UNILEVER THAI HOLDING LTD: The largest maker of consumer goods
in Thailand sees the economic downturn as the right time to prepare
for future increased demand.
Unilever, the consumer goods multinational, has been in Thailand
so long many see it as a local company.
Thailand
is extremely well placed to be a good base for serving Indochina.
We have certain operation in Vietnam, and in the long run Vietnam
would be a big enough market to start manufacturing there, but I
think countries like Cambodia and Laos can be serviced from here
RALPH KUGLER
chairman
The group established its first factory in Thailand in 1932 under
the name Siam Industries to make and distribute Lux beauty soap,
Sunlight laundry soap, margarine and edible fats.
But it had been selling products in Thailand much earlier. In 1908,
by Royal appointment, Lever Brothers, the parent of Siam Industries,
became the soap manufacturer for His Majesty King Rama V.
Siam Industries was renamed as Lever Brothers (Thailand) in 1954
and again as Unilever Thai Holding in 1997.
Although a foreign investor, the company has associated itself
so well with the Thai culture that people think of it as locally
owned. It takes this approach in all countries.
With more than 1,000 brands under its umbrella, consumers world-wide
find its products in their trolleys. In Thailand products such as
Breeze, Omo, Comfort, Lux, Dove, Sunlight, Vim, Lipton, Wall's,
SunSilk, Organics, Clinic, Pond's, Vaseline, Close-Up, Aim and Pepsodent
are household names.
With Asia accounting for 1 5 % of its total sales last year, Unilever
acknowledges that the
regional recession has trimmed its earnings growth. Even so, the
company reported half-year profits for 1998 of $1.456 billion.
As the largest manufacturer and distributor of consumer products
in Thailand, Unilever is the market leader in eight categories:
laundry, half-care, soap, household cleaning, deodorants, skin-care,
ice cream and tea.
Ralph Kugler, chairman of Unilever Thai Holdings, said it was difficult
to estimate the group's investment in Thailand, but it was certainly
"here to stay" and was expanding its
production base to meet an anticipated lift in demand when the economy
recovered.
"Unilever is committed to Thailand for the long term. We've
been here for 66 years and we plan to be here in 66 years' time,"
he said.
The group confirmed its confidence in Thailand by spearheading
a project to encourage foreign investment. In conjunction with the
British Embassy and Britain's Department of Trade and Industry,
it produced a video entitled United Kingdom: British Investment
in Thailand.
Promoted in London, the video encourages British businesses to
invest in Thailand by explaining the favourable long-term prospects.
At the launch, Mr Kugler gave a speech in which he praised economic
reforms in Thailand and urged foreigners to capitalise on the current
potential as Thailand would emerge strong from the recession.
"There is a window of opportunity today to capitalise on Thailand's
future potential. I suggest Thailand may turn out to be the strongest
'tiger' of all," he said, referring to the "Asian Tiger"
economies.
Mr Kugler plans a similar promotion in the Netherlands.
Unilever's operations in Thailand are divided into three categories:
home care, personal care, and food and beverage. It also makes and
distributes numerous products and chemicals for industrial use.
Unilever's innovation centres in Thailand develop hair-care and
laundry products, as well as ice-cream, for Southeast Asia.
Among the products introduced by these centres are Breeze detergent
in 1962, then Breeze colour detergent, Wall's Asian Delight ice-cream
and Organics shampoo.
Currently, all of Unilever's factories are at Lat Krabang, but
Mr Kugler is looking to expand these and move to sites outside Bangkok.
Thailand used to supply products to neighbouring countries such
as Laos and Cambodia and will do so again.
"Thailand is extremely well placed to be a good base for serving
Indochina. We have certain operations in Vietnam, and in the long
run Vietnain would be a big enough market to start manufacturing
there, but I think countries like Cambodia and Laos can be serviced
from here," Mr Kugler said.
Unilever is not immune to economic trends in each country in which
it operates as it relies on domestic demand. "Our margins are
definitely down," he said.
Therefore, the company is introducing what Mr Kugler calls "products
that the market demands", in other words those at budget prices.
Among the latest are Surf fabric detergent, fabric softener and
dishwasher. These are priced 20% lower than rival brands. Lux beauty
shower liquid is similarly positioned, along with some ice-creams.
Mr Kugler said cost-cutting was under way, but staff layoffs would
be the last resort as employees were the biggest asset for the company
and had been given intensive training.
Unilever has 2,800 employees in Thailand and frequently sends some
to learn from its operations in other countries including Britain,
the United States and Vietnam.
"By doing so we maintain our goal of being a multilocal-multinational,
which means bringing in the best of our international expertise,
but making sure that its absolutely right for Thai people,' he said.
The market for consumer products is said to be the most intense
of any industry in Thailand. But Mr Kugler said that was not a worry
as all companies were in the same boat.
"Consumer spending is down, so it's as tough for us as it
is for our competitors. But in a recession, the whole aspect of
competition disappears and all companies should join hands to try
to revive the economy rather than cut each others' throat,"
he said.
One way of reducing costs is the introduction of the Efficient
Consumer Response (ECR) system, which matches production with demand,
cuts lead time and eliminates excess inventories.
Companies using ECR bring products to consumers faster and at lower
costs. All consumer product makers in Thailand are introducing the
system, a move that is estimated to save the industry 12 billion
baht annually.
Another way to save money is Total Productive Maintenance (TPM)
which reduces manufacturing costs and improves quality from raw
material stage to delivery of the finished product.
Despite the recession, Thailand was contributing its fair share
to the bottom-line revenue of the parent firm, Mr Kugler said. Thailand,
India and China were the most important markets in the region.
Unilever Thai Holding Ltd
Major shareholders: Unilever
Main businesses: Manufacturing
and marketing consumer goods
Worldwide
Headquarters: Britain and the
Netherlands
Number of countries: 90
Number of employees: 270,000
1997 gross revenue: 29.76 billion
1997 net profit: 3.33 million