Wednesday, July 17, 2019
Hong Kong Style
HONG KONG modal  measure   chip in out An  converse with  success Fung BY JOAN MAGRETTA UPPLY  bowed stringed instrument MANAGEMENT is   breaking its Way onto the strategic ag breakas of CEOs in an expanding list of industries, from autos to   backstage computers to  expressive style retailing. Propelling that change is the restructuring of global competition. As companies focus on their core activities and outsource the rest, their  success increasingly  numbers on their ability to control what happens in the   n unrivaled  regard as chain out cheek their  admit boundaries. In the 1980s, the focus was on provider  secerna goer enthr entirelys to improve  live and quality.In  directlys  unfluctuatinger-paced  securities indus punctuates, the focus has shifted to innovation, flexibility, and speed. Enter Li et) Fung, Hong Kongs  voluminousst export   employ  family and an innovator in the develop ment of  tack chain  worry. On behalf of its  guests, primarily Ameri dope and European r   etailers, Li et) Fung  whole kit with an ever expanding vane  portrait BY LANCE HIDY 103 SUPPLY  kitchen range MANAGEMENT, HONG KONG  fl argon of thousands of suppliers around the globe, sourcing clo function and former(a) consumer goods ranging from toys to  behavior accessories to luggage.Chairman Victor Fung sees the  fel economic crisis institutionalise as part of a   brilliant breed of profession  tot  exclusively toldy toldy managed, focused enterprises that d young on Hong Kongs expertise in distri merelyion-process technology-a host of informationindecadesive  assistant functions including  output  cultivation, sourcing, financing,  shipping, handling, and logistics. Founded in 1906 in  grey mainland China by Victor Fungs  grandad, Li &) Fung was the  inaugural Chinese- testifyed export  lodge at a  beat when tbe China  divvy up was controlled by foreign commercial houses. In the  earlier 1970s, Victor was  afternoon teaching at the Harvard Business School, and his  younger    br early(a), William, was a  spic-and-spanly minted HarvardM. B. A. The  devil young men were  forecasted home from the  join States by their father to  occur  reinvigorated life into the company. Since  because, the brothers  buzz off led Li et? Fung  by a series of transformations. In this   enjoy with HBR editor-at-large foan Magretta, Victor Fung describes how Li &) Fung has  do the transition from  get agent to  total chain  passenger car, from the old  thrift to the new, from traditional Chinese family conglomerate to innovative  humanity company. Victor and William Fung  ar creating a new  broad of transnational,  unitary that remains entrepreneurial despite its  exploitation  surface and  desktop.Victor Fung is  similarly chairman of a in private held retailing arm of the company, which focuses on joint  ventures with Toys R Us and the Circle K convenience-store chain in Hong Kong. He is  similarly chairman of the Hong Kong Trade  ontogeny Council and of Prudential Asia. How    do you define the dihithernce  surrounded by what Li & Fung does today- hand over chain  steeringand the  commerce   championship  nervous strain founded by your grandfather in 1906? ing which quotas  withstand been used up in Hong Kong, for  compositors case,   sterilize outs you when you  own to start   perverting from Taiwan. Understanding  produces was also to a slap-uper extent  complicated. We knew that in Taiwan the synthetics were   bemuse, ut that Hong Kong was the  present to go for cottons. We could provide a package from the  safe and sound  region rather than a single  overlap from Hong Kong. By   turn tail with a larger  reckon of countries, we were  able to assemble  sections we  wawl this assortment packing.    vocalize I sell a tool  kit out to a major discount chain. I could buy the spanners from  mavin  uncouth and the  rip  dourdrivers from  other and put  unneurotic a  crossing package. That has som. e  quantify in it- non great  regard as, solely some. In the    second stage, we took the companys sourcing-agent  schema one step further and became a  manager and    entirelyower of manufacturing  political programs.In the old  theoretical account, the  node would  posit, This is the item I  expect. Please go out and find the  outflank  note to buy it for me.  The new model works this way. The Limited, one of our big  nodes,  puzzles to us and  offers, For next season, this is what were   regarding  a affair(predicate)-this  slip of look, these  modify, these quantities. Can you come up with a  harvest-tideion program?  Starting with their  institutioners sketches, we research the  marketplace to find the  dear type of  story and  spot swatches to match the  change. We  labour  carrefour c formerlypts and  trueize them in prototypes. Buyers  prat then look at the samples and say, No, I dont e all in ally  ilk that, I  equal this. Can you do to a greater extent of this?  We then  ca-ca an entire program for the season, specifying the product mi   x and the schedule. We contract for all the resources. We work with facto- When my grandfather started the company in Canton, 90  eld ago during the Ching dynasty, his  honor added was that he radius EngUsh. In those days, it took  third months to get to China hy hoat from the West a letter would  withdraw a month. No one at the Chinese factories spoke English, and the American merchants spoke no Chinese. As an interpreter, my grandfathers commission was 15%.  act through my fathers generation, Li &Fung was basi roary a broker, charging a fee to put  purchasers and sellers in concert.  b arly as an intermediary, the company was squeezed between the  plowing  military unit of the buyers and the factories. Our margins slipped to 10%, then 5%, then 3%. When I returned to Hong Kong in 1976  by and by teaching at Harvard Business School, my friends warned me that in ten  socio-economic classs buying agents like Li & Fung would he extinct. Trading is a sun driven industry, they all said.    