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THE POINT Issue 20 | November 2011 THE POINT Intelligent investing in Europe from Bridgepoint Issue 20 | November 2011 The expanding middle Emerging markets are spawning a new brand of consumer www.bridgepoint.eu Sleep: over Open your eyes to chronic fatigue issues Are you being served? The customer is always right Truth be told Sorting fact from fiction on the web bridgepoint.eu CONTENTS 2 INS & OUTS Investments and exits across Europe 6 MANAGEMENT FOCUS Sleep: over Eight hours a night used to be the norm; now it is a luxury. But what is the impact on productivity? 10 TALKING POINT The expanding middle The emerging markets’ middle classes are growing rapidly: farsighted companies can reap the beneifts 17 22 IN MY OPINION IN THE SPOTLIGHT The truth is out there? Serve to survive In an age when the internet allows everyone to be an instant expert, Simon Kuper asks how we can tell fact from fiction Reducing service levels is tempting in hard times. The consequences may be less appealing, however 26 FACE TO FACE Bill Johnson The chief executive of SPTS, a Bridgepoint-backed company at the forefront of electronic engineering 31 MARKET INSIGHT Homeward bound Developing countries have become the bastion of manufacturing. But times are changing... 36 LAST WORD It’s all Globish to me Robert McCrum demystifies the world’s most widely spoken lingo FOREWORD The turning tide When a segment of a market or society starts to flex its muscles, governments and businesses take note. That is what is happening in the emerging markets where, as economic conditions in the West stagnate and those in Asia, Africa and Latin America grow, a powerful middle class is emerging. As we explain in ‘The expanding middle’ (page 10), you ignore this phenomenon at your peril. For businesses supplying these markets, the issue is simple: an expanding middle class and rising disposable incomes mean new consumption levels of goods and services. For many years in manufacturing the mantra has been ‘China, China, China,’ but we are starting to see a more nuanced approach from European industry. Ten years ago, companies were enthusiastic about outsourcing manufacturing to Asia. Today, there is increasing evidence that the cost-effective edge provided by offshore production is narrowing. The challenge of deciding what a company’s best manufacturing mix should be is explored on page 31. Anyone can be an expert these days thanks to the likes of Google and Wikipedia. We consider whether this is entirely beneficial. We ask (page 17) if it is possible to make people use the internet more sceptically, or is it now the case that “credibility is only one of the reasons that readers click a link, and not always the main one” ? THE POINT November 2011 Issue 20 Published by Bladonmore (Europe) Ltd Editor Joanne Hart Design Bagshawe Associates UK LLP Reproduction, copying or extracting by any means of the whole or part of this publication must not be undertaken without the written permission of the publishers. The views expressed in The Point are not necessarily those of Bridgepoint. www.bridgepoint.eu At the risk of stating the obvious, service matters. Just ask the many thousands of customers worldwide who have tales of unfulfilled promises, incoherent letters or calls from companies. Of course, this should always be a concern for business but perhaps even more so in challenging economic times. ‘ Serve to survive’ (page 22) asks how and why customer satisfaction should always be guaranteed. We also explore the impact of sleep deprivation on performance at work and the way different nationalities display different sleep patterns. If you want to know how to reduce the detrimental effects of sleeplessness, see our feature on page 6. Finally, in what, I am pleased to report, has been a particularly busy period of activity for Bridgepoint and its funds, pages 2 to 4 of The Point provide updates on investment activity in France (Infront, Mezzo di Pasta and Foncia), Spain (wind energy) and the UK (ERM, SPTS and Shimtech Industries). The Point aims to stimulate interest in topics that we believe are relevant to the performance of corporate Europe. I hope you enjoy reading it as much as we enjoy writing it n William Jackson is managing partner of Bridgepoint 1 INS &OUTS BRIDGEPOINT news across Europe First past the post Bridgepoint acquires leading sports marketing group, Infront Sports & Media. Infront Sports & Media, one of the world’s bestknown sports marketing companies, has been acquired by Bridgepoint. A key player in football, winter and summer sports, the group generated revenues of more than €600 million last year. Operating out of more than 20 offices across Europe and Asia, Infront works with a range of football federations, leagues and clubs, including the German Football Federation DFB, the Italian premier league Lega Calcio, 2 AC Milan and SV Werder Bremen. Infront also handles complex events such as the FIFA World Cup as well as the FIM Superbike World Championship. In winter sports, the company is the undisputed market leader, representing six out of the seven Olympic winter sports federations, including the Fédération Interna tionale de Ski (FIS) and the International Ice Hockey Federa tion (IIHF). Infront is one of the leading sports marketing organisa tions in China too, representing the Chinese Basketball Association at league and national team level. “Infront is a scarce asset in an attractive sector with a strong management team and a unique competitive position. We expect Infront to continue to grow as it captures new opportunities in the international sports entertainment market, ultimately establishing Infront as the global number one sports marketing group,” says Bridgepoint partner Xavier Robert. The global sports rights market is worth more than $120 billion, with the global market for media and sponsorship rights representing around $55 billion. Bridgepoint has amassed consid erable experience in the sector and is currently invested in Dorna, the global rights holder to the MotoGP Motorcycle World Championship. The firm also has a successful track record in TV production that includes All3Media in Great Britain, producer of Formula One in the UK and Marathon Group in France, sold respectively in 2006 and 2007. Bridgepoint will encourage the further development of Superbike and MotoGP, although both series will continue to be organised and managed separately. “With Bridgepoint as our shareholder, we are in a position to tackle many additional opportuni ties now presented by the market while remaining highly focused on the continued delivery of high quality services to our clients and partners in all areas of our existing business,” says Infront president Philippe Blatter. Bridgepoint is acquiring 100 per cent of the business from Jacobs Holding AG, the Junkermann Group and Dr Martin Steinmeyer n When the Spanish wind blows Plugging into SPTS Bridgepoint funds have moved into the Spanish wind sector, one of the fastestgrowing arms of the renewable energy industry. Funds advised by Bridgepoint have acquired 11 wind farms in Spain, the largest independent platform of wind assets in the country. The transaction values the assets at €596.5 million and underlines Bridgepoint’s commitment to the renewable energy sector. Wind energy is a key energy source in Spain, covering 15 per cent of electricity demand in 2010. Over the past six years, the industry has delivered a compound annual growth rate of 15 per cent and this is expected to persist, as Spain envisages an increase in wind capacity of nearly 15GW by 2020. Bridgepoint’s new wind assets, in Castilla Leon, have been purchased from Spanish construction group Auxiliar de Construcción y Servicios (ACS) and have more than 440MW of installed capacity, enough to power at least half a million homes. Back in 2004, Bridge point invested in Spanish wind farm operator CESA, sold to Acciona two years later. As part of the latest transaction, former Acciona CFO Josu Arlaban has been appointed chief executive. “Our aim is to build a strategic asset through greater efficiency and selective acquisitions, which will be highly attractive to utilities or energy companies keen to increase their exposure to the renewable energy industry,” he says. “We believe this business can become the leading player in the Spanish wind industry,” adds Felipe Moreno of Bridgepoint in Madrid n Bridgepoint has backed the management buyout of SPP Process Technology Systems (SPTS), a leading player in the manufacture of semiconductor components. SPTS makes equipment used in the production of devices on semiconductor substrates, the wafers that form the base of a wide range of electronic products. Based in Newport, Wales, and San Jose, California, SPTS delivered sales of €217 million and EBITDA of €58 million in 2010. “SPTS has strong positions in every sector in which it operates, and a global customer base in end markets poised for longterm growth. In addition, we have identified a number of initiatives to optimise performance, including acquisitions in attrac tive niche markets,” says Bridgepoint director Chris Bell. (See Face to Face on page 26) n An ERM exit Bridgepoint has exited Environ mental Resources Management (ERM) in a deal valuing the environmental consultancy at $950 million (€665 million). The sale comes six years after Bridgepoint first invested in ERM, at which time the business was valued at $535 million. The company expanded considerably under Bridgepoint’s ownership: last year revenues grew by 12 per cent to $483 million while EBITDA rose 18 per cent to $76 million. “ERM is a firstclass business that has capitalised on the marketdriven opportunity arising from increased regulation, compliance and demand for natural resources and sustain ability. It is strongly positioned for a great future,” says Bridgepoint partner Chris Busby. The group is being sold to private equity firm Charterhouse and ERM partners n 3 French property purchase for Bridgepoint Bridgepoint has moved into the French property management business with the acquisition of leading operator Foncia. Foncia, the principal property manage ment group in France, has been acquired by Bridgepoint, in conjunction with French investment firm Eurazeo. Foncia has a wide European network, operating not only in France but also in Switzerland, Germany and Belgium. With 600 agencies and almost 7,000 employees, the company focuses on three activities: property management, lease manage ment & rental services and property sales. Ancillary services such as credit and insurance brokerage are also