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Transcription
Read the whole story here
Words KEITH CURTAIN Photos FIONA HAMPSON FOB THAILAND FREIGHT ON BOARD, THAILAND. It used to be that surfboards marked with Thailand on its country of origin documentation were frowned upon. Since it was founded in 2002, Global Surf Industries (GSI) has been squarely in the firing line of Asian xenophobia, accused of threatening the future existence of the time-honored tradition of the custom made surfboard industry, of running sweat shops, exploiting a juvenile workforce whilst engaging in dubious health and safety standards in order to pump out cheap, mass-produced popouts. In August this year ASB tagged along to visit GSI’s joint venture partner Cobra International with four Australian surf retailers to learn that amongst other things, not all factories are created equal. It felt like we were UN weapons inspectors. We were, after all, the first group of retailers and only the second surf magazine to ever be allowed behind Cobra’s closed doors. “Like Charlie in the Chocolate Factory,” as Murf from Murf’s Longboards in Ocean Grove succinctly summed it up. It was clear that some of the Cobra executives were not enthused by ASB’s presence. “Would the people from the magazine please raise your hand,” asked Chief Commercial Officer & GSI director, Andre-M Plump. I felt the warmth of a red laser dot on my forehead and the trail of eyes quickly set down on ASB. “No pressure,” I joked. In the past several European based magazines had exposed certain composite technologies and windsurfer designs. When millions of dollars in contracts are on the line, you can appreciate Cobra’s right to hang onto its IP. On another occasion, an unnamed European publication used that platform to write derogatory comments about the quietly spoken company president Vorpant Chotikapanich. On this particular trip the only weapons of mass destruction we found were some finely crafted Webber guns that did the job a few weeks later in solid 6-8 foot G-land barrels. “I have often wondered what these factories are like and I have a vision of a flat wasteland, grey skies, chimneys reaching into the murk and big square sheds. A bit like the Pink Floyd album cover on ‘Animals’. The reality was nothing like it.” Victor Tilley, Red Herring, Tasmania. Our journey begins “We’ve lost a factory!” exclaims the affable Kym Thompson, our guide through the industrial maze that is Cobra International. It’s hard to imagine the scale of this operation unless, as the old saying goes, “You’ve actually been there”. Located in the Muang industrial district of Chonburi, Thailand, Cobra sits adjacent to corporate heavyweights such as Sony, Mitsubishi and Toyota, in a satellite industrial “city” about an hour from Bangkok’s CBD. The area was developed, as a trade free zone many years earlier by the Thai government in their push to become the “Detroit of Asia” and it’s hard to argue it aint. Inside the foyer are CAD renderings of Cobra circa 2000, 2001 and 2002. The last few years are missing. Presumably, those responsible for the company’s décor, haven’t kept up with Cobra’s exponential growth. I’m sure the mild mannered Vorpant Chotikapanich, a native of Thailand, former 24 / champion windsurfer and Cobra’s current president, never imagined that the original company he founded in 1985 would grow to become one the world’s leading fibre composite manufacturers, producing nearly 200,000 epoxy surfboards and around 70,000 polyester boards per year. These divisions, combined with Cobra’s other interests generate an annual turnover in excess of US$65 million. Cobra’s chief financial officer, the man charged with looking after all that cash, is British born Mark Chewter, who greets our group on arrival and offers some sound financial advice. “Be careful with your money,” he says. //australasian surf business magazine / “For me personally, who pretty much grew up in a factory watching my dad for 20 years, I was really looking for some high tech factory that created high quality products with minimum waste and a work ethic that compares to nothing over here... that’s pretty much what I got.” Darren Longbottom, Zinc, Kiama. // issue fourteen / feature article // The best way to appreciate the scale of the operation according to COO and avid windsurfer, German born Andre-M Plump, is to dial Cobra into Google Earth. Like the Great Wall of China, Cobra is visible from space. Every year a new factory seems to be added. In our case, the missing factory housed high-end IMS classified yachts that weigh about 500kgs and take up to 18,000 