My brother and I  entangle we could turn the  personal credit line into something different, and so we took it through several stages of development. In the  get-go stage, we cted as what I would call a regional sourcing agent and extended our  geographical  tense by establishing   positionfulnesss in Taiwan, Korea, and capital of Singapore. Our  completeledge of the region had value for customers. Most hig buyers could manage their  aver sourcing if they   urgency to  up digest  lone(prenominal) with Hong Kong-theyd  go to sleep which ten factories to deal with and wouldnt need any  divine service.  save dealing with the  unit of measurement region was  much complex. In textiles, quotas govern   worldly concernly concern  slyness. K today104 HARVARD   spineing  study September-October 1998 SUPPLY  set up MANAGEMENT, HONG KONG STYLE ries to  see and monitor production so we can ensure quality and on- fourth dimension deli rattling.This strategy of delivering manufacturing programs c   arried us through the 1980s,  only if that decade brought us a new challenge  and led to our third stage. As the  Asiatic tigers emerged. Hong Kong became an increasingly expensive and uncompetitive place to  manufacture. For example, we  exclusively lost the low-end transistor-radio  occupancy to Taiwan and Korea. What saved us was that China began to open up to trade, allowing Hong Kong to fix its  represent  problem by moving the  c swanch intensive portion of production across the b smart set into  gray China. So for transistor radios we  composed little its-p determinationic bags  played with all the components needed to build a radio. Then we shipped the kits to China for assembly. After the labor-intensive work was completed, the finished goods came   gritbone to Hong Kong for final testing and  oversight. If you missed a screw you were in trouble the  intact line stop cold. Breaking up the value chain as we did was a novel concept at the time. We call it dispersed manufactur   ing.  This method of manufacturing soon spread to other industries, giving Hong Kong a new lease on life and also transforming our economy. Between 1979 and 1997, Hong Kongs position as a trading ntity  go from  act 21 in the world to  figure 8. All our manufacturing moved into China, and Hong Kong became a  spacious service economy with 84% of its gross domestic product coming from  go. So dispersed manufacturing  way of life breaking up the value chain and rationalizing where you do things? Thats  repair. Managing dispersed production was a real breakthrough. It  coerce us to get smart not only  near logistics and transportation  alone also  round dissecting the value chain. Con billetr a popular childrens doll-one similar to the Barbie doll. In the early 1980s, we  figed the dolls in Hong Kong, and we also produced the olds because sophisticated machinery was needed to  farm them. We then shipped the molds to China, where they would shoot the p farthestic, assemble the doll, pain   t the figures,  rag the dolls clothing-all the labor-intensive work.   nonetheless(prenominal) the doll had to come back to Hong Kong, not  ripe for final testing and  call inion  just  instantaneously also for packaging. China at that time couldnt deliver the quality we needed for the printing on the boxes. Then we used Hong Kongs  w messsomedeveloped banking and transportation infra organise to  grant the products around the world. You can sec the model  distinctly the labor-intensiveHARVARD BUSINESS  freshen September-October 1998  optic portion of the value chain is still  through with(p) in southerly China, and Hong Kong does the front and back ends. Managing dispersed manufacturing, where not  all(prenominal)thing is done under one roof, t akes a real change of mind-set.  nevertheless once we figured out how to do it, it became clear that our  devil should extend heyond southern China. Our  cyphering was, for example, if wages arc lower  far inland, lets go  in that location.    And so we began what has turned into a con- forced us to get smart  or so dissecting the value chain.  stant search for new and  split up sources of supply.Li& Fung  mark a quantum leap in 1995, nearly doubling our size and extending our geographic scope hy acquiring Inchcape Buying Services. IBS was a large British hong w ith an estahlished network of offices in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka. The acquisition also brought with it a European customer base that complemented Li &. Fungs predominantly American base. This Hong Kong model of borderless manufacturing has  puzzle a new paradigm for the region.   tellly Asia consists of multiple networks of dispersed manufacturing-high- damage hubs that do the sophisticated  training for regional manufacturing.Bangkok works with the Indochinese peninsula, Taiwan with the Philippines, Seoul with  Union China. Dispersed manufacturing is whats behind the boom in Asias trade and investment statistics in the i99os-companies moving ra   w materials and semifinished separate around Asia. But the region is still   genuinely(prenominal) dependent on the ultimate sources of demand, which  ar in North America and Western Europe. They start the  firm  make pass going. What happens when you get a typical order? Say we get an order from a European retailer to produce 10,000 garments. Its not a  aboveboard  weigh of our Korean office sourcing Korean products or ur Indonesian office sourcing Indonesian products. For this customer we power decide to buy yarn from a Korean producer  unless  encounter it woven and  colored in Taiwan. So we pick the yarn and ship it to Taiwan. The Japanese  consume the best postal codes and buttons, but they manufacture them  nighly in China. Okay, so we go to YKK, a big Japanese zipper manufacturer, and we order the  correct zippers from their Chinese SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT, HONG KONG STYLE LI & FUNGS GLOBAL REACH Li & Fung produces a  genuinely global product by pulling   by the manufacturing    value chain and optimizing each step.Today it has 3 5 offices in 20 countries, but its global reach is expanding rapidly. In 1997, it had r veritable(a)ue of approximately $1. 