| The Access Group brought together a group of experts on Canadian manufacturing
in London, Ontario on October 10, 2007 for a Leadership CEO Roundtable
on “Surviving, Competing & Prospering In the New Age of the
High Canadian Dollar”. The Roundtable panel, listed at the end
of this Report, consisted of industry leaders representing a range of
specializations. The Roundtable was held in conjunction with IBM, Allstream,
Cisco Systems, and other sponsors also listed at the end of this Report.
Andrew Wright, Ivey’s Director of Executive Development Programs,
introduced the Roundtable objective – to help align goals and add
value to the supply chain. Tom Vassos, IBM’s Canadian CIO Innovation
Executive, added that the theme for the Roundtable was selected a few
months in advance to get the group to think about the implications of
a Canadian dollar at par with the U.S. However, he suggested that "a
better strategy would now be to consider a Canadian dollar at $1.25,
since that would require us each to consider the implications of much
more dramatic strategic changes that would be needed for us to compete
successfully”.
In a lively morning of discussion, the conversation concentrated
on four main topics:
- Capitalizing on being adaptable
- Getting
help from Partners to strengthen the Value Chain
- Enlisting the
shop floor in innovation
- Taking advantage of government assistance
|
Taimour Zaman said that Access Group research suggested successful
exporters will concentrate on selling premium products, focusing on their
brands rather than competing directly on cost with other low cost producers.
This means targeting enterprise organizations, emphasizing competitive
benefits to justify a premium product/service.
Many Roundtable participants provided comments as noted in the accompanying
document. The views expressed in this white paper are those of the participants
generally and may not necessarily reflect those of The Access Group or
the sponsors.
| Cdn $ increase in 12 months to Sept 2007 |
| USD |
14.6% |
| JPY |
11.5% |
| GBP |
11.0% |
| SWF |
10.7% |
| EUR |
7.9% |
Capitalizing on Being Adaptable
Experiment with value-added products or services that make your customers
more competitive, so you don’t need to compete just on cost.
Case
study 1: leverage existing competencies into new directions
An office
furniture manufacturer looked at its metal working skills and realized
it could make quality metal boxes with shelves, so it is exploring making
tool cabinets. It launched a skunk works project to make two units as
an experiment, and now is entering a market never previously talked to
or even thought about. It is taking its process capability to a whole
new market – with the bonus that a lot of the customers are actually
in Canada.
Kent Smallwood, Inscape
What did the panel say about this?
- We
won’t survive unless in low labour content products that are
technology based and complex – no matter how optimized our plants
are
- You
have to keep growing – you can’t shrink to greatness
- There
are still opportunities close to home as well as overseas – the
world sees the Great Lakes area as an attractive $1.3 trillion market
How does the panel think this is important?
- Capitalize on the
competitive advantage of great communication and creative freedom,
and be more flexible-reactive-adaptable than global competitors
Case study
2: use cost pressures as a compelling event
A steel-wheels manufacturer
had an old Canadian manufacturing facility that was slated for closure,
and two large sister plants in Tennessee and Oklahoma. The Canadian plant
had lean tools but an old building, and they admitted to having made
every mistake in the book. The business had been strong historically
with lots of overtime but the mature work force had become complacent
and lost the ability to see its main competitor clearly, e.g. their automotive
shock absorber had not changed price in three decades. This created a
perfect storm, especially with an emissions change requiring new engines
that moved them from 50,000 trucks last year to only 200 this year. Instead
of saying ‘no hope’ and selling the plant, the company backed
into a strategy of small runs of specialized products in a commodity
environment. It restructured down to 250 people and experimented in supplying
productivity tools to the whole work force.
Leigh Wright, Accuride
Exporters reluctant to buy
new equipment
Canadian exporters should be using their strong dollars
to buy shiny new equipment at bargain prices abroad, in theory boosting
the nation's sluggish productivity, politicians argue. That's not
happening.
Many smaller exporters say their priority now is containing
costs - and that means they're focusing on shifting jobs out of Canada,
not bringing fancy new machines here. That may explain why machinery
and equipment imports over the past five years have risen just 8
per cent, as Statistics Canada calculates, even though the dollar
has soared 60 per cent over the same period. Between July of this
year and July of last, those imports actually fell 1.6 per cent.
Overall growth in machinery and equipment capital stock has withered
to just 0.3 per cent since 2002, from 4.6 per cent a year in the
1992 to 2001 period, according to a report last month by Toronto-Dominion
Bank chief economist Don Drummond.
Globe & Mail Report on Business,
September 24, 2007 |
What did the panel say about this?
