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What's a Company to Do?
By Michael Alan Hamlin
April 09, 2001

So what’s a company to do when its cheese gets moved (If you missed my column March 26, cheese that gets moved is a metaphor for an unexpected and dramatic change in circumstances.)? A client of our firm in Hong Kong and Singapore says Hong Kong is in the business of helping companies prepare for and respond to change.

I’ve discussed Thomas Group before in the context of specific goals like reducing cycle time, enhancing quality, and lowering inventory (October 2 and 9, last year). These are elements that improve supply chain and manufacturing efficiency and productivity. Thomas Group has helped companies like Esquel (one of Asia’s largest and most profitable apparel manufacturers), Johnson Electric (which makes the world’s smallest electric motors), and Clipsal, (a major manufacturer of fixtures like light switches and electrical outlets), among others, boost profitability by helping them look for more cheese; or rather, improve supply chain management and business and manufacturing processes. Soon, it will begin working with an impressive client in Singapore that I look forward to telling you about sometime in the future.

For companies like these to improve, their leaders must acknowledge the need to change if they are to remain successful in an increasingly competitive market, says one Thomas Group supply chain expert.

"We all know that China’s entry into the World Trade Organization this year will dramatically change business conditions, especially the competitive environment, says James Sparks. "But how many companies are anticipating these new circumstances by adapting now? Those that are will clearly have an advantage over those that don’t."

Now, that’s a question that every company in Asia should be concerned with, not just Hong Kong and mainland China companies. Why? Well, take Esquel. Esquel has manufacturing facilities all over Asia, including the Philippines. And the principal reason for these facilities has been garment quotas for exports to the U.S. Like other apparel manufacturers, Esquel locates its facilities in different countries so that it can take advantage of their export quotas, and ship more to the U.S. than they would be allowed to from just one manufacturing base.

Quotas were intended to enhance competition and spread opportunity (supposedly). But the real effect was to protect large manufacturers who were able to corner "the market" for quotas. Quotas, however, are coming down by 2005, less than four years from now, and competition will no longer be subject to protectionist quotas, but overall corporate performance. Now, Esquel has always been considered a quality manufacturer, but it’s taking no chances and has worked hard to increase reliability and cycle time.

That’s apparel, but no sector is safe, even if it hasn’t benefited from artificial market controlling mechanisms like quotas. Evidence? Consider the US$40 billion poured into China last year by companies that not only intend to eventually capitalize on the domestic market, but to leverage lower operating costs to shave the prices of their exports. To compete, companies in other countries will either have to move to China (or some other low-cost manufacturing base), or increase efficiency and productivity.

That brings us back to Thomas Group. Mr. Sparks claims to have helped one of his clients, Clipsal, reduce inventory 38% while improving quality of services 25%. The improvements came about when the company applied Thomas Group’s supply chain management methodology. The firm has also done work for a number of other Gold Peak companies, under whose umbrella Clipsal operates.

"The key to addressing supply chain inefficiencies is identifying the root causes of inefficient business, manufacturing, or administrative processes," says Mr. Sparks. "Interestingly, that’s the easiest — and the hardest — things for companies to do."

Identifying root causes is difficult, he says, because they are usually hidden from managers and executives who aren’t involved in day-to-day operations. Another common problem is that root causes disappear across functional boundaries. When departments aren’t familiar with best practices in other areas, there is no concern for improving overall corporate efficiency and productivity.

Mr. Sparks says that cross-functional teams make it easy to both identify and develop new, more effective processes. "Inefficiencies are often rooted in cross-functional processes. When different functional personnel come together and establish a common understanding of their collective roles in the organization, they are able to identify and cooperatively address root causes of inefficiency," he explains.

"In fact, using cross-functional teams to identify root causes of inefficiency pretty much eliminates the difficulty in identifying them. Instead, there is a shift toward deciding which among many root causes should be addressed first. That’s also an important issue."

Mr. Sparks — who has 25 years’ experience in supply chain management, much of it in the complex aerospace industry — says supply chain management is itself increasingly complex because it is no longer just a company issue. "Efficient, highly productive supply chains require management not just across functional boundaries, but across corporate boundaries. Industry leaders must be concerned with root causes of inefficiency in their suppliers’ suppliers on one end and their customers’ customers on the other."

Government also plays a role in efficient supply chain management, says Mr. Sparks. "Government enhances the competitiveness not just through the provision of infrastructure and support for private-sector infrastructure investment. Government processes are also important, such as customs efficiency at the border between Hong Kong and Guangzhou. That’s particularly important since so many of Hong Kong suppliers are located across the border."

And it’s also important for Philippine exporters who have no trouble getting supplies to the Philippines, just getting them through customs. And if those problems aren’t addressed, government — and private enterprise — will find itself without its cheese.

(Mr. Hamlin is managing director of the consultancy TeamAsia and the author of two books on Asian economies and managing in Asia. His latest book is The New Asian Corporation: Managing for the Future in Post-Crisis Asia. His e-mail address is mahamlin@teamasia.com.ph.)

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