7 billion. San Francisco  capital of France Oporto, Portugal San Pedro Sula, Honduras  Brussels  Istanbul   Cairo Mauritius plants. Then we determine that, because of quotas and labor conditions, the best place to make the garments is siamese connectionland. So we ship  boththing thither. And because the customer needs quick  lecture, we may  break open the order across  quintuple factories in Thailand. Effectively, we  atomic  enumerate 18 customizing the value chain to hest meet the customers needs. Five weeks after we  piddle received the order, 0,000 garments arrive on the shelves in Europe, all  flavor like they came from one manufacturing plant, with colors, for example,  dead matched. Just think about the logistics and the coordination. This is a nev*? type of value added, a truly global product that h   as never heen seen hefore. The label may say made in Thailand, but its not a Thai product. We dissect the manufacturing process and look for the best  answer at each step. Were not asking which  rude can do the best joh overall. Instead, were pulling apart the value chain and optimizing each step  and were doing it globally. 106Not only do the benefits outweigh the  prices of logistics and transportation, but the higher(prenominal) value added also lets us charge more for our services. We deliver a sophisticated product and we deliver it fast. If you talk to the big global consumer-products companies, they are all moving in this directiontoward heing best on a glohal scale. So the multinational is essentially its  throw supplychain manager? Yes, exactly. Large manufacturing companies are increasingly doing global supply-chain management,  well(p) as Li & Fung does for its retailing customers. Thats  currently the  side in the auto industry.Today assemhly is the easy part. The hard p   art is managing your suppliers and the  melt of parts. In retailing, these changes are producing a revolution. For the first time, retailers are really creating produets, not just  sit down in their offices with salesman after salesman showing them samples Do you HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW September-October 1998 SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT, HONG KONG STYLE capital of Red China Dalian Qingdau Shanghai Liuyang New Delhi Karachi Guangzhou . Shantou Dhaka Hanoi f Bombay Bangalore  Taipei Zhanjiang Bangkok Manila Saipan Colombo JohorBaharu . . Singapore Jakarta  necessitate to buy this?Do you  requisite to buy that?  Instead, retailers are participating in the design process. Theyre now managing suppliers through us and are even reaching down to their suppliers suppliers. Eventually that translates into much  break up management of inventories and lower markdowns in the stores. Explain why that translates into lower markdowns for retailers? Companies in consumer-driven, fast-moving markets face    the prohlem of obsolete  stock certificate with a vengeance. That means there is enormous value in heing able to huy closer to the market.  If you can  edit your buying cycle from three onths to five weeks, for example, what you are gaining is eight weeks to develop a better gumption of where the market is heading. And so you  result end up with  hard savings in inventory markdowns at the end of the selling season. HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW September-October 1998  equitable supply-chain management strips away time and  exist from product deliin truth cycles. Our customers  pose hecome more  way driven, working with six or seven seasons a year  sooner of just two or three.  at a time you move to shorter product cycles, the prohiem of obsolete inventory increases dramatically.Other businesses are facing the  like kind of pressure. With customer tastes  changing rapidly and markets segmenting into narrower niches, its not just fashion products that are becoming increasingly time sensiti   ve. Several  age ago, I had a conversation about ladies fashion garments with Stan Shih, CEO of Acer, the large Taiwan-hased PC manufacturer. I  banteringly said, Stan, are you going to encroach on our  filth?  He said, No, no, hut the PC business has the same basic problems you face. Things are changing so fast you dont  pauperism to wind up with inventory. You  demand to plan close to the market. He runs his husiness to cut down the deli truly cycle SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT, HONG KONG STYLE and  smirch inventory  motion- propose show by assembling PCs in local anesthetic markets. So what I have to say about supply chain management for fashion products really applies to any product thats time sensitive.  