offered by the company. In France alone, the group manages more than one million properties, while its leasing & rental business is responsible for a further 250,000 homes. Foncia is also highly profitable, generating EBITDA of €83 million on revenue of €580 million last year. The French residential property management services market is estimated to be worth €8 billion and has grown at an overall rate of 3.5 per cent per annum over the past 10 years. Comprised largely of small independent players, the sector offers strong opportunities for consolidation. Foncia is ideally placed to benefit from this trend and is also expected to grow through further penetration of its services. During the recent downturn, Foncia proved resilient and the intention is to focus on growth across Europe. “We will work closely with manage ment to accelerate the company’s growth, focusing on improving technology and investing in staff. Having performed robustly through the downturn due to the ‘sticky’ nature of its customer base, Foncia will now focus on becoming the undisputed European leader in property services management,” says Bridgepoint partner Benoit Bassi n Double first for Bridgepoint Development Capital Bridgepoint Development Capital has made two substantial acquisitions in very different sectors. An international specialist engineering group and a French fastfood pasta chain have been acquired by Bridgepoint Development Capital (BDC). In the engineering sector, UKquoted aerospace group Hampson Industries has sold four component businesses to BDC, in a deal valued at $84 million. Based in the US and UK, the businesses are global leaders in the manufacture and supply of shim components to the commercial and military aerospace markets. Shims are used during the assembly of complex aerostructures and are typically sold to the major aircraft OEMs and their top suppliers. Following the BDC transaction, the acquired businesses will be renamed Shimtech Industries and chaired by Clive Snowdon, a veteran of the aerospace industry. BDC partner Adrian Willetts says: “We will work with 4 management to identify opportunities for further market consolidation through selective acquisitions, which will allow Shimtech Industries to offer customers greater geographic and product opportunities.” BDC has also acquired Mezzo di Pasta, a fastfood chain with 126 outlets, including five franchise operations overseas. Serving a range of pasta dishes cooked to order, the chain operates principally in town centres but recently moved into shopping malls, exhibition centres and service stations. Workplace outlets are under consideration and master franchises have been developed in Spain, Switzerland and Mexico. A test franchise has just opened in Germany and the company is expected to accelerate openings in France too n Management focus S LE A S Sleep:over Everyone needs it. Everyone wants it and most people just don’t get enough of it. Why is sleep deprivation so prevalent and does it really matter? GR OW TH IT OF PR long with food and shelter, sleep is one of the most natural instincts in the world. But, while the developed world is perfectly able to deliver on the first two, it finds slumber increasingly unattainable. A combination of postrecession cost-cutting and the prevalence of ‘always on’ 24/7 communications technology has created a new norm in many organisations, where fewer and fewer people have more and more work to do. And while most employees would agree that putting in a few more hours is vastly preferable to the A 6 alternative, it does create a backlog of sleep deprivation. Chronic tiredness is now one of the biggest complaints among office workers and the consequences are plain to see. Take a glance around your workplace – how many of your colleagues truly look like they’ve been getting eight hours straight for the past few weeks? Now look in the mirror – what about you? Chances are you’re exhausted as well. A recent study from the UK’s Economic and Social Research Council, which questioned 100,000 people in 40,000 households, found that longer ‘‘ Americans were the working include high most likely to cite hours lead blood workplace stress for on average pressure, poor sleep patterns, to less heart with 30 per cent sleep. disease, fingering it as the prime Some 11 per some types cause, closely followed cent of men of cancer, by Germans at 27 per and 14 per even obesity cent and the British at cent of women and diabetes 24 per cent” who work 48 (because when hours a week or you are tired, your appetite increases). But more sleep for less sleep deprivation also has a than six hours a night. This is a worrying statistic, given much more immediate impact on people’s productivity at work. widespread acceptance that “Sleep deficit has a serious seven to eight hours is optimal. impact on work performance. Equally troubling, around 10 per You are more edgy, less cent of adults take sleeping pills tolerant of others and three times a week or more in quicker to anger, and as order to get to sleep at all. a result you make The problem seems to be poorer decisions,” says even more acute for those in executive coach senior positions. A study of 2,500 Miranda Kennett. managers conducted on behalf of Many of Kennett’s consumer electronics company top-level clients see Philips found that 61 per cent of sleep deprivation as them felt their work was a fact of life. But she impaired by lack of sleep. says memory, mood Americans were the most likely and higher cognitive to cite workplace stress for poor functions are all impaired by too sleep patterns, with 30 per cent little sleep. fingering it as the prime cause, “I firmly believe that if you’re closely followed by Germans at going to be at anything like your 27 per cent and the British at 24 peak performance, you need to per cent. The laid-back Dutch manage your sleep. It’s like going were the least affected at 12 per to the gym – you won’t be fit for cent, and Dutch managers also life or leadership if you don’t,” slept more than those in other she explains. countries. Even so, they could And while disrupted sleep may only manage an average of six not be an entirely modern hours and 38 minutes a night. problem, our high-tech way of Potential health issues life certainly doesn’t help. “A lot of sleep problems are down to Clearly, sleeplessness is on the overstimulation. The invention increase but how much does it of the electric light bulb has a lot actually matter? Chronic lack of to answer for,” says Kennett. sleep has been linked to all kinds of health problems. These “Our body clocks are based on circadian rhythms – the pattern of going to sleep when it gets dark and waking at dawn – but ever since humans have been able to extend their productive time by flicking a light switch, we have been overstimulating our brains and confusing our body clocks.” 7 EM AIL P&L P EE SL TR AD IN G S LE SA GR OW TH IT OF PR FORECAST BU CU ST OM UT YO ECONOMISE ER SUPPLIERS Wall Street Crash and subsequent Great Depression, contemporary political or corporate leaders might not choose to emulate his behaviour. “I am lucky; I was born with a huge amount of energy,” says James Beaumont, managing director of water testing business DelAgua. “A 16-hour day is okay for me and I can get by on six Quantity matters hours’ sleep for weeks and But how much sleep is enough? weeks. For me, it’s variety in While it is true that all animals what I do that’s more important exhibit sleep-type than sleep. So I try to take an behaviour, from human hour out in the middle of the day beings to millimetreto do something different – I play long nematode rackets and smashing a ball worms, the answer around a court really helps me is far from clear. stay fresh.” The traditionally But even he realises that sleep quoted seven to deprivation has to be paid for in eight hours for the end. “My experience is that if adults is an you are really motivated, you can average, based keep up a very punishing work on a very wide schedule for as long as it takes to distribution get the job done. But once you’ve curve. Some people can get by on done it, there is a comedown at five or six hours a night – the end. So if you run at 120 per Margaret Thatcher cent for a month, you need a few days at 50 and Winston per cent to recover,” Churchill being he suggests. two famous Some 11 per cent of The trick to examples – men and 14 per cent of managing sleep is others require women who work 48 to know yourself much more. hours a week or more The 30th and work within sleep for less than six president of your limits, says hours a night” the United Nick Hood, head of States, Calvin external affairs at Coolidge, was global risk analysis reputed to sleep 10 or firm Company Watch. 11 hours a night. As some “Like so many people, I work too economists blame him for many hours and I am tired all the sowing the seeds of the 1929 time so I have to manage the This phenomenon has reached something of a nadir, thanks to today’s round-the-clock working patterns and connectivity. Having worked a 10-hour day and spent the evening with their BlackBerrys on their laps, many people have trouble nodding off at bedtime. Hardly surprising, say sleep experts. ‘‘ 8 ‘‘ tiredness as well as the sleep itself. What are you? Early bird or night owl? You need to understand and pamper your own metabolism,” says Hood, who also racks up a punishing 200,000 miles a year travelling across 21 countries. “The general rule on foreign trips is that you won’t get enough sleep, you have to get used to it. But that means you have to pace yourself, and it’s vitally important to recharge at weekends. Every businessperson I know thinks they can work a 16hour day, party all night and still be fresh for a 7.30am power breakfast. But you can’t keep that up,” he adds. mentally too, providing ‘downtime’ during which our brains can ignore the outside world for a while. Brains are also believed to interpret, understand and log all the sights, sounds and information they are bombarded with during the day. The type of work you do and even geography can play a part in determining sleep patterns, too. Eman Martin-Vignerte, a sales manager for Bosch Healthcare, was born in Qatar, educated in Germany, is married to a Frenchman and now works in the UK. “In the Middle East, work starts at 6am and stops at noon for a siesta in the heat of the day. The purpose of sleep Then you work again from 4pm The precise biological function of well into the evening,” she says. sleep is also poorly understood, Dinner in the Middle East is although it is generally accepted frequently taken at 11pm or later, that