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Haier Growth

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... alliances with competitors (Whirlpool/GE) 9. Basis of strategy ... Shifted manufacturing operations from MTS (make-to-stock) to MTO (make-to-order) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Haier Growth


1
Haier Growth
  • Strategy Management in the Asian Corporation
  • Week 8

2
The man who made fridges cool
  • Haier founded 1984
  • When Zhang Ruimin took control of loss-making
    refrigerator enterprise QGRF
  • Incorporated as group company 1991 when market
    leader in China
  • Sales increased 73 pa 1984-2002
  • Sales of 9.7 billion in 2003
  • Has 30 of US market in small fridges
  • 50 market for wine coolers
  • 10 Europes air-conditioner market
  • 4th largest white goods manufacturer after
    Whirlpool/Electrolux/Bosch-Siemens

3
Revenue of selected appliance manufacturers
(mySAP case study)
4
Leading name?
  • Haier is most high profile Chinese company
  • Promoting global brand
  • Strategic internationalisation from 1986

5
Haier overall strategy
  • Uppsala model
  • Low-high commitment modes of operation
  • Enter markets with successively greater psychic
    distance
  • no regular export activities
  • export via agents
  • establish overseas sales subsidiary
  • overseas production
  • Each in a logically sequential step
  • Provides technology/knowledge for incremental
    building

6
Classic internationalisation
  • Exported to Germany under license
  • Direct export (1992) to Indonesia
  • JV Indonesia 1996
  • Philippines Malaysia 1997
  • ?
  • Production facility
  • JV Yugoslavia 1997
  • Greenfield in US 2000 (staffed with Philippines
    trained managers)
  • Merger Italy 2001 entry to EU avoiding trade
    barriers
  • Classic Uppsala model
  • Switch to Greenfield around time of WTO entry
  • Foreign competition making home market less
    profitable
  • Competition key in internationalisation drive

7
Exporting strategy
  • 1 Defender
  • licensing agreement (84-91) brought in imported
    production technology
  • building strong brand name
  • implementing production techniques
  • globalisation pressure weak
  • 2 Contender
  • entered developed economies (1992) to obtain
    prestige/establish brand
  • 3 Extender
  • post 1992 moved easily into other developed
    markets
  • 4 Dodger strategy in domestic market
  • transferring back internationally competitive
    products

8
FDI strategy
  • 1 Defender
  • customised to home market
  • began acquisition of small local companies
  • 2 Extender
  • began overseas operations 1996
  • increased psychic distance
  • used competitiveness developed in domestic market
  • extending initially to similar markets reduces
    risk
  • 3 Contender
  • 1999 ? Greenfield developments
  • adaptive applied local design/local
    products/local sales methods
  • 4 - Dodger strategy in domestic market
  • did not compete directly
  • formal technological alliances with competitors
    (Whirlpool/GE)

9
Basis of strategy
  • Strategies based on
  • Building global brand
  • Following competition
  • Exchanging threat
  • Following customers
  • Shaping the competition

10
Does the light go out when the fridge door shuts?
  • Plans or processes?
  • Chinese firms have an unmanageably complex
    structure
  • Meyer Lu (2002) Managing Indefinite
    Boundaries argue
  • Chinese firms are a web of relationships
  • Such webs are hard to control because it is not
    clear where one firm ends and another begins
  • Is it therefore possible to have an organised
    strategy of development?
  • Chen (2004) suggests
  • Most of Haiers innovation is incremental and
    carefully guided
  • Driver is streamlining sales processes between
    user supplier
  • Haier generates technological innovation by
    seizing business opportunity and heavily
    segmenting its markets.

11
Emphasis on process
  • Supply chain case study on Haier highlights
  • From 1998 globalisation based on appropriate
    partnering strategies on case-by-case basis
  • Providing personalised products to meet each
    customers needs
  • Implemented JIT
  • Shifted manufacturing operations from MTS
    (make-to-stock) to MTO (make-to-order)
  • Introduced lean production processes
  • Demand-oriented operations
  • But in large scale markets (like US)
  • Haier owns and manages full scale operations
    encompassing design, manufacturing and
    distribution

12
E-business
  • Key role of internal processes stressed by Li
    Chang (2004)studied e-business strategy of Haier
  • While commending vision in this respect
  • Note domestic strategy ill-timed due to
    insufficient infrastructure
  • Positives
  • Working capital requirements dropped from 36 days
    in 2000 to 10 days in 2002
  • Inventory dropped by 74
  • Warehouse space utilisation improved 100
  • Working capital in inventory dropped 67

13
Dodgy business
  • Negatives
  • Made several wrong choices in e-business strategy
    content
  • Controversial to focus so much on joining Global
    Top 500 Club as its strategic intent and
  • Achieving revenue volume as its strategic target
  • Haier might have expanded too far beyond the
    scope of its core competency and managerial
    control
  • Failed to differentiate core business from
    non-core business
  • Is Haiers strategy misdirected?
  • Is pursuit of prestige and sales volume causing
    companys fit between strategy and capabilities
    to dislocate?

