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EMS Industry Documents - Service level agreements, factory audit templates, supplier checklists, term sheets ...

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IMI CEO Arthur Tan talks EMS, acquisitions, markets and challenges

VentureOutsource.com: EMS, ODM and OEM companies are realizing the need to locate closer to their end-markets to help improve time-to-market, take advantage of various trade and tariff policies, and improve collaboration to deliver greater value to customers after realizing that placing all their operations in low-cost labor markets is not always the best or most effective solution to lowering total costs.

How will this trend of locating EMS businesses closer to customer end-markets influence the way IMI executes its plans for acquisitions and growth?

Tan: We internalized this nearly five years ago and it is one of the reasons we opted to look at locations like China, for example, because we felt the end-market requirements for our multinational customers, as well as for our local customers, are going to be driven partly by the local market.

This is also why our strategy at one time included looking for a footprint in Eastern Europe. But, this strategic component went into a holding pattern primarily because of economic conditions.

Longer term, the ideal strategy for us will still be regionalized manufacturing and we will continue to pursue this.

One of the things we are aware of is the entire full product manufacturing lifecycle may not be able to occur at the regional level sometimes because of certain intellectual property issues that need to be addressed or protected at certain stages.

For example, optical disc drive storage technology.

Even though the capability for building the final product exists in multiple regions, capabilities for building the key component, for instance, the pickup module optical disc drive especially for high-end Blu-ray discs, are limited at the number of places where it can be manufactured.

And so this portion of the product build will continue to be derived out of certain locations then shipped to a final region where it’s going be consumed.

We see this occurring and we continue to develop our capabilities around this particular strategy.

 

Integrated Microelectronics (IMI) Singapore facility.
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VentureOutsource.com: You’ve mentioned your desire to grow IMI into a $1 billion EMS company ($400 million current run rate) by 2011. To meet this objective, would you be interested in financing acquisitions with cash or a combination of, say, debt and cash, or a combination also including Company shares? What are you looking at?

Tan: We’re open to all three. It depends on the size. As I mentioned previously, we have a two-prong strategy. We’re looking at acquisitions from a business perspective and we’re also looking from a technology perspective.

So, there will be different acquisitions that could happen wherein we will satisfy the technological requirements that we foresee our business strategy will need and, at the same time, the expansion on the regional basis – which is a business strategy – will then take its form.

The size of these may be very different, right?

We are open to having a shared investment opportunity for a share-swap as well as cash and everything else for those acquisitions where we see quite a bit of alignment with the shareholder base and customer base.

But, for those acquisitions where we feel it is just a direct need and the other party is not interested in continuing the business, we can also take over those opportunities completely.

 

VentureOutsource.com: Which types of organizations, or business models, are more attractive to you than others as possible acquisition candidates?

Tan: I am biased. Since I’m an engineer by training, I would like to acquire unique capabilities in terms of technology. These could be manufacturing technologies. It could be a natural intellectual property of a sub-component that could be derived and used in multiple different markets. These are all areas we’re currently looking into.

On the business side, I want to enhance our strategy by serving the submarkets by way of even more dedicated submarkets within the fields of expertise we’ve already developed.

So, when we find other companies – and we do have some we’re currently looking at – where our business models are aligned, these are certainly companies we’re very interested in.

This does not mean such companies might be smaller than us.

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VentureOutsource.com: When many EMS companies try and diversify out of existing markets via EMS mergers or acquisitions there can be a tendency by EMS companies to deeply discount fees to win OEM contracts even though the EMS provider may not have an established business in that segment or even established relationships with OEMs serving that segment. (Read more on EMS due diligence and mergers and acquisitions )

Essentially, EMS providers take on business they’re not qualified to operate.

For the OEM executive, he finds his product quality falls and he may have to switch back to an established, more qualified provider.

What approach might IMI take to better address these challenges and risks when looking at acquisition targets?

Tan: I agree with you. That’s always been the issue…diversification, and vertical integration, but to what level?