something pretty important so sleep is taken in a couple of must be going on while we are shorter chunks. This may have dormant, otherwise we would something to do with ambient not all need to do it. One theory temperature, an important suggests sleep allows our bodies consideration because in order to repair cellular damage caused for us to get to sleep, our body by the chemical processes of temperatures need to fall metabolism. Another maintains slightly. In Germany and most of that stocks of ‘ready-use’ energy Northern Europe, for instance, in the form of the energythe norm is to work rich neurochemical from 8am or 9am adenosine triphosto 5pm or 6pm phate, depleted and sleep from during our 10pm until Sleep deficit has a waking hours, around 6am. serious impact on work are rebuilt In Southern performance. You are during sleep. Europe, by more edgy, less tolerant Sleep is contrast, of others and quicker to reckoned to be workers used anger, and as a result important to take a siesta you make poorer ‘‘ The 30th president of the United States, Calvin Coolidge, was reputed to sleep 10 or 11 hours a night, although he has since been blamed for sowing the seeds of the 1929 Wall Street Crash and subsequent Great Depression” during the heat of the day although this habit is dying out in urban areas, as Spain and Italy adopt the hours and habits of the rest of the Continent. “When I started my career, I was a development engineer in Germany and my hours were very regular,” says MartinVignerte. “But now I am in sales, I sleep a lot less regularly. I work across three time zones so I might have a conference call with Korea at 4am my time, then another at 8pm in the evening with American colleagues. I have always been flexible about going to sleep, but I have had to learn to be even more flexible. It can be done.” Martin-Vignerte admits this hectic schedule can be punishing: her favourite technique for managing sleep deprivation is the power nap. “If I do get really tired, I will nip off to the loo and take a 15-minute power nap. I went on a course to learn how to do it and it really helps. You focus on something important and relaxing in your life, perhaps your family or a special place, it’s rather like meditation. I feel a different person afterwards,” she says n decisions” 9 Talking point The expandin Western consumers are under pressure, but in emerging markets a new middle class is developing – presenting a wide range of opportunities to companies that tap into this brave new world. 10 g middle ohn Prescott, former UK Deputy Prime Minister, seemed for years to epitomise working-class Britain. Which made it all the more surprising when he declared in 1997: “We are all middle class now.” History has shown he was right – but not in the way he intended. In Europe and the US, the middle classes are suffering. Rising inflation, stagnant growth in income and soaring energy prices have prompted a fall in living standards and persistent fears about prospects for the socalled ‘squeezed middle’. But elsewhere in the world, millions of people in fastgrowing emerging markets and once povertystricken developing China is expected countries are to surpass Japan enjoying hefty gains as the second in income, a shift largest travel and that has widespread tourism market in implications for the world by 2013, corporate and and forecasts consumer behaviour. suggest it will be As economic worth $600 billion conditions stagnate by 2020” in the West, J ‘‘ businesses are looking to the burgeoning middle classes of Asia, Africa, CEE and Latin America to fuel consumer spending. Attention is particularly focused on the largest economies in these regions – Brazil, Russia, India and China – which are delivering annual rates of economic growth not seen in the West since the Industrial Revolution. There is no doubt that living standards are rising in these countries, but does this really mean the middle-class population is soaring? In Britain, for example, being middle class is as much to do with speech and upbringing as wealth. In France, ‘la bourgeoisie’ denotes a rigid set of attitudes developed over centuries. But, for companies looking at emerging markets, the issue is simpler: ultimately, it all comes down to income. All about money The World Bank uses an income range of $2 to $13 a day as a definition of the middle class in the developing world. Although 11 the figures seem exceptionally low, the key point is that increasing numbers of people are moving away from the poverty line – 1.2 billion of them, according to the World Bank. Surjit Bhalla, managing director of Oxus Research and Investments in New Delhi, uses more demanding criteria, defining the middle class as those earning between $10 and $100 a day. Even using these figures, he estimates that the middle class rose from 33 per cent to 57 per cent of the world’s total population between 1990 and 2006. Jon Copestake, chief consumer goods analyst at the Economic Intelligence Unit (EIU), says the key moment is when consumers’ ‘‘ 12 make sacrifices to create a better life for themselves”. And Mikhail Deliagin, director of the Moscow Institute of Globalization Studies, suggests: “The middle class presupposes a certain level of consumption and a certain pattern of behaviour, a particular psychology and a particular set of values.” One thing is clear: whatever the definition, huge numbers of middle-class consumers from emerging markets are beginning to flex their monetary muscles. McKinsey, the management consultancy, estimates that the global middle class spent $6.9 trillion in 2010. And it forecasts this figure will rise to $20 trillion during the current decade – about twice the current consumption in the US. Such The middle class presupposes a certain expenditure level of consumption, a particular psychology would be hard to and a particular set of values” ignore at the best of times, but income reaches a “tipping point”. when domestic Western demand “This is when your disposable is so weak, emerging market income reaches a point at which expenditure becomes particuyou can buy more goods than the larly significant. basics for life such as food, water Brandled consumption and clothing,” he explains. Others talk about a changing The trillion-dollar question is, mindset too. Eduardo Giannetti how best to exploit it? So far, da Fonseca, one of Brazil’s luxury goods companies seem to leading economists, describes be leading the way, perhaps the middle class as “people who because, as McKinsey points out, are not resigned to a life of 15 per cent of global middle-class poverty, who are prepared to spend comes from just 1.8 per cent of the world’s population, swimming-pool builders in which it describes as “upperEuropean property supplemiddle” class, earning ments). But, McKinsey, the looking further between $56,000 and management ahead, this is a $113,000 a year. consultancy, small part of the According to Mark estimates the overall story. In Henderson, director at global middle time, a far wider Walpole, a not-for-profit class spent $6.9 range of organisation that trillion in 2010. It businesses will represents British luxury benefit from goods companies, sales in forecasts this figure will rise to increased demand this particular sector are growing at an annual rate $20 trillion during for consumer the current goods such as cars, of 11 per cent. decade – about healthcare “This is way ahead of twice the current products and the UK economy and is consumption in consumer being driven by Middle electronics, the East spend and because of the US” Chinese demand for sorts of products brands like Burberry, Western Mulberry and Jimmy Choo households take for granted. shoes,” he says. “As per capita incomes rise, Rahul Sharma, managing consumption habits become director of retail consultancy increasingly sophisticated,” Neev Capital, echoes this view, says Jonathan Jackson, head pointing out that emerging of equities at stockbrokers markets make up half the sales Killik & Co. “Once consumers and more than half the profits for enter the middle-class income luxury goods manufacturers. bracket, their spending shifts “The attraction is that because towards lifestyle-oriented they sell to a small upper-middlediscretionary goods and class population, luxury goods services, with increasing tend to be priced at a premium of amounts of money being spent almost 25 per cent,” he says. on personal care, entertain“This is very different from the ment and fashion,” he adds. mass-market story.” China, for example, is Across Europe, anecdotal forecast to see 100 million evidence of such conspicuous, households joining the middle brand-led consumption abounds class over the next decade, (including a surge in Russianmaking it one of the most language adverts by important markets in the ‘‘ world for consumer goods. Luxury goods manufacturers will clearly benefit from this trend, but so should carmakers, health and beauty groups, white and brown goods manufacturers, even companies making washing-up liquid or toothpaste. The change in Brazil China is not the only fastgrowing economy, however, and the same rationale can be applied to In Brazil, Unilever several other has designed a countries. An detergent, Ala, interesting specifically for example is washing in fresh Brazil, where river water. The there has always company also been a small, sells tiny soaps wealthy middle and single class and a large, ‘‘ sachets of shampoo in India” 13 ‘‘ poor working class. But according to Brazil’s Center for Social Policies (CSP) the ‘new’ middle class ballooned from 37 per cent of the population in 2003 to just over 50 per cent by 2009. As a consequence, the middle class now has greater purchasing power than its wealthier counterpart. “From the standpoint of economics, this is the dominant class,” says CSP director Marcelo Neri. The shift has prompted a rapid uptake in the purchase of consumer electricals. The number of homes with a washing machine rose from 33 per cent in 2003 to 44 per cent in 2009. The share of those with a fridge rose from 86 per cent to 94 per cent. Such goods are commonplace in the West, but for numbers of emerging market consumers, they represent a step change in lifestyle. For others, however, these items remain out of reach. Know your market Martin Ravallion, director of the World Bank’s development research group, separates the developing-world middle class into two tiers – upper ($9-$13 a day) and lower ($2-$9 a day). The numbers in the lower tier increased by almost 1.2 billion between 1990 and 2005. The increase in the upper tier was a far more modest 95 million. 