man-hours to produce. The place has grown exponentially with the demand for surfboards, windsurfers, yachts, jet skis, and any kind of fibre composite product you can imagine, including 48-metre wind turbine blades and an entire milieu of products that we didn’t have time to see or were too numerous or obscure to reference here. Awards, accolades and sad indictments Through the expansion of its product offering, Cobra has stamped itself as a leader in fibre composite technology, having achieved numerous awards, including ISO 9002 certification by Bereau Veritas Quality International (BVQI) in 2002, the highest level of international certification attainable for production and manufacturing processes. The company is striving forward to attain ISO 14001 certification for environment management systems – a goal it hopes to achieve by 2007. Everywhere you look, around the walls of the factory, are little company mantras that read, “Yes, we can” and “Building dreams, one board at a time”. There’s no nude calendars on the wall at Cobra, no lazy buckets of acetone sloshing around the place, no cloth and tape strewn from one end of the bay to the other, no foam dust in the daily garbage. Cobra accumulates several tonnes of garbage a day, but there’s barely a visible trace of it. Much of it is traded between factories, i.e. off cuts of fiberglass from the surfboard section are sold to the fins section. OK, so maybe we’re guilty of the same stereotypes once accused of Asian manufactured surfboards. But we all know a shaper like this back home. “Our aim is to ensure that boards made in this factory, boards marked Made in Thailand, can be displayed like a badge of honor,” explains Thompson. Indeed, it’s this desire to be accepted as part of the surfing world that’s possibly the catalyst for Cobra’s pursuit of excellence. It’s also the reason, it’s fair to say, that all factories aren’t created equal. Thompson left his beloved Bells Beach over nine years ago to help kick start Cobra’s surfing division. And what a division. It now matches the windsurfing division in terms of revenues; contributing 45% of Cobra’s total US$65 million. In fact, the tributes to Thompson came fast and furious from friends back home, including one in particular from former mentor and shaping legend, Murray Bourton. “Tell Kym I said ‘hi’, tell him I’m sorry we didn’t have enough work for him back home at the time... and tell him he’s gone on to become our worst nightmare!” exceed or at least are commensurate with Thai laws. But despite this, Thompson admits retaining key staff is still an issue. “Often times we’ll train them up and they’ll get poached by rival industries.” Clearly, that’s an issue for all business’, not just those isolated within Asia. Poaching staff is still the exception rather than the norm at Cobra. It’s clear to me that as the five o’clock shift workers make their way to a procession of buses at the front gates that the smiles on their faces indicate anything but oppressive sweat shop conditions. The sweat, if any, was probably generated from volleyball or footsall, a type of aerial ping-pong played by foot with a rattan ball, that these guys play with extreme skill on their breaks. The sweat could also have been bought about by the concentration and toil they exert on every miniscule task they’re involved with. “What the Thais lack in surf culture, they make up with a manufacturing culture,” explains Thompson. Enter GSI To complement its range of production technologies, which include pultrusion, prepreg lay-up, wet lay-up, filament winding, vacuum moulding and sandwich structure production, Cobra has set up five joint venture companies with key suppliers to aid its manufacturing business. DSM, based in Chonburi, Thailand, manufactures soft goods from Grip to board bags to promotional accessories, while APM Marketing GmbH in Munich, Germany, is Cobra’s European liaison office offering customer service and sales. Another JV is Composite Marine (CMI) a 50/50 partnership with pro UK boat builders John Higham and Pom Green. But it’s Global Surf Industries (GSI) that Australian surf retailers would identify with, and who were our gracious hosts on this tour of duty. “It’s a really professional unit with everyone working together, from the person laying up to the person filling his (or her) bucket with resin, they all do their own little bit and its hands on all the way.” Murf, Murf’s Longboards, Ocean Grove. Tim Hanrahan. Aloha, Manly. In September 2002, Cobra entered a joint venture partnership with Manly based GSI to act as its exclusive marketing and distribution arm worldwide. The