like Atlassian reflect the team’s values.
- James’ candid view on asset values, media rights, and how F1 must evolve its broadcasting model to engage younger fans
4. The Future of the Sport:
- Why two-day race weekends could be the future, and how unpredictability makes F1 compelling.
- His view on an 11th team, the balance of tradition versus innovation, and how Netflix and Drive to Survive changed the sport’s global appeal.
- What excites him most about the years ahead: leaving a lasting legacy at Williams and returning the team to the front of the grid
Share this post