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Ending West's dominance in the power tools market

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Ending West's dominance in the power tools market
China Daily, July 25, 2016

6c0b840a2e3818ffc9150c.jpg
Don Gao, president of Positec, stands in a showroom for the Chinese company's Worx-branded tools, which are now gaining traction in the US and European markets. [Photo/China Daily]


Chances are high that on your next visit to a hardware store in the United States, you may notice that Chinese fall clean-up tools are among the best-selling products, giving Germany's Bosch, the world's top power-tool maker, stiff competition.

Before you attribute the sales to presumably lower prices of made-in-China goods, take a reality check: Worx products are costlier than Bosch's.

That's not all. The cordless, lightweight Worx grass-trimmer won an award from the US Electronic Retailing Association in 2010 for its quality and innovation.

There's more. GFK, a European research and consulting company, said in a report that some costlier Worx products outsell Bosch in the latter's home market Germany.

The person behind the brand is Don Gao, president of Positec, a leading Chinese maker of power tools, lawn and garden equipment, and accessories.

"It's not very easy to make inroads into some well-established markets such as the US, Germany and the UK because customers are very loyal to local brands. But we did it, step by step," he said.

When it was founded in 1994, Positec was simply a trading company engaged in exports of power tools, including hand drills, trimmers, chainsaws and mowers.

Business was good, spurred by the country's foreign trade. But Gao knew the company had to grow beyond simple trading. For the long run, Positec had to have its own products.

So, in 1995, Gao set up a factory in Suzhou in Jiangsu province, East China. The plant made products for large home improvement retailers overseas such as Sears, B&Q and OBI.

Positec was clearly not aiming to be a glorified original equipment manufacturer. OEMs typically dream of making products for industry leaders such as Bosch and Black & Decker. But Gao was aiming higher. Not for him an OEM at the bottom of an industrial value chain.

"We have no say in pricing because you always find someone sets prices lower than yours. The cut-throat competition in China squeezed profits of many traditional producers," he said.

He asked himself: "Why can't we have our own brands?"

In 1999, he decided to create his own brand of power tools. "The shift meant that your old partners became your competitors, so you faced a huge risk of losing orders."

The risk was real and, to be sure, huge: turnover that year plunged by $50 million. Some erstwhile partners even threatened to withdraw their existing orders. "We said, 'Go ahead'."

After several years' efforts and research, Gao finally launched a brand called Worx in 2004. In the same year, Positec acquired Rockwell, a well-known US brand founded in 1945.

Yin Jie, an expert in brand management and a consultant to many consumer goods makers, said that Positec, in order to avoid direct competition with local brands, took a shortcut to gain local resources in the US market. "The Rockwell acquisition was a quick way to squeeze into a foreign market and help the company build up reputation and a distribution network.

"Sometimes, we've good products but we don't know how to promote them in a new market."

But Positec probably knew. It spent some 15 percent of its annual revenue on TV commercials and online social media promotions.

The campaigns worked so well US sales almost doubled, even during the housing crisis from 2008 to 2010. Gao said the key to winning a marketing battle lies in what he calls product innovation.

"Consumers don't care about the technologies you are putting into products. They only care about whether it works well when they are cleaning up their gardens or assembling their own bookshelves," he said.

A Forbes report said Positec now spends 6 percent of its revenue on innovation, much higher than Black & Decker's less than 2 percent and Bosch's 1.8 percent.

In recent years, it has invested 1 billion yuan on innovation and launched more than 100 products every year, most of them complete with smartphone applications that allow remote control as well as access to product information and after-sales service.

To keep up with the latest trends in power-tool products, Gao spends one-third of his time every year travelling around in the US and Europe and attending various fairs.

"If there's a new launch of a product in the marketplace, I want to know," he said.

The company has a distribution network and operations in 13 countries and three research and development centers in China, Italy and Australia.

**

This story is so inspiring, I could not help tagging you guys all.

