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Consumer
Goods Technology
July/August 2001
by Kit
Davis
It's
Our Turn : Bringing Quality Products to the Mainland
CHINA,
JAPAN,
KOREA, TAIWAN - these and other Asian countries have been
supplying American consumers with products for years.
Now
it's our turn!
U.S.
consumer goods companies are taking notice of new markets
in the Far East, as commerce with Asia is reinvigorated via
lower tariffs and more favorable import regulations. For example,
China's import duties will likely plummet with its imminent
membership in the World Trade Organization (WTO).
But
logistics and fulfillment can be a hassle. Getting product
from one place to another in Asia is considerably more complicated
than in America. Hurdles include trade restrictions, customs
red tape, substandard transportation networks, currency differences
and state-owned enterprises, to name a few. As a result, the
huge transportation providers - FedEx, UPS and others - are
eyeing and entering the Asian logistics marketplace. And smaller
firms are also making their moves. For example, the Asian-based
fulfillment solutions provider ecLogistics
Asia (www.eclasia.com)
is streamlining the process of bringing high-quality American-made
products to the Far East.
"We
want to be a total supply-chain and logistics solution for
North American companies entering the market in China, Hong
Kong and Taiwan," says John Sclafani, vice president
of North American sales at ecLogistics Asia (ecL). The company
provides end-to-end fulfillment and logistics for American
companies selling their products in Greater China. Services
include IT infrastructure, call centers, fulfillment, transportation
and over one million square feet of total warehousing space.
"We
do nothing that's unique in the U.S., but by Asian standards,
our services are extremely high quality," Sclafani
reports.
ecL's
focus is the B2B market because, as Sclafani explains, in
Greater China, consumers may browse online, but shopping is
a cultural pastime and people prefer shopping at a
brick-and-mortar store.
Understanding
the local culture when trying to sell in Asia can be essential
for success, while having an American-based viewpoint can
be a recipe for failure. "Some companies
are too ethnocentric," Sclafani observes. For
example, he recalls that when a U.S. company offered products
priced in dollars via an English-speaking call center, its
performance in Asia was dismal. But he notes that a different
U.S. company succeeded in Greater China as a result of seeking
product-mix advice from Asians, using a call center staffed
with Chinese-language speakers and stocking products locally
for faster delivery.
ecL
offers the China-centric approach that CG companies need when
attempting to penetrate Greater China markets.
ecL's
Asian employees can help U.S. firms localize their brands
and select which products are most likely to succeed in Greater
China. ecL manages a 50-seat, 24 x 7 call center in Hong Kong
that serves all of Greater China, and its call-center personnel
speak local languages such as Mandarin and Cantonese. The
call center uses the latest CRM solutions, including automated
call distribution and voice-over IP technology.
For
warehousing and inventory management, ecL operates an enormous
facility in Hong Kong, where Webcam technology enables clients
to view warehouse inventory online. It plans to expand soon
into Shanghai, Beijing and Guangzhou. ecL will also fill orders,
manage transportation and handle reverse logistics for its
American CG clients. Additionally, ecL provides online reporting
services, including Web-based, real-time information retrieval
and inventory visibility.
ecL
handles shipping within Asia, and Sclafani notes that ecL
representatives are experienced in the nuances of Asian transportation.
They know how to comply with Chinese regulations and how to
get the sometimes difficult-to-obtain licenses required to
move products in-land. In addition, ecL's local relationships
enable the company to take advantage of the Greater China
logistics infrastructure. In Hong Kong, ecL has its own fleet
of trucks; in China and Taiwan, ecL outsources transportation.
And for CG companies whose items are being made in Asia, ecL's
services mean products need not travel round-trip to the U.S.
and back to Greater China.
For
cross-ocean shipping to Asia, ecL can provide assistance,
but Sclafani points out that many U.S. companies have their
own transportation providers and their own logistics group
to manage the ocean-crossing process. He says that more and
more companies are choosing air freight - especially for small,
high-value items - over slower ocean-carrier delivery.
Asked
about recent strains on U.S.-China relationships, Sclafani
affirms, "The recent tensions will
pass by. We do too much business with each other. Circumstances
today are completely different from the old traditional Cold
War situation."
Sclafani
is confident that China holds great promise as a marketplace
for American consumer goods, especially with the country's
imminent entrance into the WTO. He notes that with WTO membership,
tariffs that are as high as 65% for wines and 85% for jeans
will fall to 15%. He concludes, "China, with its 1.1
billion people, is a market U.S. companies should consider."
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