At the end of the day, you have to have something better than your expertise at some point with regards to the overall business or else you’re going to get burned.

So I agree on those counts alone and that’s something we’re cognizant of. We’re looking to make sure the capabilities are there.

People are also a very critical component of this which is why we place a heavy emphasis on the people rather than just the locations or the technology for every transaction we evaluate.

If we see a group of people that can share the same vision and operate with the same principals we have, then I feel they, too, will be able to see the value of the engagement between IMI and themselves.

At that point, that’s more than half the battle.

Integrating businesses, developing businesses, investing money into technologies – these are far easier challenges to overcome than making sure we have a cohesive group of people moving forward in the same direction.

VentureOutsource.com: What are your thoughts on emerging market opportunities in EMS?

Tan: In my mind, emerging EMS opportunities refers to there still being quite a bit of product currently consumed by the market that is served by OEMs.

We see products and their companies, strong OEMS trying to survive this market because they are able to deliver a wide breadth of product, finding themselves having to make the decision to either take a partner or continue to develop everything on their own.

That model is very tough.

It’s hard for you as an OEM executive to dominate and be able to manage this type of model.

Companies like Philips (www.philips.com) must diversify and figure out how they want to approach their market.

And, we see other large companies deciding their fate – whether they’re going to continue to be largely developing semiconductors or they’re going to be developing product, and so on.

This is where EMS is going to come in.

Each individual EMS company will have to decide his fate.

Hon Hai (www.fih-foxconn.com/about/honhai.aspx) will be taking a different route just as Flextronics (www.flextronics.com) is taking a different route, as well as Celestica (www.celestica.com) and so on…with everyone finding their niche in the EMS space as OEMs continue to rationalize their asset base. (Read January 2010 interview with Celestica CEO Craig H. Muhlhauser)

At the same time, product itself is evolving.

As product evolves, EMS providers also have to decide. As an EMS provider, you can’t be a manufacturer for everyone.

Today, customization is inherent in the vertical integration requirements for every product. Mass customization happens at every stage for every product. You simply can’t be a vertically integrated EMS provider for every product.

The challenge for EMS leaders is to decide which particular product and product niche you want to be vertically integrated for in order to capture. This is the challenge each of us is going to have to deal with as we move forward.

EMS providers have to strategically decide which playing field to play in.

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VentureOutsource.com: What are some of IMI’s biggest challenges?

Tan: Scalability and being ready for customer requirements as OEMs come to terms with unloading a lot of their product development and product.

This challenge takes into consideration manufacturing capabilities that also must be addressed from a human resources perspective.

VentureOutsource.com: What changes would you still like to see internal IMI?

Tan: How do I continue to grow human capital?  I ask myself this question each day. This is the real challenge for me because everything else is derived from this.

The challenge is getting an engaged group of people and making sure the people I have are in an environment they trust and is one where they love to work.

Does each person share the goals and the passion we have as a Company – that I have? That’s the challenge I still see.

I’d love to say all of us have the same level of passion and vision but we’re not there yet and that continues to be a challenge for me at my level – to create that environment – and at the same time, grow the company.

VentureOutsource.com: Is there anything else you’d like to share with our readers?

Tan: The market is changing and economic balance is shifting. Clearly, we see developed countries maturing and the rate of growth there is limited. Emerging markets are driving economies right now and I see this continuing.

There will be change in how we view things and how we manage and how we engage in business.

The Holy Grail used to be learning how to run your organization like a U.S.-based company. Clearly, we now know this is not necessarily the best way.

There are other ways.

Companies, and countries, are thriving and doing well with their own set of rules and criteria that determine how business is transacted. We have to be open to this.

The consuming end-market is also very different now from what we were used to previously and this is something we have to adjust to.

The EMS industry is still very bright and is going to continue to evolve. There’s still quite a bit of headroom that’s going to happen for us.

 

Connect directly with Arthur Tan in VO GlobalNet

 

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