@cirr , @Beidou2020 , @oprih , @Chinese-Dragon , @Sinopakfriend , @ahojunk , @cnleio , @AndrewJin , @beijingwalker , @Beast , @yusheng , @xunzi , @ChineseTiger1986 , @terranMarine , @Jlaw et al.
 
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This is really good news for Positec. You need to develop a good product with good value and then market it properly.

China needs more companies like Positec, Huawei, DJI, etc and visionaries like Don Gao, Jack Ma, etc.

The perception of "Made in China" is changing.

Six years ago, when China and HSR are mentioned in the same sentence, it's always not so favourable. Western media will say things like, "not profitable", "stealing other technologies", etc. You can't steal when yours is the best.

Today, any western journalist trying this sort of negative stunts with regards to HSR will be laughed out the door.
 
. .
LOWE’S NAMES POSITEC
“INNOVATOR OF THE YEAR”


Lowes-2-img1-562e616570da88af77b2bd94a34364c3.jpg


Every year Lowe’s recognizes its four most supportive business partners through the ‘Supplier of The Year’ program. In 2009, for the very first time, Lowe’s has introduced an additional program—Innovator of the Year—to reward a single vendor who has demonstrated innovation and promoted innovative and creative thinking in its product and merchandising programs with the retailer.

Positec is only the second vendor to receive this honor and most notably, Positec garnered this prestigious award after only its first year of business with Lowe’s.

***

WWF AWARDS POSITEC WITH THE PLATINUM LCMP AWARD

The World Wildlife Found (WWF) has presented Positec with the Platinum Low Carbon Manufacturing Program award.

The award presented by the WWF acknowledges Positec’s actual commitment to the environment. The Company expresses this commitment by designing consumer products that allow end users to reduce their own carbon footprint, also by actively reducing the company’s manufacturing footprint, cutting greenhouse gas emissions within its supply chain and by setting best practices for energy efficiency.
 
. .
LOWE’S NAMES POSITEC
“INNOVATOR OF THE YEAR”

Lowes-2-img1-562e616570da88af77b2bd94a34364c3.jpg


Every year Lowe’s recognizes its four most supportive business partners through the ‘Supplier of The Year’ program. In 2009, for the very first time, Lowe’s has introduced an additional program—Innovator of the Year—to reward a single vendor who has demonstrated innovation and promoted innovative and creative thinking in its product and merchandising programs with the retailer.

Positec is only the second vendor to receive this honor and most notably, Positec garnered this prestigious award after only its first year of business with Lowe’s.

***

WWF AWARDS POSITEC WITH THE PLATINUM LCMP AWARD

The World Wildlife Found (WWF) has presented Positec with the Platinum Low Carbon Manufacturing Program award.

The award presented by the WWF acknowledges Positec’s actual commitment to the environment. The Company expresses this commitment by designing consumer products that allow end users to reduce their own carbon footprint, also by actively reducing the company’s manufacturing footprint, cutting greenhouse gas emissions within its supply chain and by setting best practices for energy efficiency.
.
Two good awards won by Positec, especially the second one.

I am sure Positec will win more awards in the future.
 
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This is really good news for Positec. You need to develop a good product with good value and then market it properly.

China needs more companies like Positec, Huawei, DJI, etc and visionaries like Don Gao, Jack Ma, etc.

The perception of "Made in China" is changing.

Six years ago, when China and HSR are mentioned in the same sentence, it's always not so favourable. Western media will say things like, "not profitable", "stealing other technologies", etc. You can't steal when yours is the best.