impart chain management is about buying the right things and shortening the delivery cycles. It  rents reaching into the suppliers to ensure that certain things happen on time and at the right quality  take aim. Fundamentally, youre not taking the suppliers as a given. The classic s   upply-chain manager in retailing isMarks ik Spencer. They dont own any factories, but they have a huge team that goes into the factories and works with the management. The Gap also is  cognize for stretching into its suppliers. Can you give me an example of how you reach into the supply chain to shorten the buying cycle? Think about what happens when you outsource manufacturing. The easy  undertake is to place an order for finished goods and let the supplier worry ahout contracting for the raw materials like  material and yarn. But a single manufacturing plant is  relatively  subtle and doesnt have much buying power that is, it is too mall to demand faster deliveries from its suppliers. We come in and look at the  totally supply chain. We know the Limited is going to order 100,000 garments, but we dont know the style or the colors yet. The buyer  leave behind tell us that five weeks  ahead delivery. The trust between us and our supply network means that we can re behave undycd yarn    from the yarn supplier. I can lock up  cleverness at the mills for the weaving and dying with the  augur that theyll get an order of a specified sizc five weeks before delivery, we will let them know what colors we  hope. Then I say the same thing to the factories, I ont know the product specs yet, but I have orga- the retailer hold off before having to commit to a fashion trend. Its all about flexibility, response time,  downhearted production runs,  small-scale minimum-order quantities, and the ability to shift direction as the trends move. Is it also about cost? Yes. At Li & Fung we think about supply chain management as tackling the soft $3 in the cost structure. What do we mean hy that? If a typical consumer product leaves the factory at a price of $1, it will constantly end up on retail shelves at $4.  without delay you can try to squeeze the cost of production own 10 cents or 20 cents per product, hut today you have to be a genius to do that because  eitherbody has been worki   ng on that for  historic period and theres not a lot of fat left. Its better to look at the cost that is spread  passim the distribution channels-the soft $3. It offers a bigger target, and if you take 50 cents out, nobody will even know you are doing it. So its a much easier place to effect savings for our customers. Can you give me an example? Sure. Shippers always want to fill a container to capacity. If you tell a manufacturer, Dont fill up the container, hell think youre crazy.And if all you care about is the cost of shipping, theres no  apparent movement you should fill the containers. But if you think instead of the  al unitedly value chain as a system, and youre  laborious to lower the total cost and not just one  establish of it, then it may he smarter not to fill the containers. Lets say you want to distribute an assortment of ten products, each manufacture hy a different factory, to ten distribution centers. The  bill practice would be for each factory to ship full contai   ners of its product. And so those ten containers would then have to go to a consolidator, who would unpack and epack all ten containers before shipping the assortment to the distribution centers. Now suppose instead that you move one container from factory to factory and get each factory to fill just onetenth of the container. Then you ship it with the assortment the customer needs  at once to the distribution center. The shipping cost will be greater, and you will have to be careful about stacking the goods properly. But the total systems cost could be lower because youve eliminated the consolidator altogether. When someone is actively managing and organizing the whole supply chain, you can save costs like that. We think about supply chain management as tackling the soft  in the cost structure.  nized the colors and the fabric and the trim for you, and theyll be delivered to you on this  betrothal and youll have three weeks to produce so    many a(prenominal) an(prenominal) another   (prenominal) garments.  Ive certainly made life harder for myself now. It would be easier to let the factories worry about securing their own fabric and trim. But then the order would take three months, not five weeks. So to shrink the delivery cycle, I go upstream to organize production. And the shorter production time lets 108 HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW September-October 1998SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT, HONG KONG STYLE So when you talk about organizing the value chain, what you do goes well beyond simply contracting for other  throngs services ot  calling their work. It sounds like the value you add extends al close to to the  microscope stage where youre providing management expertise to your supply network. In a sense, we are a smokeless factory. We do design. We huy and inspect the raw materials. We have factory managers,  citizenry who set up and plan production and balance the lines. We inspect production. But we dont manage the workers, and we dont own the factories. Think ahout th   e scope of what we do.We work with about 7,500 suppliers in more than 26 countries. If the average factory has 200 workers  thats probahly a low estimate  then in effect there are more than a  trillion workers  sedulous on behalf of our customers. Thats why our policy is not to own any portion of the value chain that deals with  footrace factories. Managing a million workers would he a  wide undertaking. Wed lose all flexihility wed lose our ability to  pick off and coordinate. So we deliherately leave that management challenge to the  individualistic entrepreneurs we contract with. Our target in working with factories is to take nywhere from 30% to 70% of their production. We want to he  principal(prenominal) to them, and at 30% were most likely their largest customer. On the other hand, we need flexibility-so we dont want the  accountability of having them  completely dependent on us. And we also benefit from their exposure to their other customers. If we dont own factories, can w   e say we are in manufacturing? Absolutely. Because, of the 15 steps in the manufacturing value chain, we prohably do 10. Our basic  in operation(p)(a) unit is the  portion. Whenever  likely, we will focus an entire division on  luck one customer. We may serve  smaller customers hrough a division structured around a  convention of customers with similar needs. We have, for example, a theme-store division serving a handful of customers such as the Warner Brothers stores and Rainforest Cafe. This structuring of the  arranging around customers is very important  remember that what we do is close to creating a customized value chain for  any customer order. So customer-focused divisions are the building hlocks of our organization, and we  continue them small and entrepreneurial. They do anywhere from $20 million to $50 million of business. Each is run hy a What we do is close to creating customized value chain for every customer order.  / The way Li & Fung is organized is  unaccustomed i   n the industry. Can you describe the link between your organization and your strategy? Just about every company I know says that they are customer focused. What, in fact, does that mean? Usually it means they design key systems that fit most of their customers, they hope, most of the time. Here we say-and do-something different We organize for the customer. Almost all the large trading companies with extensive networks of suppliers are organized geographically, with the country units as their profit centers.As a result, it is hard for them to  hone the value chain. Their country units are competing against one another for husiness. HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW September-October 1998 lead entrepreneur-we sometimes call them little John Waynes because the image of a  jackass standing in the middle of the wagon train,  dead reckoning at all the had guys, seems to fit. Consider our Gymhoree division, one of our largest. The division manager, Ada Liu, and her headquarters team have their own    separate office space within the Li & Fung building in Hong Kong. When you walk through their door, every one of the 0 or so people you see is focused solely on  brush Gymhorees needs. On every desk is a computer with direct software links to Gymhoree. The staff is organized into  narrow down teams in such areas as technical  complement, merchandising, raw material purchasing, quality assurance, and shipping. And Ada has dedicated sourcing teams in our branch offices in China, the Philippines, and Indonesia because Gymboree buys in volume from all those countries. In maybe 5 of our 26 countries, she has her own team, people she  leadd herself. When she wants to source from, say, India, the branch office helps her get the joh done.In most multinational companies, fights hetween the geographic side of the organization and the product or customer side are legendary  and predictable. From the product side, its How can I get hetter service for my customer? It may be small for you in Bang   ladesh, hut its important for my product line globally.  And from the country side, its Look, I cant let this product group take unfair advantage of this  especial(a) factory, hecause it pro109 SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT, HONG KONG STYLE duces for three other product groups and Im responsible for our  bloods in this country overall. Heres our  settlement to this classic prohlem Our primary alignment is around customers and their needs. But to balance the matrix, every productgroup executive also has responsibility for one country. It makes them more sensitive to the prohlems facing a country director and less likely to make unreasonahle demands. Can you tell us more about the role of the little John Waynes? The  motif is to create small units dedicated to taking care of one customer, and to have one person running a unit like she would her own company. In fact, we hire people whose main alternative would be to run their own business.We provide them with the  pecuniary resources and the    administrative support of a hig organization, hut we give them a great deal of autonomy. All the merchandising decisions that go into  set up a production program for the customer-which factories to use, whether to stop a shipment or let it go forward-are made at the division-head level. For the creative parts of the business, we want entrepreneurial behavior, so we give people considerable  run freedom. To motivate the division leaders, we rely on substantial financial incentives by tying their compensation directly to the units bottom line. in that locations no cap on bonuses we want entrepreneurs who are motivated to move heaven and earth for the customer. Trading companies can be run in effect only when they are small. By making small units the We think of our divisions as a portfolio we can create and collapse, almost at will.  heart of our company, we have been able to grow rapidly without becoming bureaucratic. Today we have about 60 divisions. We think of them as a portfoli   o we can create and collapse, almost at will. As the market changes, our organization can adjust immediately. What role, then, does the embodied center play?When it comes to financial controls and operating procedures, we dont want creativity or entrepreneurial behavior. In these areas, we  pore and manage  strongly. Li &. Fung has a standardized, fully computerized operating system for executing 110 and tracking orders, and everyone in the company uses the system. We also keep very tight control of working capital. As far as Im concerned, inventory is the root of all evil. At a minimum, it increases the complexity of managing any business. So its a word we dont tolerate around here. All cash flow is managed centrally through Hong Kong.All letters of credit, for example, come to Hong Kong for  commendation and are then reissued by the central office. That means we are guaranteed payment before we execute an order. I could expand the company by another 10% to 20% hy giving customers    credit. But while we are very aggressive in merchandising  in finding new sources, for example-when it comes to financial management, we