14
The Economists view (March 2004)
  • In domestic overseas markets
  • diversification is driven by opportunism and
    desperation not good strategy
  • Profits are not increasing despite sales growth
  • Quotes Zhang Ruimin
  • After China joined the World Trade Organisation
    every multinational set up in China. Margins are
    low here. If we don't go outside, we cannot
    survive
  • Outside China, Haier has so far concentrated on
    niches--mini-fridges (to which it adds a handy
    fold-down flap for a laptop) and wine coolers.
    But to continue to grow globally it will have to
    compete with the likes of Whirlpool in their main
    markets. Yet Haier lacks such firm's RD, their
    design skills--it employs just ten researchers in
    America--their distribution or their service
    networks.

15
The Economists view (March 2004)
  • Nor is Haier being careful to keep costs low. Mr
    Zhang insists that Haier must produce outside
    China to be responsive to customers. Yet, at a
    stroke, that deprives Haier of its greatest
    advantage China's vast pool of low-cost labour.
  • Meanwhile, Haier's attempt to reward
    creativity--allowing every engineer the freedom
    to design and build his own products--has worked
    too well, leaving it with a bewildering 96
    categories of goods in 15,100 specifications,
    including a fridge that pickles Korean kimchee
    cabbage and a washing machine that also cleans
    sweet potatoes. Most of these variants add more
    to production costs and complexity than they will
    ever add to sales.
  • Worse, the group has moved beyond white goods
    into computers, mobile phones (where sales have
    badly disappointed), and even interior design and
    pharmaceuticals. All with unlimited potential,
    insists Mr Zhang. "This is a globalised era. No
    single industry can survive. There is a great
    future in these markets."

16
Pattern?
  • Technology development
  • Uppsala model of internationalisation
  • Founded on domestic competition
  • Illogical
  • unrelated product diversification
  • over-engineering product
  • abandonment of domestic industrial base (
    associated cost benefits)

17
Is this typical Asian strategy?
  • Commonalities
  • Institutional emphasis
  • Shared characteristics of emerging economies
  • lack of established product/finance/labour
    markets
  • lack of sufficient laws regulations
  • inconsistent enforcement of contracts
  • unrelated diversification may help to generate
    institutional support
  • Explains doing it all oneself

18
Is this typical Asian strategy?
  • Agency theory
  • owners and managers have divergent interests
  • Chinese investors dont have skill to guide
    investment
  • institutionally have little power (who owns
    company?!)
  • asymmetry of information

19
Resource explanation
  • Prahalad Hamel (1990)
  • Core competencies harmonised and coordinated
    aggregate of various production skills and
    multitude of technologies in diversified firm
    sharing resources and developed technology and
    skills between diversified firms
  • Needs uniform resource support
  • Close linkages
  • Ability to identify develop core competencies
  • This pre-supposes
  • Consistent allocation of access to resources

20
Different situation
  • In emerging economy as markets are inconsistent
  • Broader scope (unrelated diversification) may
    overcome
  • institutional behaviour uncertainty
  • internally competitive markets
  • Put another way
  • In advanced economies
  • institutional quality
  • consistency in resource access
  • mature markets
  • permit development of corporate competitiveness
    promotion through related diversification
  • These conditions do not apply in emerging markets
  • This must affect corporate strategy

21
Li Wong (2003)
22
Add in social antecedent dimension
  • Keister (2004) studied firm borrowing in China
    1980-89
  • In west as companies become more profitable they
    borrow less
  • In China as companies become more profitable they
    borrow more
  • Consider retained earnings state assets
  • So undertake external debt in preference
  • Other companies copied strategies of successful
  • As firm grows needs to access more capital
  • Therefore drive to internationalise may be more
    resource seeking than result of domestic
    competition

23
Im sorry, I just cant help it!
  • Di Benedetto Song (2003) analyse Chinese firms
    from perspective of Miles Snows typology of
    strategic types
  • Prospectors
  • Analysers
  • Defenders
  • Reactors
  • Suggest that in Chinese environment firms fit
    capabilities to promote strategic type (not vice
    versa)
  • Zhangs comments suggest Prospector
  • Capabilities all aimed at first mover advantage
    aggressive exploitation of markets
  • In an emerging market context
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