14 While emerging markets are diverse, multina tionals almost always benefit from finding a local partner” Clearly, the range of goods to which consumers aspire varies considerably according to which middle class they belong to. And different tactics are required to match goods with domestic income levels, local taste and local customs. In Brazil, Unilever sells a detergent, Ala, specifically for washing in fresh river water, a smart move given more than half the population still does not own a washing machine. The company also sells tiny soaps and single sachets of shampoo in India for a few rupees. Sharma at Neev Capital says the sachets have worked well, attracting people in rural areas who were “not used to putting anything in their hair”. “They could be priced really low, so they were genuinely affordable and because of that people were not worried about trying them once and seeing if they liked them,” he explains. Many other companies have used India as a testing ground for affordable products, such as a $30 mobile phone handset or Tata’s Nano car, the cheapest available in the world. “The combination of volume and affordable pricing is driving innovation,” says Sharma. Another way of keeping costs down is to make containers refundable. Coca-Cola introduced slightly smaller and cheaper bottles in rural China that people drink on the spot and return immediately. At the other end of the scale, an expanding media presence in countries such as India means a growing number of consumers are aware of branded goods, often before they can actually afford them. Sharma adds: “You meet a construction worker in Mumbai and he will be wearing a fake Nike T-shirt with the ‘swoosh’ because he is aware of the brand. But once his income rises, he will be happy to trade up to the real thing.” Western firms can fall into traps, however. Quintessentially, a UK-based luxury concierge service, highlights diverging tastes between traditional and new middle classes. In Brazil, for example, the nouveau riche may be keen to snap up branded clothes and bags, but traditionally wealthy Brazilians see this behaviour as “corny” and giving “free propaganda”. On a more down-to-earth level, Sharma points to Anglo- French group Kingfisher’s move into China, with the launch of DIY stores aimed at homeowners. Unfortunately for the home improvement retailer, low labour costs mean the Chinese tend to pay people to do the work rather than do it themselves. “It was a case of not understanding the consumers,” says Sharma. The EIU’s Copestake believes this underlines an important lesson: while markets are diverse, one common benefit for multinationals is to find a local partner. “The strategy has been tried and tested with food and drink and it really helps because partners can give advice on market pitfalls and how to adapt products to the market.” This can mean investing time and money reconfiguring the business model to tap into what seems to be a relatively small market. “You can’t just go in with a product as you would in London or the US as a means of obtaining success,” Copestake says. “It’s not a quick fix and may mean spending millions on research and development to get the potential of the market.” The next phase To date, multinationals have been focused on the supply of ‘‘ When the US became an industrial nation, the market leaders in 1925 remained the number one or number two player for the rest of the century” goods, both luxury and day-to-day. Looking ahead, services may offer the next phase of opportunity, as the emerging middle classes demand more sophisticated technology and know-how. The CSP report, for instance, shows the number of Brazilian households with a computer and internet access has doubled since 2003, as has the number with a mobile phone. Even direct rubbish collection and the provision of sewerage systems have shown a noticeable increase in Brazil. Western expertise can prove beneficial in many of these sectors – and in areas such as logistics – importing goods or bringing them from field to store. International consumer groups and retailers have real expertise here. “Tesco and companies like it have an important role to play, bringing logistics technology to reform the supply chain and transport fresh food efficiently,” says Sharma. Being middle class also implies increased leisure time, another important opportunity for Western companies. Management consulting firm Boston Consulting Group, for example, expects China to overtake Japan as the second-largest travel and tourism market in the world by 2013, and forecasts it will be worth $600 billion by 2020. And Deloitte predicts that by 2015 the tourism industry in China and India will be greater than those of Britain, France or Japan. “The greatest potential in these markets will lie in developing mid-market and economy-branded products aimed at the domestic traveller,” says Alex Kyriakidis, global managing director of tourism, hospitality and leisure at Deloitte. Significantly too, as households become richer they will start to prioritise education and healthcare, which will open up whole new markets for the West. Far-sighted companies are already positioning themselves in these important new regions, ensuring they are well placed for the future. The lessons of history bear out the importance of first-mover advantage: when the US underwent industrialisation, market leaders in 1925 remained the number-one or number-two player for the remainder of the century. “As middle classes develop worldwide, the most important thing is brand and brand sentiment,” says the EIU’s Copestake n 15 In my opinion Anyone can be an expert on anything these days, thanks to Google and Wikipedia. Is this freedom of information in action or a real social danger? FT columnist Simon Kuper checks the facts. o usted South African president Thabo Mbeki, one of the first web-savvy heads of government, never believed HIV causes Aids. He felt this notion reeked of ancient Western prejudices about oversexed Africans. Surfing the internet in the late 1990s, he found scientists who agreed with him. Eventually, Mbeki contacted David Rasnick, a biochemist at the University of California who didn’t believe HIV causes Aids either. Rasnick and others encouraged Mbeki’s views. Later, the president even had his own theory of Aids posted online on the main website for Aids dissidents, virusmyth.com. (The site remains active today.) It’s a problem of our age: on the internet, everyone can become an expert in minutes. Mbeki’s ‘expertise’ and subsequent disapproval of orthodox Aids drugs proved unusually damaging. A study by Harvard researchers in 2008 found South Africa could have prevented 365,000 deaths if it had given anti-retroviral and other common drugs to Aids 17 patients, to help stop pregnant women infecting their babies. There is wonderful information on the internet and dangerous garbage too. Politicians, corporate executives, doctors, the sick, journalists, market researchers, students and countless others use the web to find out what is true and what probably isn’t. The problem is, most people don’t care much about that distinction. From Britannica to Wikipedia I’m a truth-seeker myself. I have been trying to write the truth in articles and books for 25 years, so my career divides almost equally between the preGoogle and post-Google eras. When I started out, the struggle was finding information. In 1992, for instance, I was planning a research trip to Cameroon. From the UK, it was almost impossible to follow current events in the West African backwater. I visited the Cameroonian embassy in west London to ask to read the country’s newspapers. I was blocked at the door. At the time I took this for rudeness, but I later found out that the embassy was barring strangers for fear that they might be creditors demanding money. Trying to build my own journalistic database, I used to store old newspapers and magazines in my room. While I was still living with my parents, this used to drive my mother berserk. But she did understand my quest for information. She herself worked for Encyclopaedia Britannica. She commissioned experts to write entries, and was forever anguishing about which professor was best in each particular field. We got the Britannica for free, but most homes couldn’t afford the full set. When Sonia Sotomayor became a justice in the US Supreme Court in 2009, one explanation of her rise was that her family was possibly the only one in its Bronx housing project to own the Britannica. Wikipedia’s founder Jimmy Wales also read the Britannica as a child. That was rare. Information was scarce in those times. Then, in 1998, two graduate students at Stanford University incorporated a company called Google. They sublet a garage in Menlo Park, California, put a whiteboard with the jokey text, “Google Worldwide Headquarters” outside, and began beta testing a search engine. The world changed. Suddenly, everyone could be an expert, instantly. I first became an instant expert 10 years ago, when I was invited to debate euthanasia on Dutch TV. The invitation included a free flight to Amsterdam, so I went. My ignorance about euthanasia turned out not to be a problem. After an hour’s online research, I could go on television and debate the topic as if I’d been steeped in it all my life. Back then, it felt like cheating. Now we all do this constantly. The world’s chief source of instant expertise is the online encyclopaedia Wikipedia. Last year UNUMerit, a research centre of the United Nations University, conducted a survey of Wikipedia, canvassing 176,000 readers and 54,000 contributors, spread across many countries. One interesting finding: 45 per cent of the contributors had not attended university. No wonder, because half of all respondents to the survey were under 22 years old. Contributors (average age 26) were only slightly What matters to most people is not that the source is true but that they like what it says, and that it’s credible enough to defend” 18 Last year, Chinese police revealed that employees at the big dairy company Mengniu and a Beijing based internet marketing company had paid writers to spread rumours that deepsea fish oil was bad for your health” older than readers (average age 25). Almost 90 per cent, incidentally, were male. In other words, the typical contributor to Wikipedia is not the august professor who would have impressed my mum. Nor would she have been reassured to hear that Wikipedia started by absorbing articles from the famous 1911 edition of her own encyclopaedia, and from other similarly old reference books that had gone out of copyright. She used to worry that 