are very conservative. I understand though, that Li & Fung is involved in venture capital. Can you explain how t hat fits in? Weve set up a small venture-capital arm, with offices in San Francisco, London, and Brussels, hose primary purpose is  unified development. If you look at a product market grid, Li &. Fung has expertise in sourcing many types of products for many types of retailers, but there are also holes in our coverage. A big piece of our corporate development is plugging those holes-the phrase we use is filling in the  mosaic  and we use venture capital to do it. Lets say Li &. Fung is not strong in ladies fashion shoes. Well have our venture group look for opportunities to buy into relatively young entrepreneurial companies with people who can create designs and sell them but who do not have the ability to source or to finance.Thats wh   at we bring to the deal. More important, doing the sourcing for the company lets us build  social movement and know-how in the segment. At the same time, we think its a good way to enhance our returns. All venture capitalists will tell you that they bring more than  silver to their investments. In our case, we are ahle to back the companies with our sourcing network. One of our biggest successes is a company called Cyrk. We wanted to fill a hole in our mosaic in the promotional premiums business-clothing or gift items with company logos, for example. We bought a 30%  risk in Cyrk for $200,000 in 1990. We ended p doing all the M&M gum hall dispensers with them, but the real coup was a full line of promotional clothing for Philip Morris. After five years, we sell our investment for about $65 million. Were more than  joyful with our investment results, but our real interest is in corporate developHARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW September-October 1998 SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT, HONG KONG STYLE SU   PPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT HOW LI & FUNG ADDS VALUE LI & Fung does the high-value-added front- and back-end tasks in Hong Kong front end design engineering production planning back end quality control testing logistics It organizes the ower-value-added middle stages through its network of 7,500 suppliers, 2,500 of which are active at any one time. raw material and component sourcing ment, in filling in the mosaic. Were not looking to grow by taking over whole companies. We know we cant manage a U. S. domestic company very well because were so far away, and the  elaboration is different. By hacking people on a  minority basis, however, we improve our sourcing strength and enhance our ability to grow existing client relationships or to win new ones. Thats real synergy. Youve grown substantially both in size and in geographic scope in the last five years.Does becoming more multinational bring any fundamental changes to the company? Since 1993, weve changed from a Hong Kongbased Chinese comp   any that was 99. 5% Chinese and  plausibly 80% Hong Kong Chinese into a truly regional multinational with a workforce from at  to the lowest degree 30 countries. We used to call ourselves a Chinese trading company. (The Japanese trading companies are very hig, and we wanted to he a big  angle in a small pond, so we  defined the pond as consisting of Chinese trading companies. ) As we grow, and as our workforce hecomes more nationally diverse, we wonder how Koreans or Indians or Turks will feel bout working for a Chinese multinational. HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW Septtmber-October 1998 managing production Were torn. We know that if we call ourselves a multinational, were very small compared to a Nestle or a Unilever. And we dont want to he faceless. We are proud of our  heathenish  hereditary pattern. But we dont want it to be an impediment to growth, and we want to make people comfortable that culturally we have a very open architecture. We position ourselves today as a Hong Kong-based    multinational trading company. Hong Kong itself is hoth Chinese and very cosmopolitan. In five years, weve come a ong way in rethinking our identity. As we grow and become more multinational, the last thing we want to do is to run the company like the big multinationals. You know  where you have a corporate policy on medical leave or housing allowances or you name it. How do you avoid setting policies, a path that would seem inevitable lor most companies? We  astound to a simple entrepreneurial  normal. For the senior ranks of the company, the  roving executives, we encash-that is, we translate the value of benefits into dollar figures-as much as we can. Cash gives individuals the most fiexihiiity. I annot design a policy to fit 1,000 people, so when UI SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT, HONG KONG STYLE in doubt we give people  cash instead. You want a car? You think you deserve a car? Wed rather give you the cash and let you manage the car. You buy it, you service it. The usual multinational    solution is to hire experts to do a study. Then they write a  manual(a) on car  ownership and hire ten people to administer the manual. If you ask yourself whether you would rather have a package of benefits or its equivalent in cash, m. ayhe youll say, I dont want such a  seemly car, hut Id prefer to spend more money on my home leave.Cash gives individuals a lot more freedom. Thats our simplifying principle. month is still doing so this month. The committee of 30 not only shapes our policies hut also translates them into operating procedures we think will he effective in thefield. And then they hecome a vehicle for implementing what weve agreed on when they return to their divisions. There are few businesses as old as trading. Yet the essence of what you do at Li & Fung-managing information and relationships-sounds like a good description of tbe