(1) Sam Grobart, My Fridge Is Smarter Than Yours.
www.businessweek.com/articles/20 ... iance-maker-by-2015
Quote:
“The technology industry hums with disruptive new companies that enter the market by taking share away from others or creating markets of their own. But kitchen appliances? The brands that dominate the field today—Whirlpool, General Electric, Kenmore—are the same names we’ve known for decades. Samsung Electronics plans to upend that.
“It’s [Samsung’s] already the fastest-growing appliance brand in the US, having jumped from 2.3 percent in market share to more than 10.5 percent over the last five years. ‘We’re on track,’ says BK Yoon, Samsung’s co-chief executive officer in charge of consumer products such as TVs and appliances. But grabbing the top spot from appliance leader Whirlpool won’t be so easy. Samsung’s appliance-related revenue totals roughly $12 billion a year; Whirlpool took in almost $18 billion in 2012. (Whirlpool declined to comment.) In the US especially, ‘Samsung has a way to go,’ says Eric Voyer, a vice president and former appliance-industry analyst at the Stevenson Co, a market research firm.
“The company’s high-end refrigerator has a target price of $6,000, almost 50 percent more than the most expensive Kenmore model. Currently, Samsung’s average price for an appliance is $1,046 in the US, according to the Stevenson Co. The industry average is $702. For Samsung to become the world leader in appliances, it will have to broaden its appeal with cheaper models, says Bob Baird, vice president for appliance merchandising at Home Depot. ‘Right now they’re a premium brand, but you can’t be No 1 without capturing the core of the market,’ says Baird, whose company began selling Samsung products at the end of 2012.
“One area in which Samsung may have an edge is consumer recognition that extends beyond appliances. The company’s success in TVs and mobile devices means that far more people are familiar with Samsung than ever before. In 2012, Samsung spent $29 million on US appliance advertising, according to data from Kantar Media, which tracks ad spending. That’s less than the $33 million appliance archrival LG Electronics spent on home goods, and a lot less than the $54 million spent by Whirlpool. Zoom out [and look at the bigger picture of Samsung’s US advertising budget all ALL brands, including cellphones], though, and Samsung’s advertising dwarfs that of the other appliance makers: In 2012 the company spent $600 million on ads overall.
Note:
(a) summary underneath the title in print: Samsung aims to dominate the appliance business by 2015
(b)
(i) Kenmore Appliances
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenmore_Appliances
(a Sears brand)
(ii) For Kenmore history, see
Still Renovative After All These Years; Celebrating Kenmore Brand's 100th year of renovation. Kenmore, undated
www.kenmore.com/innovationtimeline/nb-120000000301791
("1913 The name 'Kenmore' makes its debut on sewing machines")
(c) For US market share of household appliances, see
James R Hagerty and Min-jeong Lee, Samsung's Phones Help Sell Home Appliances; Reputation and advertising of trendy devices boost refrigerators and washers in US. Wall Street Journal, Aug 6, 2013
online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424127887323664204578609892263756014
View only the bar chart whose heading is:
Korean Surge[:] US market share, in dollar terms, for major home appliances
(2Q08: Whirlpool > GE> Electrolux > LG > Samsung; 2Q13: Whirlpool > GE> LG> Samsung > Electrolux)
(d) When the Economist lavished praise on Haier a few month back, I scratched my head. I do not know Haier’s corporate culture, but OUTSIDE China: it is not well known, highly regarded; sales not among the top rankings.
(e) Beyond China: Can a New Acquisition Help Haier Crack Japan? Knowledge@Wharton, Nov 9, 2011.
knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/beyond-china-can-a-new-acquisition-help-haier-crack-japan/
Quote:
“It's not often that loss-making companies are enticing acquisition targets. But there is good reason why Haier Group has just shelled out 10 billion yen (US$132 million) for Japan’s Sanyo Electric, a company that's been in the red since 2005.
“Although Haier reigns as an appliance-making juggernaut at home in China, growth abroad has been tough. * * * But being big in China is one thing; being big globally is another. Haier is the world’s largest refrigerator manufacturer and the second-largest manufacturer of washing machines by volume, but that's largely due to an enormous home market, which accounts for most of the company's sales.
“Can Haier succeed where many have failed? Consider computer maker Lenovo. Similar to Haier, Lenovo wanted to become a global player. Buying a well-established foreign brand appeared to be the fastest route to that goal. But after Lenovo purchased IBM's worldwide PC business in 2004, the American firm lost market share in Japan. To regain ground, Lenovo then bought 51%of NEC’s computer business earlier this year.
“Wharton management professor Saikat Chaudhuri notes that although Haier has not been able to break into the Japanese market, they're not the only ones. "American firms have also had a hard time penetrating that market," he says. A case in point: GE, which had only 0.5% market share in refrigerators in Japan in 2010, according to London-based Euromonitor International. Euromonitor reported that by 2010, Haier had only a 0.2% share of Japan's major electric appliances market, with sales totaling 10 billion yen [despite Haier’s efforts: “Haier's arrival in Japan. In 2002, it set up a sales unit in Osaka in western Japan, and formed a joint venture with Sanyo to market Haier’s white goods in the country].
“Haier's share in Japan's washing machine market is currently close to zero, and will be around 15% thanks to Sanyo, says Cristina Baus, a Euromonitor consumer applianceanalyst. Panasonic led the market in 2010 at 34.9%
“Korean and Chinese manufacturers have made the mistake of relying on product designs that imitate their Japanese rivals rather than being innovative, says [Tomoo] MARUKAWA 丸川 知雄 of Tokyo University.
*Jim Breen’s online Japanese-English dictionary:
* tomo 友(P); 朋 【とも】 (n): “friend”
or * tomo 共 【とも】 (n): "together with <両国とも今は平和な状態にある。 Both countries are now at peace>"
* o 雄; 男; 夫; 牡 【お】 (n): "male [as in animals]; man"
(The “oo” in the given name is NOT a long vowel of “o.”)
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