10-year-old entries were outdated. Yet many Wikipedia entries (the one about the Greek philosopher Diogenes, for instance) grew out of a text written for the Britannica by some august professor circa 1909. Wikipedia’s founders had wanted to do things my mother’s way, using an up-to-date coterie of experts, but they quickly found out it was very hard to get a significant number of articles, because it was too much effort for people. Now you don’t even need to log in and you can add something. And whatever you add tends to become the world’s favourite source on your chosen topic. The problem is not just when Wikipedia (or any other website) is flat-out wrong. A subtler problem is when knowledge is only skin-deep. Take the statement, “In 1492 Columbus discovered America.” That statement isn’t wrong per se. But it begs a number of questions. How could Columbus “discover” an inhabited territory? What made that vast and diverse territory “America”? And so on. Often, websites give you facts (true or otherwise) without understanding. Evaluating sources Clearly, anyone researching online needs to understand sourcing. Indeed, universities and schools are increasingly teaching students to evaluate sources, although many students still cite the internet as their source. But sourcing is even more complicated than most people understand. Scientific research depends on peer review so if Professor A writes something, it only becomes accepted as true once other experts in the profession accept and repeat it. Unfortunately, few people outside academia understand how science works. Typically, bloggers and journalists place too much faith in a single piece of research, notably health research. Academics perform one study that finds a link between some factor and a disease. Websites then hype the study: “Stress (or cell phones, or hair dye) causes cancer!” Yet any single academic study, however good, doesn’t tell us anything for certain. If it contradicts most other studies on cancer, or Aids, or has no biological rationale, then its validity is doubtful. What’s important is the totality of evidence from many studies and from biological research. Online readers often don’t understand this, which frees them to believe whatever they want to believe. The internet helps you find whatever truth you are looking for. That is what President Mbeki did. The Aids dissidents he relied on weren’t uncredentialled 18-year-old boys. Rasnick was a PhD biochemist. Charles Geshekter, another of Mbeki’s informants, was a respected historian of Africa, albeit not a medic. Crucially, though, their views on Aids had failed the test of peer review. That is why they were dissidents. Mbeki was relying on a few studies amid a sea of knowledge. And of course he handpicked the studies that bolstered his prejudice: that sexual behaviour did not cause Aids. Sometimes the main problem for web surfers is lack of time. When you are trading stocks, seconds count. When ‘news’ pops up online that affects a stock, you don’t always have time to perform a sophisticated source analysis. One morning in October 2008, for instance, an item appeared on a 19 site called iReport saying that Steve Jobs, founder and former chief executive of Apple, “was rushed to the ER just a few hours ago after suffering a major heart attack”. Apple’s shares fell 10 per cent in 10 minutes. The stock soon recovered, after Apple nixed the false rumour, but still closed the day 3 per cent lower. iReport, as it turned out, was a “citizen journalism” site run by CNN. That means that anyone could post items on the site. The story about Jobs appears to have been posted by an 18-year-old. iReport’s stories were neither filtered nor edited, yet because of the CNN imprimatur they ran the risk of being taken seriously. It wasn’t the first time a false internet report had moved a giant stock. United Airlines was even unluckier: in September 2008, a Bloomberg employee accidentally included a six-year-old story about United’s bankruptcy in a “news alert”. United’s shares fell 75 per cent. As a United spokeswoman said: “It is what happens when people are irresponsible and don’t check facts, and our lawyers are investigating.” Some false “reports” are put up online in error. Others are made up deliberately, however. After all, there are few easier ways to earn a quick buck on the stock market than to disseminate a bogus story about a stock. Of course, false rumours have moved stocks since speculators in Amsterdam first began to trade shares 400 years ago. I know this to my own cost: in my own worst moment in journalism, as a young business reporter in 1996, I wrongly reported that the jewellery company Signet was about to be taken over. My source was an outside investor in Signet. (Only later did I figure out he might have had an ulterior motive.) When my article appeared, Signet’s market value rose by millions of pounds. Mistaken stories have always appeared, but the internet has multiplied the speed of the news, and the number of unverified sources. At least my wrong article was checked by three subeditors, even if they did all pass it through. Web surfers tend to believe what they read on the web, and some opportunistic companies make use 20 of this tendency. 45 per cent of contributors to In China, reports Wikipedia did not attend univer the Washington sity. No wonder, because half of Post earlier this all contributors and readers are year, there is an under 22 years old” “online army” of thousands of people who are paid by companies to plant false information about rival companies on blogs, chat rooms and message boards. Last year, for instance, Chinese police revealed that employees at the big dairy company Mengniu and a Beijingbased internet marketing company had paid writers to spread rumours that deep-sea fish oil was bad for your health. It just so happened that a rival of Mengniu’s, a company called Yili, had a milk product aimed at children containing that very fish oil. One fictional parent wrote on an internet forum: “Now it was exposed that the milk product ... can make children sexually premature. I’m going crazy.” If people surfed the internet more sceptically, understood which sources were more reliable than others and knew how academic research works, they might swallow less garbage online. However, it’s doubtful that most web surfers really are striving for truth. To quote the journalist-turned-novelist Tom Rachman: “Alas, credibility is only one of the reasons that readers click a link, and not always the main reason.” Many web surfers, such as Mbeki, are looking for a “truth” that suits them. What matters to most people is not that the source is true but that they like what it says, and that it’s credible enough to defend. If there is an unprecedented amount of garbage masquerading as truth today, the internet is partly to blame. But just as pernicious is the widespread desire to believe that garbage n *Additional research by Pauline Harris In the spotlight Serve to survive When times are hard, it is all too easy for businesses to cut back on customer service. But this may be a shortsighted solution, prompting savvy consumers to move their business elsewhere. hat price poor customer service? A total of $338.5 billion or $243 per customer lost, according to Genesys, a supplier of customer management software, which conducted a survey across 16 countries. The underlying message is clear: service matters. Get it wrong, and you will lose both customers and profits. W 22 This is hardly a startling conclusion. How many of us have hung up rather than go through a series of automated commands before we get to a real person? Decided to shop elsewhere rather than wait for the sales assistants to finish discussing their plans for the weekend? Left a restaurant after waiting too long to be served? Or chosen to fly with a higher-priced airline rather than be herded like cattle through the departure gate? But, even though numerous consumers know the value of service, far too many companies struggle to get the message. Good service can, of course, be expensive and when the economy is faltering and demand is sluggish it is tempting to look for savings on the shop floor. But the impact of rationalisation programmes on customer ‘‘ relationships can be highly damaging – far from improving profits by cutting costs, companies can actually lose money as dissatisfied customers take their business elsewhere. those surveyed said they were not willing to compromise on service in return for lower prices. A downward trend Coping with the downturn In its Global Consumer Survey, consultancy group Accenture found that almost two-thirds of consumers – 64 per cent – switched from at least one service provider in 2010 because of poor service. Retailers were the worst affected, with 26 per cent switching to different store groups, but that was closely followed by banks at 22 per cent and internet service providers at 19 per cent. Accenture also found that levels of customer satisfaction had fallen since 2009 in all 11 areas which it measures, including key attributes such as the time it takes to be served and the length of wait to resolve a service issue. Perhaps most surprisingly in these economically stretched times, more than half of Good places to look for potential over investment include marketing campaigns and excessive use of bill credits and adjustments. The business case for these ‘customer delight treatments’ can include unreal istic assumptions about how they will increase customer referrals and retention. And often, there is no business case” Encouragingly too, consultancy firm McKinsey says there are ways companies can reduce costs while maintaining or even improving customer service. “The challenging economy is putting consumer companies such as airlines, banks and retailers in the difficult position of cutting back the service levels that customers have come to expect in recent years. These companies are closing retail locations, reducing hours of operation, and making do with fewer staff in stores and call centres,” say principals Adam Braff and John C. DeVine. “Meanwhile, faced with rising costs, they are also increasing prices, either overtly or through fees. As a result, our customer experience research shows that satisfaction scores are reversing the upward trend of the past few years and actually dropping in a number of industries.” One way to avoid this, they say, is for companies to make sure they know what actually drives customer 23 ‘‘ satisfaction. A mobile phone company was operating a call centre, for example, where the key variable was the length of time taken to