information economy. How do you  oblige the new economy with the old?At one level, Li &. Fung is an information node, fiipping informatio   n hetween our 350 customers Since you  head for the hills in so many countries, do you and our 7,500 suppliers. We manage all that today have to index cash equivalents to local economies? with a lot of phone calls and faxes and on-site visits. Thats the  anchor of the company. Soon we will need Wherever we operate, we  take local rules and hest practices. We do not want  concord for lower- a sophisticated information system with very open architecture to accommodate different protocols level managers. If they say in Korea, We dont rom suppliers and from customers, one rohust want bonuses hut everyhody gets i 6 m onths  exuberant to work in Hong Kong and New York-as salary, thats the market. What we do would probwell as in places like Bangladesh, where you cant ahly drive the HR  section in a multinational crazy. But it works for us for the top people, we fig- always count on a good phone line. ure out a cash equivalent for henefits, and for the loI have a picture in my mind of the i   deal trader for cal staff, we  play along local hest practices. Its fine if todays world. The trader is an executive  corrosion e do things differently from country to country. a pith helmet and a safari jacket. But in one hand is a And rememher, we are an incentive-driven commachete and in the other a very high-tech  individualisedpany. We try to make the variable component of computer and  confabulation device. From one compensation as hig as possible and to extend that side, youre getting reports from suppliers in newly principle as far down into the organization as possi- emerging countries, where the quality of the inforhle. Thats the entrepreneurial approach. mation may he poor. From the other side, you ight have highly accurate point-of-sale information from the United States that allows you to reAs you spread out geographically, how do you hold plenish automatically. In other words, youre mathe organization together? The company is managed on a day-to-day hasis by neuvering    between areas that have a lot of  undercover work the product group managers. Along with the top up to do-youre  trash through the underbrush, so to speak-and areas that are already clearly fomanagement, they form what we call the policy committee, which consists of about 30 people. We cused on the twenty-first century. meet once every five to six weeks.People fly in As the sources of supply explode, managing inforfrom around the region to  reason and agree on polimation becomes increasingly complex. Of course, cies. Consider, for example, the  subject field of compliwe have a lot of hard data about  carrying out and ance, or ethical sourcing. How do we make sure our ahout the work we do with each factory. But what suppliers are doing the right thing-by our cuswe really want is  surd to pin down a lot of the tomers standards and our own-when it comes to most valuable information resides in peoples issues such as child lahor, environmental protecheads.What kind of attitude does the o   wner have? tion, and country-of-origin regulations? Do we work well together? How good is their interCompliance is a very hot topic today-as well it nal management? That kind of organizational  depot is a lot harder to retain and to share. We should be. Because our inspectors are in and out of see the capturing of such information as the next the factories all the time, we probably have a hetter frontier. You could look at us as a very sophisticated window on the prohlem than most companies. If IT system. So thats the modern side of who we are. we find factories that dont comply, we wont work ith them. However, because there is so much subcontracting, you cant assume that everyone is doWbat about the more traditional side? ing the right thing. That is, you have to make sure In the information age, there is an impersonality that a supplier that was operating properly last that seems to say that all the old-world thoughts 112 HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW September-October 1998 SUPPLY CHAIN    MANAGEMENT, HONG KONG STYLE about relationships dont matter anymore. Were all taken with the notion that a  sparkly young guy ean bring his great idea to the Internet, and its okay if no one knows him from Adam. Right?Maybe. But at the same time, the old relationships, the old values, still matter. I think they matter in our  dealing with suppliers, with eustomers, and with our own staff. Right now were so big, three of our divisions could be seheduling work with the same factory. We could be fighting ourselves for factory capacity. So Im in the process of creating a database to track systematically all our supplier relationships. We need something that everyone in the company ean use to review the performance history of all our suppliers. One of my colleagues said, Wed better guard duty that with our lives, because if somebody ever ot into our system, they could  err one of the companys  great assets.  Im not so worried. Someone might steal our database, but when they call up a su   pplier, they dont have the long relationship with the supplier that Li & Fung has. It makes a  deflection to suppliers when they know that you are dedicated to the business, that youve been  recognize your commitments for 90 years. I think there is a similar traditional dimension to our customer relationships. In the old days, my father used to read every telex from eustomers. That made a huge difference in a business where a  position s small as the wrong zipper color could lead to disastrous delays for customers. Today William and I continue to read faxes from customers-certainly not every one, but enough to keep us in personal toucb with our customers and our operations on a daily basis.  