Today, any western journalist trying this sort of negative stunts with regards to HSR will be laughed out the door.
Becos China innovate in HSR building that speed up construction and save huge cost that competitor has no way to challenge China HSR. Our train is also average speed faster and more stable than any peers. :enjoy:

 
.
Becos China innovate in HSR building that speed up construction and save huge cost that competitor has no way to challenge China HSR. Our train is also average speed faster and more stable than any peers. :enjoy:

Breaking the temporary western dominance

Tunnel boring machines
(TBMs)
U10553P27T1D816332F3DT20141229072807.jpg

U10553P27T1D816332F26DT20141229072807.jpg


中国铁建重工副总经理、TBM总设计师程永亮介绍说:“目标工程如果采用传统的隧道施工工法,每月只能掘进不到150米,而采用这种先进的TBM,每月可掘进600米以上,大大提高了效率。这种国产TBM每台售价约1.7亿元,比同级别的进口TBM至少便宜5000万元,施工寿命达30公里,性价比高,优势明显。”

据介绍,这台敞开式TBM由中国铁建重工集团联合浙江大学、中南大学、天津大学、中铁十八局等共同研发,拥有自主知识产权,成功填补了我国大直径全断面硬岩隧道掘进机研制的空白,是大型高端装备制造领域的重大突破。

Co-invented by China Railway Construction Corporation (CRCC) with Zhejiang Uni, Tianjin Uni, Central South Uni, etc.
 
.
Unlike SK or JP China has a huge domestic market. The first phase of development/industrialisation was focused on directed towards all the building blocks of a developed economy.

Remeber, please, when / where China started and came from. Now the second phase of industrialisation has started. More and more high quality products and services are emerging.

Chinese companies have invested a huge sum of money in quality control and assurance.

The results we are beigning to see today are result of last ten years efforts.

Great going...very pleased to see such news coming more often.

Only thing that Chinese companies have been lacking is marketing and branding. But this is slowly chaging as well.

Opposition will always throw the mud of cheap or copy like things... we must keep going and give them run for their money.

In the end it is the customer that decides what is a good product.

Brilliant times ahead.
 
.
Unlike SK or JP China has a huge domestic market. The first phase of development/industrialisation was focused on directed towards all the building blocks of a developed economy.

Remeber, please, when / where China started and came from. Now the second phase of industrialisation has started. More and more high quality products and services are emerging.

Chinese companies have invested a huge sum of money in quality control and assurance.

The results we are beigning to see today are result of last ten years efforts.

Great going...very pleased to see such news coming more often.

Only thing that Chinese companies have been lacking is marketing and branding. But this is slowly chaging as well.

Opposition will always throw the mud of cheap or copy like things... we must keep going and give them run for their money.

In the end it is the customer that decides what is a good product.

Brilliant times ahead.

Everyone can trash talk China all they want.

They won't stop China.
Simple as that.
 
. .
Everyone can trash talk China all they want.

They won't stop China.
Simple as that.

I guess the gridlock/bottleneck, or whatever, in innovation and marketing/image making is being slowly overcome.

China's new venture capitalists/innovators/visionaries are realizing the world is wide open and China has resources... money, know-how, industrial base, logistics, labor...

They just need to go out and explore.
 
.
BOSCH is now run of the mill tools..only some of their made in germany products are good..everything else is made in china crap..and POSITEC is taking advantage of their weakness..
 
.
Ending West's dominance in the power tools market
China Daily, July 25, 2016

6c0b840a2e3818ffc9150c.jpg
Don Gao, president of Positec, stands in a showroom for the Chinese company's Worx-branded tools, which are now gaining traction in the US and European markets. [Photo/China Daily]


Chances are high that on your next visit to a hardware store in the United States, you may notice that Chinese fall clean-up tools are among the best-selling products, giving Germany's Bosch, the world's top power-tool maker, stiff competition.

Before you attribute the sales to presumably lower prices of made-in-China goods, take a reality check: Worx products are costlier than Bosch's.

That's not all. The cordless, lightweight Worx grass-trimmer won an award from the US Electronic Retailing Association in 2010 for its quality and innovation.

There's more. GFK, a European research and consulting company, said in a report that some costlier Worx products outsell Bosch in the latter's home market Germany.

The person behind the brand is Don Gao, president of Positec, a leading Chinese maker of power tools, lawn and garden equipment, and accessories.