answer the phone. McKinsey found customers were delighted if the phone was answered immediately, and dissatisfied if they were left hanging on beyond a specified length of time. Braff and DeVine concluded the business could save $7 million and improve customer satisfaction if it focused on this one specific area and also managed call centre staff levels to improve the slowest satisfactory response time. “The same principles apply to setting up a new account, scheduling an appointment, answering a non-urgent email, or having customers wait in line,” says the consultancy. “Other good places to look for potential over-investment include marketing campaigns (for example, offering to move a customer to a cheaper rate plan 24 regardless of whether the customer says cost is a problem) and excessive use of bill credits and adjustments. The business case for these ‘customer delight treatments’ can include unrealistic assumptions about how they will increase customer referrals and retention. And often, there is no business case.” A wireless service Almost twothirds of consumers – 64 per cent – switched from at least one service provider in 2010 because of poor service” about the use of email adverts, online banners, comparison sites and other internet tools. And two-thirds of those surveyed said they were increasing their use of technology in areas such as automated phone attendants, live internet chats and selfservice options on a website, suggesting these developments have improved service levels over the past several years. Intriguingly, customer willingness to use technology differs Of course, the internet is having a major impact on customer service, particularly global More than 80 per cent of consumers in France online retailer and Germany are happy to use the web alone to Amazon. The US consult customer services; in the UK and the giant consisNetherlands, the percentage falls to around half” tently tops the league table of customer satisfaction and its markedly across Europe. More speed of service and efficiency of than 80 per cent of consumers in complaint-handling mean it sets France and Germany are happy the standard that other retailers to use the web alone to consult must follow. customer services; in the UK and With regard to online service, the Netherlands, the percentage Accenture’s survey found falls to around half, according consumers were enthusiastic to Genesys. ‘‘ Wherever businesses are located, using the internet to streamline customer service may help costs but it does not mean they can give up on more traditional methods. Across Europe, almost 90 per cent of consumers said they had conducted at least one so-called ‘cross-channel’ conversation during 2010 – switching between stores, telephone and internet. While customers are happy to start their transaction using the most convenient outlet, they prefer to resolve more complex issues by talking to someone real from customer services. And, when asked where they most wanted investment to be focused, 43 per cent of respondents plumped for better assistance from humans. This leaves companies facing a difficult challenge. They must maintain levels of service, regardless of economic difficulties, or risk seeing their consumers swap to another supplier. The internet can prove helpful but it also facilitates switching to other service providers. And the web is rarely sufficient in itself. Customers want to access new technologies while still being able to fall back on human interaction. As the Genesys report concludes: “Businesses should plan for an integrated solution that plans for the future and is designed to evolve and adopt new crosschannel mechanisms – but first and foremost, they must provide and support the mechanisms the market in their country favours today.” n Ready to serve Clive Schlee, chief executive of sandwich chain Pret, attributes the firm’s success not just to its food but also to its proud, professional staff. “We can’t work out for sure which of these two is most important, but we think it is likely that service is. It is everything in today’s world,” he explains. With this in mind, Pret’s attention to customer service starts with recruitment: every potential new recruit has to work in the store for one day, after which the existing team have to vote on whether or not they are suitable. This responsibility is more than symbolic: Pret’s stores are surveyed by a mystery shopper every week. If the shopper’s experience of the service is good, everyone in the store will get an extra £1 an hour in salary. For employees earning around £6 an hour, the bonus payment is significant. The idea is that everyone should get the extra money and, in practice, between 92 and 97 per cent of the chain do – but the system means everyone in the store has a real interest in ensuring their colleagues are up to scratch. That team spirit is reinforced by Pret’s system of awarding ‘shooting stars’ to staff. When an employee is promoted, he or she is also given between £50 and £100 to share among those who helped them gain their promotion. Pret does not offer new recruits a formal induction programme. Instead, it encourages staff to be themselves. “We look for enthusiastic, energetic and friendly people with leadership qualities. You don’t join Pret if you really want to be a librarian,” says Schlee. Leadership qualities are important because the chance of career advancement is real. There are about 50 steps of promotion, outlined to everyone when they start. This offers employees a real sense that they have a future in the company, not just on the shop floor but in management too. Some 60 per cent of head office personnel started out selling sandwiches, while sales and operations managers are among those who started life as team members. Schlee maintains the key mistake rivals make is that they “ritualise” the process: staff are told what to say and how to say it and, while they all claim that service matters, in practice, their commitment is little more than lip service. 25 Face to face An innovative edge Bill Johnson started out as a lowpaid worker in the Midwest. Today he is chief executive of SPTS, a Bridgepointbacked company at the forefront of electronic engineering. 26 I n 1964, at the age of 16, Bill Johnson went to work at Spartan-Atlantic Department Store, a discount outlet in Minnesota, where he then lived. Johnson was “a grunt” – a low-paid holiday worker hired to do the most menial work there was. “There were four of us, all working for the assistant manager. We were sent on to the roof to shovel snow off the top of it; we moved fixtures around, that kind of thing. It was a great experience because it convinced me I never wanted to do that kind of thing again,” says Johnson. He never did. After graduating in physics at Minnesota University, Johnson went on to do a master’s in electrical engineering and a PhD in material sciences at Michigan Technical University. By this time, the world of computer science was just beginning to open up and Johnson soon moved to its epicentre, California, working in technology, marketing and senior management for software and hardware companies. By 2003, he had become a consultant to the industry, and four years later he was approached by the Japanese aerospace and electrical engineering group Sumitomo Precision Products with a particular assignment. “I was introduced to the president of SPP, Susumu Kaminaga, who asked me to join the company and help him figure out what do to with STS,” says Johnson. At the time, STS was a struggling specialist technology business based in Newport, Wales, that had been spun out of Electrotech, an early pioneer in the semiconductor and silicon field. Electrotech had also demerged a related business, involved in the production of semiconductor processing equipment, which eventually became known as Aviza. “Aviza had a base just a few miles down the road from STS and the two companies were doing complementary things. But Aviza had another branch in California where it was competing with the mainstream silicon chip manufacturers and it was having a really tough time,” says Johnson. By 2009, Aviza’s difficulties in the US had become terminal and the group filed for Chapter 11. Meeting of minds “I saw it coming but I recognised Aviza had a real gem in the UK and I managed to convince SPP that we should buy the business. I felt putting the two together would create more than the sum of the parts. Most of the SPP board didn’t agree with me but the president did so we went ahead,” says Johnson. The merger created SPP Process Technology Systems or SPTS, a company based in Newport and San Jose, specialising in the production of large, complex pieces of equipment used to make intricate semiconductor devices. The group differs from mainstream silicon chip manufacturers because its customers tend to be involved in the computer industry, whereas SPTS customers are focused on cutting-edge sectors such as microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) and light-emitting diodes (LEDs). As Johnson explains: “If you buy an iPhone, it has 19 devices or chips in it that make it work, store memory, react when it’s turned and so on. Apple buys the chips from a manufacturer such as STMicroelectronics or Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company and we make the 27 machines they use to create the chips.” The process is highly technical. Silicon wafers or wafers made from compound materials are inserted into the SPTS machines and adapted for use in hundreds of everyday applications. Some machines allow patterns to be etched on to chips, some allow materials to be deposited on to them or some heat the chips to an extremely high temperature. “If you think of the chip-creation process as taking place in a kitchen, we provide the oven, the mixer, the chopper and the dicer,” says Johnson. SPTS offers demonstrations of its equipment to show customers that it works, but it is not involved in the chip-making process per se. Nonetheless, demonstrations are important as the SPTS kit does not come cheap. “These are large, specialised machines and they rarely cost less than $1 million. Some pieces of equipment cost $4 to $5 million apiece,” says Johnson. Nonetheless, demand for these products is robust. New markets “We are serving new and emerging markets, new industries and new applications. Take MEMS, for instance. Ten years ago, MEMS devices were just used in airbags for cars. Now they are used for smart phones, Wii games, even the machines you strap on when you’re running to see how many steps you’ve taken. New products are coming on to the market all the time