JV spawned a variety of products for 11 different brands distributed to 19 countries, the latest being the United Arab Emirates. GSI’s success lies in the strategies adopted by president Mark Kelly – an ability to identify a variety of margin building products whilst controlling its channels of distribution. In an interview for ASB Issue 11 feature article ‘Charlie Don’t Surf’ Kelly claimed that by targeting the entry level and intermediate market GSI hoped to attract more people to the surfing lifestyle and bring more dollars into the surf industry. “Last year GSI Australia spent most of our advertising budget of $200,000 outside the surf industry, working to bring consumers into the surf retail channel,” Kelly said. Today, the company has 15 factories expanding out over 13 acres, although Kym swears the missing yachts are housed in Factory 17, an area of Cobra he clearly never visits and doesn’t even exist yet. It’s simply staggering to see the rows and rows of surfboard moulds that line the massive factory aisles, each one costing several thousand US dollars to manufacture. “Imagine if they opened a seconds outlet,” joked Victor Tilley from Red Herring. Cobra employs around 4,500 permanent staff and each worker is entitled to their own hospital and medical benefits that extends to their immediate family. They receive wages, which Another division, Cobra engineering, specialises in industrial tooling and machinery, providing complete machine shop services, including four computer numerically controlled (CNC) machines that run 24 hours a day, six days a week. It’s this seamless manufacturing integration that allows Cobra to offer turnkey solutions without using external suppliers. Adjacent to the CNC machines are 20 shaping bays where Thai “shapers”, each trained under Thompson’s expert tutelage, finish rails and fine sand each board. Some of these guys have been finishing boards for over 10 years and I wonder how many custom boards back home could make the same claim. It’s also at the helm of the CNC’s master control “It’s really big. It’s really organised and it’s way more environmentally friendly than I expected” // section name / issue fourteen // //australasian surf business magazine / room where we meet another Aussie expat, Matthew Miles, Cobra’s front line manager. Matt left Perth seven years ago to help assist with blank formulas and set up of the CNC unit. And like most of Cobra’s key staff we met on this trip, he never returned home. In fact, at every layer of the Cobra juggernaut there seems to be an Aussie, or an Aussie component. The stringers on the PU boards are produced from sustainable, regenerated forest timber in Australia and imported to Thailand. At dinner one night a quiet, mild mannered guy pipes up and introduces himself as Bruce Wylie. Bruce is Cobra’s windsurfing division’s version of Kym Thompson. It turns out he won the first Olympic windsurfing gold medal for Australia at the LA Olympics in 1984 and, after the great MR, was one of the few Novocastrians to be awarded the keys to the city. Bruce joined Cobra from Hawaii where he was a successful windsurf designer for various leading brands and now calls Thailand home. “The biggest thing that stuck in my mind is something Kym Thompson said to me... These guys (Thais) aren’t the best at creating things, but they are the world’s best bar none at mimicking things. I thought about it for a while and it is deadset on the money and a sign for the future.” Darren Longbottom, Zink, Kiama. The production process The production process for GSI’s NSP and South Point ranges are based on a vacuum press moulding process. The mould and tooling is made from a master design. The foam core is then made and shaped (Cobra produces EPS foam core by EPS injection moulding, while polyvinyl chloride (PVC) foam cores are also used). The core is sanded into shape and drilled for fin boxes to be fitted. Vacuum press moulding of the core with the fabric/resin laminate then follows. The assembly line process concludes with trimming and/or re-shaping, painting (primer and topcoat), finishing, final inspection and packing. It’s also perfectly clear how the price/margin structure works for each particular model. The NSP and the South Point ranges involve 24 and 28 “hands on” production and QC stages. The additional workmanship in the South Point models is reflected in the higher price. So there it was, in black and white; the more work involved, the more bucks you pay. The NSP boards alone include numerous man-hours each to produce – clearly far from being pop-outs, as some would allege. But GSI and Cobra