"It's not very easy to make inroads into some well-established markets such as the US, Germany and the UK because customers are very loyal to local brands. But we did it, step by step," he said.

When it was founded in 1994, Positec was simply a trading company engaged in exports of power tools, including hand drills, trimmers, chainsaws and mowers.

Business was good, spurred by the country's foreign trade. But Gao knew the company had to grow beyond simple trading. For the long run, Positec had to have its own products.

So, in 1995, Gao set up a factory in Suzhou in Jiangsu province, East China. The plant made products for large home improvement retailers overseas such as Sears, B&Q and OBI.

Positec was clearly not aiming to be a glorified original equipment manufacturer. OEMs typically dream of making products for industry leaders such as Bosch and Black & Decker. But Gao was aiming higher. Not for him an OEM at the bottom of an industrial value chain.

"We have no say in pricing because you always find someone sets prices lower than yours. The cut-throat competition in China squeezed profits of many traditional producers," he said.

He asked himself: "Why can't we have our own brands?"

In 1999, he decided to create his own brand of power tools. "The shift meant that your old partners became your competitors, so you faced a huge risk of losing orders."

The risk was real and, to be sure, huge: turnover that year plunged by $50 million. Some erstwhile partners even threatened to withdraw their existing orders. "We said, 'Go ahead'."

After several years' efforts and research, Gao finally launched a brand called Worx in 2004. In the same year, Positec acquired Rockwell, a well-known US brand founded in 1945.

Yin Jie, an expert in brand management and a consultant to many consumer goods makers, said that Positec, in order to avoid direct competition with local brands, took a shortcut to gain local resources in the US market. "The Rockwell acquisition was a quick way to squeeze into a foreign market and help the company build up reputation and a distribution network.

"Sometimes, we've good products but we don't know how to promote them in a new market."

But Positec probably knew. It spent some 15 percent of its annual revenue on TV commercials and online social media promotions.

The campaigns worked so well US sales almost doubled, even during the housing crisis from 2008 to 2010. Gao said the key to winning a marketing battle lies in what he calls product innovation.

"Consumers don't care about the technologies you are putting into products. They only care about whether it works well when they are cleaning up their gardens or assembling their own bookshelves," he said.

A Forbes report said Positec now spends 6 percent of its revenue on innovation, much higher than Black & Decker's less than 2 percent and Bosch's 1.8 percent.

In recent years, it has invested 1 billion yuan on innovation and launched more than 100 products every year, most of them complete with smartphone applications that allow remote control as well as access to product information and after-sales service.

To keep up with the latest trends in power-tool products, Gao spends one-third of his time every year travelling around in the US and Europe and attending various fairs.

"If there's a new launch of a product in the marketplace, I want to know," he said.

The company has a distribution network and operations in 13 countries and three research and development centers in China, Italy and Australia.

**

This story is so inspiring, I could not help tagging you guys all.

@cirr , @Beidou2020 , @oprih , @Chinese-Dragon , @Sinopakfriend , @ahojunk , @cnleio , @AndrewJin , @beijingwalker , @Beast , @yusheng , @xunzi , @ChineseTiger1986 , @terranMarine , @Jlaw et al.

I've heard of Worx brand but it's not considered a high end product at least in Canada. The way things work here is that they need to sponsor home renovations shows that show the trades workers using their products on TV.

I've never used a Worx product but from what I hear from friends who are in trade business, the reason they would pay more for expensive tool is if the vital parts are not made of rubber or plastic. They want to see manufacturers use metal. They used to purchase DeWalt but now many trades people are buying Milwaukee. DeWalt shot themselves in the foot by using cheaper plastic and rubber parts to replace what was once metal parts.
 
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BOSCH is now run of the mill tools..only some of their made in germany products are good..everything else is made in china crap..and POSITEC is taking advantage of their weakness..

That's definitely a perception that needs to be broken and do away with.

Before you attribute the sales to presumably lower prices of made-in-China goods, take a reality check: Worx products are costlier than Bosch's.
 
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