that use these devices and we make the equipment needed to create them,” explains Johnson. “LED is another exploding industry, used in LCD TVs, every kind of computer and wireless screen and for consumer lighting,” he adds. This is a far cry from the mainstream silicon chip manufacturers. “Parts of that industry have been around for 30 years. I cut my teeth there but it is now a mature industry, everyone knows how to make the devices and it is dominated by huge companies. Our markets are very different. They’re growing rapidly, new technology is being introduced all the time and new processes are required. For me, that is very exciting, in terms of both the technological advances and the strategic opportunities they present to SPTS,” says Johnson. Those opportunities have already helped SPTS to 28 blossom since its formation two years ago. Back then, the two original businesses were generating around $80 million of revenue. In 2010, sales were more than $215 million and Johnson hopes to double that figure over the next few years, despite the fragile state of the global economy. “Our markets are diverse and they are not in sync with each other. The LED market has very different growth drivers from the MEMS market, for example. In Japan, they have declared that all consumers will have to switch to LED lighting and in Europe and the US they are talking about it so that presents us with opportunities. I think we are positioned well for the future. We are not recessionproof but we are recession-resilient. In Silicon Valley, they all see their growth coming from Asia but we think our growth will come from Asia, Europe and the US,” says Johnson. In previous downturns, companies making silicon chip manufacturing equipment have tried to encroach on SPTS territory, but Johnson suggests this piecemeal approach is not terribly effective. “Our customers are at the forefront of technology so they need lots of hand-holding and lots of flexibility. Each machine has to be slightly customised to fit their specification and this can be very difficult for large companies which are used to making everything in the same mould. They just can’t react as quickly as we can,” says Johnson. “We also match up with our customers in terms of size. We are large enough to have critical mass but not so large that we can’t focus on them and their needs. We really work in partnership with them. It’s an overused term but in our case, it’s true,” says Johnson. Johnson is keen to grow SPTS organically and through acquisitions, taking the business into adjacent processes and broadening the range of products the company can offer its customers. Onestop shop “When we merged STS and Aviza, it meant we could offer more to our customers. Over time, I would like SPTS to become the one-stop shop for the markets we serve,” he explains. That ambition is supported by Bridgepoint, which backed an MBO of SPTS earlier this year. “Bridgepoint gives us financial stability and they have been very encouraging about our growth Name: Bill Johnson Age: 63 Nationality: American Education University of Minnesota and University of Michigan First job Shovelling snow from the roof of a discount department store Car A greyblue Audi TT convertible with an oolonggrey 2012 TT convertible on order Finest professional achievement Bringing SPTS together Finest personal achievement Seeing my children grown up, gainfully employed and good citizens Lifetime ambition To leave my part of the world better than when I entered it ambitions. We spoke to several private equity firms but they were the clear winner because of their profile, their professionalism and the behaviour of their people during the MBO process,” he says. Johnson describes SPTS as “a truly global business” with 500 employees operating in 19 countries and dual headquarters in Wales and California. Based near San Jose, Johnson “commutes” to the UK every month and travels to the group’s other offices too. “I spend a lot of time on aeroplanes but it gives me the space to think and plan,” he says. A father of four children and with six grandchildren, Johnson tries to spend as much time as he can with his wife and family and counters life on the road with a passion for wine. “We live on a vineyard in Livermore. We grow Cabernet Sauvignon, Malbec and Cabernet Franc grapes and sell them to local boutique wineries,” says Johnson. The vineyard is managed by professionals but Johnson also makes his own wine, about a barrel a year. “I make Chardonnay, Syrah, Cabernet Sauvignon and sometimes Zinfandel. I just sit in the wine room, watch the wine age and I can pull a glass from the barrel when I feel like it. It’s very relaxing,” he says n 29 30 Market insight Over the past few years, European manufacturers have taken advantage of cheap Asian markets to reduce their prices at home. Now times are changing. 31 ‘‘ urgical Innovations (SI) is a small, unpretentious manufacturer based in the north of England. At the forefront of technology for minimally invasive – or keyhole – surgery, the company is one of the fastestgrowing businesses in the Yorkshire region. Non-executive chairman Doug Liversidge attributes the group’s recent success to a decision, two years ago, to bring manufacturing back to the UK from disparate sites across the globe. He also believes the time is right for other manufacturers to do their sums again. “Bringing manufacturing back home has paid off for us and I recommend that other companies should look at doing the same. We have since trebled our workforce here in Leeds and our quality has significantly improved,” he says. SI previously used manufac- S 32 The future of European manufacturing is changing and European manufacturers are reasserting their confidence in a global market” turing plants in China, Eastern Europe and North Africa, but a full evaluation, including the cost of executives travelling back and forth and the time spent making sure the quality of goods was acceptable, prompted a change of heart. “When we looked at it properly, there wasn’t the advantage that first appeared,” Liversidge says. “The time has come to bring manufacturing back home. Lots of other companies in the Sheffield area are looking hard at this,” he says. Further south, garden furniture maker Li-Lo Leisure is hoping to hear shortly whether it has been given planning permission to build a new UK factory, which will create 100 jobs, on land it owns in Loughton, Essex. The company wants to bring its manufacturing operation back to the UK because costs have rocketed in China, where most of its products have been made for the past decade. This trend is not isolated to one or two companies. And it is not a purely British phenomenon. As transport costs surge and Asian workers demand higher wages, more and more Western companies are finding the advantage they had sought from outsourcing manufacturing and production to the East has been eroded. Jürgen Maier, a managing director at German industrial conglomerate Siemens, explains: “Ten years ago we were enthusiastically transferring manufacturing to Asia, now less so.” Soaring commodity prices have a significant role to play too. According to the International Monetary Fund, these rose 30 per cent year-on-year in the first five months of 2011 alone. At the same time, oil prices have been rising steadily and the long-term outlook for energy prices suggests further increases are likely. When raw material costs increase, the incremental value of outsourcing becomes commensurately lower. Perhaps it is not surprising therefore that a recent survey from accountancy firm BDO Stoy Hayward and manufacturing trade body, EEF, revealed that one in seven British companies had repatriated manufacturing operations to the UK in the past two years. A new survey, to be conducted over the next few months, is expected to reinforce this trend, reporting that British companies are more circumspect than ever about moving production offshore. Maier says rising commodity prices play a part but they are not the only issue. “Other factors are more critical: high labour inflation rates, high labour turnover, the time it takes to transfer knowledge and achieve the same quality levels and rising logistics costs,” he explains. Supply chains from emerging markets have also turned out to be riskier than companies expected. Orders can take months to fulfil and there is a widespread disregard for intellectual property. There is evidence too that some of Europe’s larger retailers are looking closer to home to source products that are no longer cost-effective to produce offshore. The short lead times offered by production in the domestic market are particularly attractive, given the unsettled nature of consumer confidence. Sir Philip Green of UK highstreet retail chain Arcadia Group said earlier this year, for example, that he was considering bringing some production back to the UK. And Clarks, the shoemaker that closed its last British factory in 2005, is also understood to be considering moving some production back to the UK. Wrong message Yet there are dissenting voices, or at least those who question a blanket return to the good old days of the 1950s and 1960s. Professor Richard Dashwood at Warwick University’s Manufacturing Group says: “Most of the work that has gone offshore has been at the low-value, highvolume end of the market. Do we want to send out the message that the UK is now just as cheap as Asian economies for manufacturing? We shouldn’t want to get this work back, what we should be aiming for is high-value, lowvolume manufacturing at the top end of the value chain.” And UK Trade & Investment, which helps British companies 33 ‘‘ expand into overseas markets, suggests: “European manufacturing can’t compete on price, it has to compete on quality. It is high-volume, low-skill manufacturing that has migrated abroad and there is little sign of that returning.” Some of the biggest European retailers concur, saying that despite rising commodity costs, it remains considerably cheaper to manufacture in Asia. Marks & Spencer uses some specialist British manufacturers – for hosiery and furniture – but only 15-20 per cent of products it sells come from Europe and North Africa, mainly goods for fast fashion lines. Most of its clothing is still sourced from South Asia (30 to 40 per cent) and the Far East (40 to 45 per cent) and that balance is likely to remain. Clothing chain Next also expects to continue manufacturing most of its goods in the Far East. In a recent trading statement, Next said that it believed it was over the hump of price increases and that it was likely to be business as usual 34 As