- In ‘Lean’, Operations
tends to see their main goal is reducing costs, but we should be selling
our colleagues on niche products too small to be of interest to other
vendors and offering our employees and managers opportunities for growth
- GM
labelled Canada as a low cost country three years ago creating a lot
of supplier jobs in Canada as a direct result of that view, but now
Canada is not low cost any more and that supplier business is moving
elsewhere
- Our
firm has recognized that poor quality is a hidden cost – so we
look strenuously for process quality gaps and make sure we really know
our costs
- Many Canadian companies are just hunkering down – falling
behind because they have not invested in new technology so their productivity
gap has continued to grow
- Flexible tools, techniques, training,
and methodologies applied intelligently have worked for many exporters – even
in the most competitive sectors
- Toyota no longer has lift trucks,
it has robots – but don’t layer on automation without the
right tools – the Toyota Production System is now mature but
the roadmap is still clear about eliminating waste – otherwise
automation, inventory reductions, and innovation will be sub optimal
How does the panel think this is important?
- Now is actually a
good time to invest – considering most technology is bought in
US dollars and is now 40% cheaper (than six years ago)
Case study 3: differentiate value-added operations from commodity ones
An auto parts and medium steel components company until recently had
5 plants all in Toronto but now has one facility in Mexico and two in
the US. Their competitive advantage is in assembly with rolling technology.
Although their quoting systems were weak against US competitors, they
recognized that they couldn’t rely on the currency for competitive
advantage because “it will catch up with you”. They focused
on eliminating low cost labour products that they did not have an advantage
in, self-hedging by moving other commodity products that still fit their
strategy to a facility in Ohio. The company is now on track. – Al
Power, Van Rob Inc.
The Asian era is coming!
(And Canadian businesses don't care)
Canada's share of the overall Asian market is less than 1 per
cent, down from 1.72 per cent in 1995 and 2.51 per cent in 1984. "Asia
is the fastest-growing region of the world, producing one-quarter
of global exports, and accounting for over 35 per cent of the world's
GDP. This is projected to rise to a 43 per cent share by 2020." Yet
only 17 per cent of Canadian companies have a formal China strategy.
Globe & Mail Report on
Business, October 17, 2007 |
What did the panel say about this?
- We cannot
be just in Canada but must start to think globally – many Canadian
companies have not had to until now because they could hide behind
a strong dollar and the advantage of being next to the largest market
in the world
- Many Canadian plants have an advantage over many
US plants, having adapted to being always about to be shut-down and
learned competitive survival skills
- Global competition is no
longer down the street, nor even just in North America – Canadian
companies have to go worldwide with business strategies to survive
- Look
at consolidating shipping costs to Asia, e.g. to fill a container,
convince auto companies to ship 6 different types of tires
- My
company sells custom-built products to a Chinese customer buying in
France, providing a second source and solving process issues with unique
solutions
How does the panel think
this is important?
- Canadian ingenuity in addressing rapidly changing
market demands will be in greater demand, especially as the talent
crunch spreads worldwide
Working with Partners to
Strengthen the Value Chain
While costs higher than competitors are clearly a recipe for non-competitiveness,
it is value not cost that drives sustained business success.
Case study
4: unlock supply chain efficiencies
A water heater manufacturer, in business
since 1847, is one of Canada’s oldest manufacturers of residential
and commercial products. Over the past 18 months, the organization has
transitioned from a major operating unit to a member of a large multinational
organization. The company remains the largest employer in its county,
and consists of a mature and skilled workforce. The organization faced
many challenges including in customer supply chains as well as internally.
Management went back to the work force to explain the situation and use
the work force’s experience and expertise to solve such problems.
Working collaboratively and cross-departmentally, supply chain and other
processes were improved and customer relationships were strengthened
so that both customer and vendor could benefit. Over four years, the
share price which had been flat for some time previously, rose ten-fold.
Zamal Ruffudeen, GSW
What did the panel say about this?
-
“A challenge facing industrial organizations is the
ability to see their entire supply chain. They need to be able
to see all costs, to view operation activities, and to predict
how economic, financial, and political conditions can impact
their supply chains.”
Taimour Zaman, Access Group research,
2007 |
Continuous
supply chain improvement is a competitive necessity; it is no longer
a competitive advantage
- Thoughtful planning year after year
is the key; it is not just something that happened recently, it is
not spur of the moment innovation that just happens once
- We
look at our value in our own terms not just the customer’s, including
looking at other industries to see more clearly what is happening in
our own industry
- Involve suppliers in your price reductions
by working with them in facilitating a reduction in the cost of doing
business with us
- Toyota has shown that rationalizing suppliers
enables better collaboration with remaining suppliers
How does the panel think this
is important?
- The supply chain cost/value relationship can differentiate
your products – few companies compete successfully with commoditized
products strategies
Enlisting the shop floor in innovation
Collaborative and knowledge based organizations will prevail in the
coming era of increasing talent shortages and complexity.
