China Daily (Hong Kong)

Pencil use keeps old firm sharp

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World, p12

NUREMBERG, Germany — If the digital revolution is going to consign anything to the dustbin of history, you might think the humble pencil would be a leading contender.

However, with such pastimes as doodling and coloring being touted as stressbust­ers to escape the daily grind and the relentless lure of smartphone­s, German pencil-maker Faber-Castell is thriving 256 years after it was founded.

“We see that people with all the digital devices around go back to a more manual way of expressing themselves,” said Daniel Rogger, chief executive of the family owned firm.

“It’s like a countertre­nd to digitaliza­tion in terms of product usage and of course that’s something that we love to see.”

The fashion for adult coloring, where people have books of different themes and patterns to complete, like children, lifted Faber-Castell to record sales of 667 million euros ($829 million) in 2016/2017.

While that fad has now ebbed, new trends such as “bullet journals” — a combinatio­n of writing to-do lists and artistic doodling — will keep sales stable in 2017/2018, Rogger said.

Faber-Castell is even seeking to turn the online world to its advantage by setting up a digital gallery.

It launched the platform last year in Brazil — one of its biggest markets — where artists can share their work and creative ideas.

It is also setting up fine art academies in Japan and Lebanon modeled on the one in Stein, outside Nuremberg, where Faber-Castell makes 150 million colored pencils a year.

A larger factory in Brazil produces more than 2 billion each year. Laid end to end, its annual production would go round the world 10 times.

The company has been in the same family for nine generation­s, and over that time it has faced repeated threats to its existence.

And, in a case of what today might be called digital disruption, the invention of electronic calculator in the 1970s destroyed Faber-Castell’s sideline making slide rules virtually overnight.

For Daniel Rogger, the digital era and social media presents an opportunit­y.

“It enables us to get very close to our customers, to our consumers, to interact, to get direct feedback on our products, on trends,” said Rogger, a 49-year-old Swiss with a background in the luxury watch industry.

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 ?? MICHAELA REHLE / REUTERS ?? An employee controls wood-cased pencils during their production at Faber-Castell manufactur­er in Stein, Germany, on Jan 16.
MICHAELA REHLE / REUTERS An employee controls wood-cased pencils during their production at Faber-Castell manufactur­er in Stein, Germany, on Jan 16.

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