transport costs surge and Asian workers demand higher wages, more and more Western companies are finding the advantage they had sought from outsourcing manufacturing and production to the East has been eroded” going forward. The company believes that 2012 will be a more benign year for cost price inflation, in part due to a sharp reduction in cotton prices and an easing of manufacturing capacity constraints in the Far East. Ben Gordon, chief executive of British retailer Mothercare, which is expanding overseas, particularly in the Middle East and Asia, says: “We have developed a highly successful international sourcing operation based predominantly in the Far East. We have spent years establishing a trusted supplier network that not only gives us the commercial benefits of quality, flexibility and delivery, but also seeks to operate at the highest ethical standards.” European rebound While clothing retailers may continue to focus on Asian manufacturing, other industries believe Europe does have a role to play. Siemens, for example, is expecting to see at least a miniresurgence in manufacturing in Europe. This will be driven not only by the decreasing price differential between East and West but also by growing product customisation, growing consumer demand for ‘local’ products and the growth of the green economy, including the clean tech sector. This desire for goods produced close to home is spreading rapidly across Europe, affecting sectors as diverse as food and car engines. In the UK, manufacturing’s contribution to the economy has risen 3.6 per cent in real terms since 2010. This increase is based not on a surge of growth in lowpaid, low-skilled jobs but on an expansion of high-tech, knowledge-based production. There are also occasions when this knowledge enables European manufacturers to cope better with rising commodity prices than their Asian competitors. Andrew Johnson, senior economist at the EEF, says European producers have more opportunities to add value to their products, given their high degree of human capital that can be adapted and developed for other applications. One coatings manufacturer, for example, recently offered its highly skilled ‘‘ staff incentives to reduce the amount of the commodity titanium oxide in its coatings, thereby cutting the cost of production. Looking ahead, this advantage may not last. Experts maintain that, even if European manufacturers are enjoying a temporary respite from the competitive pressures of Asia, they should be keeping a close eye on Chinese manufacturers’ ability to move up the value scale and produce highly engineered goods. “They have invested heavily in an industrial base and a strong university system. Entrepreneurs in China work in industry, not in services. They are investing in skilled original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) in Europe – making cars at the likes of Longbridge – and taking intellectual property back home. It won’t be long before they can compete with us to create the high-value and high-tech products,” Professor Dashwood says. Siemens echoes these concerns, pointing to the rapid development of knowledge and skills in China. In 2002, for example, 26 per cent of global GERD (gross domestic expenditure on R&D) was generated in the EU and 5 per cent in China. Just five years later, those figures were 23 per cent and 9 per cent. “We need to work very hard to stay ahead,” Maier says. Recent statistics paint a mixed picture. The sector employed 33 million people in Europe in 2008, but the financial crisis resulted in a sharp and severe downturn in industrial output in the European Union and the numbers employed shrank accordingly. In some countries, the contraction in activity was the largest seen since the 1930s. Fortunately, from a low point in April 2009, there has been a steady increase in industrial output in Europe, up 15 per cent by March of this year. But, while the rise in commodity costs and labour costs in Asia has encouraged some manufacturers to reconsider manufacturing in Europe, many remain committed to Asia. This is not simply because costs are lower there but because the region offers huge potential for new customers. As a spokesman for Peugeot, the French car manufacturer, explains: “We do not plan any reduction of our production capacities in Europe but we also plan to develop our production capacities outside Europe in developing markets such as China, Latin America, Russia and soon India.” This sends a positive message to European manufacturers. While many may retain capability in Asia, they will also think twice before closing down completely in their home markets. Time will tell whether those who have been bold enough to bring manufacturing back home can continue to make the decision add up. But the future of European manufacturing is changing and European manufacturers are reasserting One in seven British companies repatriated manufacturing operations to the UK in the past two years” their confidence in a global market. For the most ambitious, it is now a case of manufacturing where the customers are. It cannot be either Asia or Europe. It has to be both n 35 Last word It’s all Globish to me What do you get when you mix Chinese, Russian and French? English of course, or rather Globish, as author and editor Robert McCrum explains. The globalisation of AngloAmerican language and literature is the cultural revolution of our generation. Today English is used, in some form, by about two billion people, approximately onethird of the planet. As a mother tongue, English is only outnumbered by Chinese, spoken by nearly 1.8 billion people. But, according to the British Council, some 350 million Chinese people – more than the entire population of the United States – also speak “some kind of English”. This lingua franca has been defined as ‘Globish’ for one very good reason. Since the millennium, English has moved into a new phase. Never before has there been such a hunger for a common tongue with a global reach. In China they call it “Crazy English”. Never mind the label: for the first time in human history, it’s possible for one language to be transmitted, and received, across the whole planet. And it’s not just a linguistic story. For me, a milestone was reached in 2005. In September that year, the Jutland Post, a Danish magazine, published some cartoons poking fun at the prophet Mohammed. Parts of the Muslim community went wild, but the most bizarre response to this affair was a protest by Muslim fundamentalists outside the Danish embassy in London the following February. Chanting in English, the protestors carried banners with slogans such as “Freedom of Expression Go To Hell” and “Down with Free Speech”. This collision of the Koran with Monty Python was my ‘Eureka’ moment. What more telling commentary on the power and influence of global English could there be? But it took a Frenchman, JeanPaul Nerriere, to coin the term Globish. An IBM executive, Nerriere had been posted to Japan, where he noticed nonnative English speakers were communicating far better with Asian clients than their British and American counterparts, for whom English was the mother tongue. Standard American or the Queen’s English was all very well for Anglophone countries, but in the developing world, 36 there was a role for what Nerriere called “decaffeinated English” or “Globish”. Today, the word has become shorthand for the emergence of English as a global communications phenomenon, with a momentum that gives it independence from its AngloAmerican origins. Nerriere advocates 1,500 “most commonly used English words” and eliminating complexity, especially figures of speech, such as “I burned with desire” or “I missed the boat”. So, in Globish, “my nephew” becomes “the son of my brother” while “a helicopter” becomes, rather clunkily, “a kind of airplane that takes off and lands without a runway”. You can almost express the idea in a quasiscientific formula: English + Microsoft + the FTSE = Globish. But it is not just about money and wires. Globish embodies a longing for individual selfexpression, helps liberate markets and democratises politics. Is this the end of Babel? Far from it. The world is still a crazy patchwork of about 5,000 languages, reflecting petty nationalisms. But when these proud, local cultures find a need for global interaction, Globish is the default position. And it does not have to be the McDonald’s of English. Globish can be a lively and original means of communication: contagious, populist, adaptable and sometimes subversive. Globish may ultimately go the way of Latin, Persian and Sanskrit, former languages of power and influence. Some say translation technology will make Globish redundant. Who knows? The history of the English language is littered with the burntout wrecks of shiny new predictions. One thing is certain: at the beginning of a new decade, Globish has a supranational momentum in which it is becoming an educational and a commercial tool and the expression of a changing global economy. So when, as The New York Times reported recently, an Indian and a Cuban working for a midwestern startup wanted to commission research from a lab in Uruguay, with additional input from Israeli technicians, the language they used was undoubtedly Globish n CONTENTS 2 INS & OUTS Investments and exits across Europe 6 MANAGEMENT FOCUS Sleep: over Eight hours a night used to be the norm; now it is a luxury. But what is the impact on productivity? 10 TALKING POINT The expanding middle The emerging markets’ middle classes are growing rapidly: farsighted companies can reap the beneifts 17 22 IN MY OPINION IN THE SPOTLIGHT The truth is out there? Serve to survive In an age when the internet allows everyone to be an instant expert, Simon Kuper asks how we can tell fact from fiction Reducing service levels is tempting in hard times. The consequences may be less appealing, however 26 FACE TO FACE Bill Johnson The chief executive of SPTS, a Bridgepoint-backed company at the forefront of electronic engineering 31 MARKET INSIGHT Homeward bound Developing countries have become the bastion of manufacturing. But times are changing... 36 LAST WORD It’s all Globish to me Robert McCrum demystifies the world’s most widely spoken lingo THE POINT Issue 20 | November 2011 THE POINT Intelligent investing in Europe from Bridgepoint Issue 20 | November 2011 The expanding middle Emerging markets are spawning a new brand of consumer www.bridgepoint.eu Sleep: over Open your eyes to chronic fatigue issues Are you being served? The customer is always right Truth be told Sorting fact from fiction on the web bridgepoint.eu