Case study
5: seek shop floor help in solving business problems
The Canadian operations
of a large US-based tire manufacturer include three relatively small
locations in Alberta, Quebec and Northern Ontario. Two of the these facilities
had been the periodic focus of shut down studies, with the US Corporate
group always looking to rationalize worldwide operations. Both facilities
survived and prospered due to unplanned circumstances. The point is that
they are still here because of the strength of the shop floor and the
people involved at a local level.
By unlocking shop floor knowledge and
enthusiasm, the company found new business opportunities, creating new
products using ‘obsolete’ machinery. In so doing, they fostered
a can-do survival attitude. This corresponds to the Japanese experience
from the 1950’s through the 70’s, when the country’s
manufacturers had little capital, weren’t large, and did not have
volume equipment. In the Canadian case, the facilities were not part
of large scale upgrading plans, so they had almost no money and had to
innovate using existing resources. They made the case to the parent to
secure modest additional capital, and received management support. Their
old, small volume equipment was well-suited for development work that
created niche market products – meeting customer needs - which
the mass manufacturing plants were not interested in making. Experimental
work on high volume production equipment is an expensive luxury that
is difficult to schedule in a large facility. Manufacturing of niche
products means these small factories are not as threatened by global
rationalization so long as the markets for their goods remain viable,
and high margins are more likely here than if mass manufacturers played
in these markets.
Gary Blake, Goodyear Canada
What did the panel say?
- Obtain
innovation from many sources – it is not just about “forgotten
branch plants” but also single entity companies, and applying
techniques such as Don Tapscott’s ‘Wikinomics’ collaborative
development approach
- Engage the entire work force wherever a
spark of intuition or innovation can be found – to get a better
differentiation strategy and momentum
- Continuous improvement
on the shop floor worked for us even with a low-skilled workforce – responsibility
was assumed, little changes became success factors
- Our plant
in South Africa empowered people on their shop floor and got productivity
improvement twice that in Canada, sharing metrics and overcoming quality
issues by energizing the work force
- You never know where ideas
will come from until there is an information flow that looks like a
dialog – innovation often
comes from recognizing internal resources
- Treat people fairly
and allow them to make and correct mistakes – profile the
best people and allow them to do creative things
- Companies who
have involved the shop floor to increase efficiencies have gained real
benefits; however, the same internal shop floor’s knowledge and
enthusiasm could also be engaged to continuously improve the customer
and supplier interactions, according to Stuart Pothan, Director, Professional
Services, Manufacturing, Allstream
- Town hall meetings involve
the workforce in solving issues – invite
people to participate, assign input requirements, watch people become
more participatory
- Canadian manufacturers can learn from the
example of the Japanese competing on process and quality innovation
in the 1980s when they had no capital, weren’t large, and did
not have volume equipment
- Toyota’s current production
system can be viewed by Canadian manufacturers – Toyota will
accommodate plant tours as they are already working on the next wave
of manufacturing innovation and so replicating what they do today does
not impact them competitively
- Canadian
manufacturing has a highly educated workforce compared to other countries – skills,
ability to bring in tools, and implementation knowledge
How does the panel
think this is important?
- Local people are more responsive at solving
problems because they have more information at their finger tips – the
best ideas never come from corporate, rather incremental changes best
come from the shop floor and are often sold first into the local market
Taking Advantage of Government Assistance
Government has helped significantly with support programs and getting
a more level playing field.
Case study 6: government help can make a difference
An 80-year Toronto company employing 600 people recycled 2 million
tires a year. Seventy per cent of the customers were in the auto industry.
Losses meant it took 75 days to pay suppliers. In a year, they went from
four plants to two, shedding 30% of sales and 60% of the work force by
eliminating low labour products without a competitive advantage. Despite
this, the company would not have survived if the government had not made
a $5 billion investment that saved five of his auto assembly plant customers,
including Honda and Toyota. There is concern today about the degree of
Federal government support for the Ontario economy.
Al Power, previously
at National Rubber
Many industrial organizations are looking at:
- pushing the government to ease existing immigration laws
- targeting the new economy worker – baby boomers
- training mid level managers to be able to take senior roles
in upcoming years
- outsourcing non-core activities
Taimour Zaman Access Group research, 2007 |
What did the panel say?
-
Take advantage of government programs
to drive productivity, like Scientific Research & Experimental
Development and accelerated tax write offs
- The Department of
Foreign Affairs is spending $200 million a year on trade offices
around the world providing services available to Canadian manufacturers
How does the panel think this is important?
- Manufacturing issues
now have Canadian government attention, for example the talent and
skills side of immigration, but still need more public visibility
Next Steps: Roundtable ‘Take-aways’
The Roundtable participants do not have a simple recipe for success.