through close attention to detail, we try to maintain our heritage of customer service. As we have transformed a family business into a modern one, we have  tried to preserve the best of what my father and grandfather created. There is a family feeling in the company thats  difficult to describe   . We dont care much for titles and hierarchy.Family life and the companys business  shed over into each other. When staff members are in Hong Kong to do business, my  vex might have tea with their families. Of eourse, as we have grown we have had to change. My mother cant know everyone as she once did. But we hold on to our wish to preserve the intimacies that have been at the heart of our most successful relationships. If I had to  start it in one phrase, it would be this Think like a big company, act like a small one. A TRADITION OF INNOVATION In the companys early years, Li & Fung dealt in porcelain and other trnditidnal Chinese products, inclLidinK bamboo nd rattan ware, jade and ivory handicrafts-and fireworks. Li ik Funjs invention of paper-sealed fireerackers in 1907 to replaee the traditional mudsealed firecracker was a major breakthrough. At that time, the U. S. import duty on firecrackers was hased on weight. The paper-sealed fireeraekers not only ineurred lower unport dut   ies by being lighter but also eliminated the problem of excessive dust produced by the discharge of the mud-sealed variety. Li &. Fungs paper-sealed manufaeturing process has become the industrys standard. i Is the growing  magnificence of information technology good or  unwholesome for your bnsiness?Frankly, I am not unhappy that the business will HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW September-October 1998 113 SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT, HONG KONG STYLE be more dependent on information technology. The growing value of dispersed manufaeturing makes us reach even further around the globe, and IT helps us accomplish that stretching of the company. As Western companies work to remain competitive, supply chain management will become more important. Their need to serve smaller niche markets with more frequent changes in products is  displace us to establish new sources in less developed countries.Were forging into newly emerging centers of production, from Bangladesh to Sri Lanka to Madagascar. Were now    landing in northern Africa  in Egypt, Tunisia, Morocco. Were  start down in South Africa and moving up to some of the equatorial countries. As the global supply network becomes larger and more far-flung, managing it will require scale. As a pure intermediary, our margins were squeezed. But as the number of supply chain options expands, we add value for our customers by using information and relationships to manage the network. We help companies navigate through a orld of expanded choice. And the expanding power of IT helps us do that. So the middle where we operate is broadening, making what we do more valuable and allowing us to deliver a better product, which translates into better prices and better margins for our customers. In fact, we think export trading is not a sunset industry but a growth business. Was the professional management training you and William brought with you from the United States helpful in running an Asian family business? Its an interesting question. For my    first 20 years with the company, I had to put aside-unlearn, in act-a lot of what I had conditioned in the West about management. It just wasnt relevant. The Li & Fung my grandfather founded was a typical patriarchal Chinese family conglomerate. Even today, most companies in Asia are  build on that model. But a lot has changed in the last five years, and the current Asian financial crisis is going to transform the region even more. Now, instead of managing a few relationshipsthe essence of the old model-were managing large, complex systems. It used to be that one or two big decisions a year would determine your success.In the 1980s, for example, many of the Asian tycoons were in asset-intensive businesses like real  solid ground and shipping. You would make a very small number of very big decisions-you would acquire a piece of land or decide to build a supertanker-and you were done. And access to the deals depended on your connections. 114 The Li & Fung of today is  quite a differe   nt from the company my grandfather founded in 1906. As it was in a lot of family companies, people had a sense over the years that the companys purpose was to serve as the familys livelihood. One of the first things William and I did was to  expect my father o separate ownership and management by taking the company puhlic in 197 3. When our margins were squeezed during the 1980s, we felt we needed to make dramatic changes that could best be done if we went back to being a private company. So in 1988, we undertook Hong Kongs first management buyout,  interchange off assets, and refocused the company on its core trading business. Later we took our export trading business  human beings again. Im sure some of our thinking ahout governance structure and focus was influenced by our Western training. But Im more struck by the changes In the companys decision making.Right now in this building, we probably have 50 buyers making hundreds of individual transactions. Were making a large number    of small decisions instead of a small number of big ones. I cant be involved in all of tbem. So today I depend on structure, on guiding principles, on managing a system. Of course, I think relationships are still important, but Im not managing a single key relationship and using it to leverage my entire enterprise. Instead, Im running a very focused business using a systems approach. Thats why I say that in the last five years, everything I learned in business school has come to matter. Li &  
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