Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta time. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta time. Mostrar todas as mensagens

domingo, fevereiro 06, 2011

Pergunta ingénua do dia (parte II)

Continuado daqui.
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Em 1988, a revista Harvard Business Review publicou o artigo "Time - The Next Source of Competitive Advantage" escrito por George Stalk Jr.
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O artigo começa com:
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"Like competition itself, competitive advantage is a constantly moving target. For any company in any industry, the key is not to get stuck with a single simple notion of its source of advantage. The best competitors, the most successful ones, know how to keep moving and always stay on the cutting edge.
Today, time is on the cutting edge. The ways leading companies manage time--in production, in new product development and introduction, in sales and distribution--represent the most powerful new sources of competitive advantage." (Moi ici: Está sempre a mudar, ou antes, está sempre em evolução)
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(Moi ici: Interessante esta evolução histórica que se segue. Será que podemos generalizar e fazer um paralelismo?) "In the period immediately following World War II, Japanese companies used their low labor costs to gain entry to various industries. As wage rates rose and technology became more significant, the Japanese shifted first to scale-based strategies and then to focused factories to achieve advantage. The advent of just-in-time production brought with it a move to flexible factories, as leading Japanese companies sought both low cost and great variety in the market. Cutting-edge Japanese companies today are capitalizing on time as a critical source of competitive advantage: shortening the planning loop in the product development cycle and trimming process time in the factory--managing time the way most companies manage costs, quality, or inventory.
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In fact, as a strategic weapon, time is the equivalent of money, productivity, quality, even innovation. Managing time has enabled top Japanese companies not only to reduce their costs but also to offer broad product lines, cover more market segments, and upgrade the technological sophistication of their products. These companies are time-based competitors.
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From Low Wages to Variety Wars Since 1945, Japanese competitors have shifted their strategic focus at least four times. These early adaptations were straightforward; the shift to time-based competitive advantage is not nearly so obvious. It does, however, represent a logical evolution from the earlier stages."
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Há tempos descobri os livros da David Birnbaum que me mostraram números sobre a explosão de SKUs e o seu efeito no aumento da volatilidade e incerteza na previsão da procura.
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Pois bem, voltando ao artigo de 1988:
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"Today's new-generation companies compete with flexible manufacturing and rapid-response systems, expanding variety and increasing innovation. A company that builds its strategy on this cycle is a more powerful competitor than one with a traditional strategy based on low wages, scale, or focus. These older, cost-based strategies require managers to do whatever is necessary to drive down costs: move production to or source from a low-wage country; build new facilities or consolidate old plants to gain economies of scale; or focus operations down to the most economic subset of activities. These tactics reduce costs but at the expense of responsiveness. (Moi ici: Wrong move para quem lida com clientes que estão no ramo da moda ou da flexibilidade, por exemplo)
In contrast, strategies based on the cycle of flexible manufacturing, rapid response, expanding variety, and increasing innovation are time based. Factories are close to the customers they serve. Organization structures enable fast responses rather than low costs and control. Companies concentrate on reducing if not eliminating delays and using their response advantages to attract the most profitable customers."
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Aumento de SKUs, aumento da capacidade de escolha, aumento da diversidade, aumento da volatilidade e incerteza e...
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"Traditional manufacturing requires long lead times to resolve conflicts between various jobs or activities that require the same resources. The long lead times, in turn, require sales forecasts to guide planning. But sales forecasts are inevitably wrong; by definition they are guesses, however informed. Naturally, as lead times lengthen, the accuracy of sales forecasts declines. With more forecasting errors, inventories balloon and the need for safety stocks at all levels increases. Errors in forecasting also mean more unscheduled jobs that have to be expedited, thereby crowding out scheduled jobs. The need for longer lead times grows even greater and the planning loop expands even more, driving up costs, increasing delays, and creating system inefficiencies. (Moi ici: É esta realidade, a par do aumento de SKUs, que longe do prime-time dos media, está a re-criar as coisas para uma re-industrialização europeia, não para a massa, não para a escala, não para o volume, mas seguindo o padrão japonês retratado inicialmente)
Managers who find themselves trapped in the planning loop often respond by asking for better forecasts and longer lead times. In other words, they treat the symptoms and worsen the problem. The only way to break the planning loop is to reduce the consumption of time throughout the system; that will, in turn, cut the need for lead time, for estimates, for safety stocks, and all the rest. After all, if a company could ever drive its lead time all the way to zero, it would have to forecast only the next day's sales. While that idea of course is unrealistic, (Moi ici: Não há impossíveis. Como a forçar? Como a tornar possível?) successful time-based competitors in Japan and in the West have kept their lead times from growing and some have even reduced them, thereby diminishing the planning loop's damaging effects."
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"What distorts the system so badly is time: the lengthy delay between the event that creates the new demand and the time when the factory finally receives the information. The longer that delay, the more distorted is the view of the market. Those distortions reverberate throughout the system, producing disruption, waste, and inefficiency.
These distortions plague business today. To escape them, companies have a choice: they can produce to forecast or they can reduce the time delays in the flow of information and product through the system. The traditional solution is to produce to forecast. The new approach is to reduce time consumption.
Because time flows throughout the system, focusing on time-based competitive performance results in improvements across the board. Companies generally become time-based competitors by first correcting their manufacturing techniques, then fixing sales and distribution, and finally adjusting their approach to innovation. Ultimately, it becomes the basis for a company's overall strategy."
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Esta revolução do tempo, a par da subida dos salários chineses, da conflitualidade laboral na China, do yuan, do consumo doméstico chinês... não é compatível com o sonho do presidente da CIP.
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Em vez de fazer batota e promover a reflexão e a acção bottom-up a nível da micro-economia para aproveitarem o regresso da indústria à Europa, entretém-se com o que interessa às empresas do regime que vivem de rendas.