They say competitive costs are key but other factors are more strategic – like
a continuous search for quality and innovation, unique solutions supported
by business cases, and adding value through partnerships and alliances.
At the close of the discussion, the Roundtable participants made a number
of suggestions for next steps, for example:
- Ask your team if the strategy is still good enough if the Canadian
dollar goes to $1.25 rather than the parity many have recently concentrated
on
- Look at the whole world as a place in which to do business
- Strategy
is critical, but make sure you get the tools right as well
- Continue
to implement ‘Lean’, practiced more widely today and often working
well, but now is also the time for better marketing
- Push the experimental
process to the top of the company – and stop procrastinating!
- Capitalize
on the advantage over US ‘operations complacency’ when the
rising Canadian dollar has already forced us to examine our own competitiveness
- Re-visit your business vision and customer relationships, and ensure
you add value through technology solution implementation and process
improvements
- Pull more of your workforce into solving problems – use
their diverse brain power and the organization’s culture to improve
how you do business – sustaining a skilled and self-managed workforce’s
knowledge will attract and retain them
- Articulate your company’s
value to your customer's customer, otherwise you may just be ‘making
devices’ and just thinking ‘commodity’
- Use Government
assistance in sales and marketing, trade missions, networking, incentive
programs for innovation, and problem solving
Manufacturing organizations will need to know how to cater their supply
chains to mass merchants, specialty stores, and other channels, in order
to serve this new upcoming trend, according to the Access Group’s
Taimour Zaman.
Robert Angel
Toronto
October 10, 2007
Our thanks go to our panellists and sponsors for their contributions:
Roundtable Panel:
Leigh Wright, VP & GM, Accuride Steel Wheels
Tim
Olliver, Director Corporate Relations, Canadian Manufacturers & Exporters
Zamal Ruffudeen, VP Finance & IT, GSW Water Heating
Chris Piper,
Associate Professor, Director - Competitive Excellence through Operations,
Richard Ivey School of Business
Al Power, President & CEO, Van Rob
Inc.
Sponsors:
IBM Canada
IBM is pleased to have sponsored this event, providing a
forum for an open dialogue with our valued Canadian clients. IBM Canada
Ltd. is one of Canada's leading providers of advanced information technology,
products, services and business consulting expertise. We are dedicated
to helping our clients innovate and succeed through the end-to-end transformation
of their business models and the application of innovative technology
and business solutions. IBM Canada and its wholly-owned subsidiaries
employ more than 19,000 regular full-time and part-time people across
the country. In addition, IBM provides temporary employment for 3,800
people, including 805 students. For more information about IBM, visit
www.ibm.ca.
Cisco Systems
Cisco Systems, Inc. is the worldwide leader in networking
for the internet. We continue to create unprecedented value for our customers
by improving their ability to communicate and extend their reach globally.
Cisco appreciated the candour and openness of the participants, as
we all learn and improve when allowed to discuss major issues in such
an open and collaborative format. For more information, visit www.cisco.com/go/financial.
Allstream
Allstream is pleased to have sponsored this event and is committed
to providing value to manufacturers across the country. Allstream has
a sizeable customer base, which includes customers who work in, or are
dependent on the manufacturing sector. Allstream, the enterprise solutions
division of Manitoba Telecom Services Inc., is one of Canada's leading
national communication solutions providers, delivering a world-class
portfolio of IP Connectivity, Unified Communications, Security and IT
Consulting services. Allstream's extensive national broadband fibre optic
network spans more than 24,300 kilometres, and provides business customers
with international connections through strategic partnerships and interconnection
agreements with other international service providers.
Richard Ivey School of Business, The University of Western Ontario
The
Richard Ivey School of Business at The University of Western Ontario
(www.ivey.ca) offers full-time undergraduate (HBA) and graduate degree
programs (MBA, Executive MBA and PhD) in addition to non-degree executive
development programs. Ivey has campuses in London (Ontario), Toronto,
and Hong Kong. Ivey recently redesigned its curriculum to focus on Cross-Enterprise
Leadership - moving to a holistic way of approaching management education
in keeping with the demands of today's global and interconnected business
world and breaking from the traditional business school teaching in functional
silos.
Korn/Ferry International
Korn/Ferry International, with more than 80
offices in 39 countries, is a premier global provider of talent management
solutions. Based in Los Angeles, the firm delivers an array of solutions
that help clients to identify, deploy, develop, retain and reward their
talent. For more information on the Korn/Ferry International family of
companies, visit www.kornferry.com.
Access Group:
Rick Wolfe – PostStone Corporation
Robert Angel – White
Paper
Taimour Zaman – Founder and Managing Director |