A Free-Reprint Article Written by: Martin Harshberger 

Article Title: 
Can the US Furniture Industry Compete Globally?

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Article Description:
I witnessed the decline of the U.S. Steel Industry first
hand. I also participated in the rapid market shifts in the
computer and high-tech manufacturing industries. There are
many parallels with the furniture industry and those
industries. So to answer the question, can the U.S.
Furniture Industry compete globally? YES and NO!


Additional Article Information:
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699 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2010-01-14 12:00:00

Written By:     Martin Harshberger
Copyright:      2010
Contact Email:  mailto:[email protected]


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Can the US Furniture Industry Compete Globally?
Copyright (c) 2010 Martin Harshberger
Measurable Results LLC
http://www.bottomlinecoach.com/



Here in North Mississippi that's the question everyone seems to
be asking. I'm sure they are asking it in other areas such as
North Carolina as well.

My impression is that folks just don't believe they can.

I witnessed the decline of the U.S. Steel Industry first hand. I
also participated in the rapid market shifts in the computer and
high-tech manufacturing industries.

There are many parallels with the furniture industry and those
industries.

So to answer the question, can the U.S. Furniture Industry
compete globally?

YES and NO!

If it's to be business as usual the answer is no. We simply
cannot do things the way they've been done the past fifty years
and compete with the low cost imports from places like China.

Let's face it, labor at an average of .69 cents an hour, no
environmental or worker protection requirements, low overhead,
add up to an insurmountable list of obstacles to address head-on
and win.

I read recently that one Furniture Trade Organization plans to
petition the government to put protective tariffs on imports from
China. While action like this is certainly warranted to protect
domestic manufacturers against "dumping", that is selling their
products below cost to gain market share, it is never a long term
solution. The steel industry has secured government protection on
several occasions and instead of using the time and money gained
to revamp their operations, they did nothing different, and we
all know the result.

So what's the answer?

First it is to realize that foreign competitors succeed in our
market because there is an opportunity to do so in the absence of
differentiation.

They simply copy what we make, ship it here and sell it cheaper.

We then compete on that lower price point, and rather than
differentiate, we chase them.

Just look at any furniture advertisement, is there anything other
than low cost highlighted?

 * Delivery?

 * Warranty?

 * Customer service?

 * Quality?

 * Features?

All ignored, just cheap!

I read an article on this very subject a while ago, and the
writer quoted the old comic character Pogo, "We have met the
enemy and he is us".

We need to level the playing field.

Start with understanding what we have that the off-shore
producers don't?

 * Location, geographic proximity

 * Design capabilities

 * Quality track record

 * Customer service

 * R and D

 * Higher productivity per worker

 * More and better automation

The Chinese have low production costs due solely to cheap labor.

Why do we allow them to drive us to compete on the one single
advantage they have over us?

It's time far a strategic renewal of the U.S. Furniture
industry. We need to rethink the entire supply chain;

 * New business models

 * Supply channels

 * Manufacturing techniques

 * Innovation / information instead of inventory

 * Quick ship / build to order

 * Innovate or evaporate!

We need to move away from commodity products that are mass
produced at lower and lower costs, and develop niche markets that
will pay a premium for quick ship, some customization, and
quality.

We need to develop strategic supplier agreements and take
advantage of the furniture manufacturing clusters that exist
around the country.

Simply put we need to develop a market that capitalizes on our
strengths and exposes their weaknesses, not continue to try to
compete head-on against their one strength.

The U.S. market for home furnishings is the largest in the world
and it's ours. We need to innovate and plan to drive that
market, not follow others.

U.S. manufacturers need to take responsibility for their own
destiny. We need to define the market, set the standards based on
ours strengths and make off-shore manufacturers compete on our
terms.

Will it work for the entire market? Of course not. There will
always be buyers looking for "cookie cutter" product based
solely on price.

But there also has to be a huge market looking for quality goods,
with some level of personalization, delivered in a timely
fashion. It exists for other products, look at the automotive
industry. People buy cars to make a statement about themselves,
do we think they wouldn't furnish and decorate their homes with
the same goal in mind?

We need to decide what market we're in and strategically plan to
dominate it. 




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Martin Harshberger is Managing Partner of Measurable Results LLC.
Marty specializes in strategic planning, pre- and post-merger 
integration, as well as business process improvement. 
He can be reached at 662-844-9088 or by email at: 
mailto:[email protected] 
His new book Bottom Line Focus is available on Amazon 
and his website: http://www.bottomlinecoach.com/


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