are not confined to restricting new technologies or new brands to its epoxy program, with their “traditional” polyurethane (PU) offering expanding at a rapid rate and sitting around 70,000 units per year. Joining Cobra’s PU program is none other than Al Merrick, with his newly created Anacapa range of boards, which were released last month. We saw the first shipment of the Anacapa range being toiled away on by Thai worker’s. Few Aussie shapers could claim to have met the man, the legend, Al Merrick himself, but the Cobra sand and finish team have when ‘Big Al’ recently came to Thailand to oversee the first production run of the brand. Similarly, Greg Webber spent several days with the production staff overseeing the original Afterburners and the more recent 6’6 and 7’0 semi guns, imparting his knowledge about rails and finishing touches. There’s also another side of this business, it’s Cobra’s custom made boards, constructed with a hand lay-up and vacuum bag technique. Depending upon the board model, the materials used can include combinations of high performance epoxy resin, vinyl or polyester resin, PVC foam sheet, polyurethane foam, fiberglass, carbon and aramid fibre fabrics, and various paints and topcoats. While the base of Cobra’s manufacturing technology is vacuum moulding, the company has developed other processes as it has needed them, including pultrusion, prepreg lay-up, wet layup, filament winding, press moulding, thermoforming, foam injection, resin transfer moulding (RTM) and sandwich structure production. But it has also adapted these processes to its own requirements. “There is no R&D section – it’s the entire factory,” Cobra’s Chief Technical Officer, Pierre-Olivier Schnerb, explains. Thompson provides us with practical examples. “Take the fin set up. These Thais developed a little gadget that takes all the guesswork out of laying up and setting the fins. I looked at it and thought, ‘shit, why didn’t I think of that 20 years earlier!’” It’s the people that count Cobra’s success is a result of the mix of people it employs. There’s a clear organizational hierarchy at Cobra, but it evaporates when the topic of surfing, skating or windsurfing is involved, much like anywhere else in the world really. The 15 key unit managers are a variety of nationalities and most are avid surfers or windsurfers. They get real excited when the wind blows up a 2ft wind slop in southern Phuket and they can tell you about a trip ‘down-south’ like the best of ‘em. CCO, Andre-M Plump, recounts another story about Satja Cheyankanon, a surfer of Thai/American descent and a popular standout vin his local line-ups in Delaware, USA. Satje threw his American passport in the bin during his interview for a position with the management production unit at Cobra, proudly exclaiming, “I’m Thai now”. During my visit I was overwhelmed by the genuine passion for the products and the company. “It’s great to see how harmonious the whole factory worked as a team from upper management right thru to the lowest ranks. But the highlights for me would have been the camaraderie shown by the Thais at lunchtime playing sport, the lunch halls, their daily Buddhist prayers and the massive amount of respect they have for the King (of Thailand).” Tim Hanarahan, Aloha, Manly. The pioneering spirit was alive and well in this often-waveless haven in the backblocks of an industrial district in Thailand. It seems that Satje, Matt, Kym, Bruce and Andre all left behind fair shores, good waves, family and friends to forge a new beginning at Cobra and ended up staying a little bit longer than expected. I don’t know if it’s catching but I just can’t get the high pitched voice singing, “oh won’t you stay, just a little bit longer, pleeeease stay just a little bit more” out of my head. Maybe it was the karaoke that continued late into the night at the end of our tour. ------------------------------------------------// / 25 // The first shipment of Al Merrick/GSI’s ‘Anacapa’ boards get the eye. // The Cobra sand and finish unit. // The feeding of the 5000. Thai Curry anyone? // Thai style prepeg lay-up. Just another cog in the wheel. 26 / // Cobra achieved ISO 9002 certification by Bereau Veritas Quality International (BVQI) in 2002. // Lunch hour games played with a rattan ball and great skill. // Approximately one third of Cobra’s production staff is female. //australasian surf business magazine / // It ain’t all black and white and some factories arn’t created equal. // Its hands on all the way. // Team Cobra including Kym, Matt, Lane, Satje, Prasapan, Andre and Bruce. // issue fourteen / feature article //