
FEATUREARTICLE
Leadtime Leader Q&A: Offshore Competition
MoldMaking Technology's 2003 Leadtime Leaders relate how foreign competition motivates them.
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The topic up for debate this time around is probably the industry's biggest challenge-offshore competition and how the Leadtime Leaders deal with it in their shops through leadtime reduction, innovation and excellent customer service. For more information on how to enter next year's contest, click here. If you have a question for any of the Leadtime Leaders, please e-mail them to sherry@ctipublishing.com.
Steve Johanns, managing director, business development, Advance Tool, Inc. (Blaine, MN) As we look ahead, we see the opportunity to be a global tooling solution provider as more of an opportunity than a threat. Our U.S. operation is focused on aligning with the right customers that can leverage our technical capabilities and capacity on larger programs with more complicated high production tooling requirements, while our offshore operations today and into the future will be focused on supporting the market locations they serve. Offshore competition also creates the motivation to become better, smarter and faster with our U.S. manufacturing capabilities. Technology, communication and accountability are the three areas we are beginning to see have a real impact. It is not easy, but it can be done. Last year we built more than thirty tools in the U.S. for a long-time customer that we actually exported into China. We competed with other shops in places like Singapore and China. Obviously we weren't the lowest priced supplier, but because of our relationship with the customer and our suppliers we were able to take risk and cost out of a highly visible program and make our case that led to us being awarded the business. Every customer (whether they realize it or not) does a cost/risk analysis. The successful moldmakers understand how to make their case. Serving global customers requires that you have the additional puzzle pieces to make your case work. That's where understanding offshore business and having the right resources can benefit the successful growth of well-managed U.S. moldmakers.
Rich Burman, president, Graphic Tool Corp. (Itasca, IL)
Wayne Shakal, business development manager, Ultra Tool Group (Grantsburg, WI) We've noticed that as our industry continues to mature and increasingly become a global commodity, it is virtually impossible to continue to grow by doing things that can also be done by many of our competitors. Fortunately, we can still capitalize on offering our clients solutions that will get them to market on time. Leadtimes on tooling have decreased dramatically all over the world, but in many cases we've seen substantial delays on the back-end. This is never expected but happens time and time again. We've proven that we're very good at it and we're motivated to get even better at it. This is an area for any moldmaker to strive to excel at in order to maintain existing customers and add new ones. Secondly, we are motivated to innovate. It is critical that we continue to develop technology that continuously takes tooling to the next level. Specifically, we put a lot of emphasis on finding better ways of molding extremely high volume applications for both single and multishot applications. This allows us to reduce the need to always compete on price with offshore competition. When a customer has volumes of 500,000,000 pieces annually, they will invest in top-tier tooling. It's even easier to justify when this tooling saves them 30 percent on their cycle time. |
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