Continua.

sexta-feira, março 21, 2008

Macro economia vs micro economia?

Será impressão minha ou o ponto de vista da micro economia é mais optimista e mais realista?
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Aqui, referimos que 60% da produção portuguesa de mobiliário é dirigida para os mercados externos. Gente de carne e osso, agarrou a oportunidade de vender valor em vez de preço, identificou clientes-alvo (também eles de carne e osso, não abstracções estatísticas), apostou na evolução na cadeia de valor, desenvolveu novos produtos, abriu os olhos para o marketing e... voilá!

Será que quando um outsider olha para um sector industrial, tem tendência a colocar o preço acima de tudo e vê tudo por esse prisma?

Lembrei-me deste artigo na revista Time : "Twilight In Italy" publicado em Dezembro de 2005, e assinado por Peter Gumbel.

"Many of the thousands of small and medium-size companies that once gave the Italian economy its flexibility and dynamism are poorly equipped to deal with the challenges of a fast-changing world. Most don't have the scale, the funding or the commercial know-how to become global players. What they produce is beautiful, but it's neither particularly sophisticated nor difficult to replicate." Não creio que o problema seja a escala, ou sobretudo a escala. Por vezes fico a pensar se o sucesso chinês não será o canto do cisne, o estertor de um modelo de negócio baseado na produção em massa. Long tail, long tail...

"The Manzano entrepreneurs know they can't compete on price. But if they can find a way to carve out an upmarket niche for themselves--as the most successful chairmakers are doing--there's every reason to believe that Europeans and Chinese can coexist and flourish, building on their respective strengths."

"no one has much experience selling to customers other than the big German distributors that once snapped up as much as 70% of the district's output. ... "If I say three companies have true marketing departments, I'm exaggerating.""

Um dos empresários bem sucedidos optou por "And he has put a relentless focus on making his own branded products rather than manufacturing for other companies. In 1997, 35% of the firm's output was of no-name furniture; today it's 1.5%."

"The first thing we need to do in this global world is to have an identity. If we don't, we'll disappear,"

A despropósito, onde é que eu já vi isto "When Italian manufacturers ran into competitive problems in the past, there used to be an easy fix: currency devaluation, which made Italian exports cheaper relative to those of other countries. But that solution is no longer available, because Italy swapped the lira for the euro, which has risen against most other currencies, including the dollar."

terça-feira, abril 10, 2007

French Exodus

Hoje, ao final da tarde, ao chegar a casa, encontrei na caixa do correio mais um número da revista TIME.

A capa chamou-me logo a atenção: "The French Exodus (Europe)"
By PETER GUMBEL, Why a growing number of talented and ambitious young people are leaving France behind.

Alguns trechos desse artigo deviam fazer com que muito mais gente pensasse:

"an estimated 2.2 million French citizens, about 4% of the population, who have joined a wave of emigration. According to the Foreign Ministry, there has been a 40% increase in the number of those registering at French consulates abroad since 1995. "

""France is like an old lady. It is paralyzed by the fear of what it could lose.""

"Ségolène Royal wants to hand out $13,000 interest-free loans to aspiring entrepreneurs, and says she will create 500,000 state-funded jobs to get young people into the workforce." Caso para dizer, they just don't get it.

"The French diaspora isn't waiting. Emigrés are voting with their feet, and that has turned them into an election issue"

"Royal's Socialist Party briefly mooted whether to institute a tax on French who move abroad, but soon dropped the idea" ???????!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

"More than 7% of French university graduates in their late 20s are unemployed — one of the worst records in the European Union and about 50% higher than the E.U. average. Moreover, many of the jobs that are available to young people, even highly skilled ones, tend to be short-term and poorly paid. That's a consequence of a skewed labor market, which provides so much protection to full-time employees that firms are reluctant to hire people for anything other than temporary positions. "