Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ignore me, Chinese exec tells firms

Haier’s acquisitio­ns, such as GE Appliances, on their own

- JOE McDONALD

QINGDAO, China — After Haier Group bought the General Electric Co. appliance unit last year, the Chinese company’s chairman said he gave its American managers unusual orders: Ignore me.

Zhang Ruimin built Haier from a failing refrigerat­or factory in the 1980s into the biggest maker of major appliances. Now, he is trying to transform a traditiona­l manufactur­er with 60,000 employees in 25 countries into a nimble, Internet Age seller of consumer goods and services from Web- linked washing machines to food delivery.

To do that, Zhang has broken up Haier into a “networked company” of hundreds of independen­t business units with orders to act like customer- focused startups. He said GE Appliances will be given almost total autonomy.

“One of their senior managers asked, ‘ How are you going to control us?’” said Zhang in an interview at Haier headquarte­rs in this eastern Chinese city. “I said, ‘ I’m not your boss. I’m not your leader. The leader is one person: the user.’”

Zhang, who at 68 is still on the job a decade after many Chinese chief executives have retired, is leading Haier through changes to compete in a fast- evolving global market — changes that now include GE Appliances and its 12,000 employees, most of them in the United States.

Haier’s approach is an example of a wave of management experiment­s by Chinese companies as they expand into global markets.

The founder of e- commerce giant Alibaba Group, Jack Ma, announced plans in 2013 to split it into 25 divisions to revive the innovative

spirit of its startup days. After buying Volvo Cars in 2012, automaker Geely Holdings left Swedish managers to run the company while they also cooperate on developing cars its Chinese brands might export.

Companies that grew rapidly during China’s boom of the past decade also are spending heavily to invent or buy technology to improve their competitiv­e edge as the economy cools.

Midea Group, another Chinese appliance maker, bought one of the leading makers of industrial robots, Germany’s Kuka, last year.

Haier’s tie- up with GE Appliances should help both companies, said Dinesh Kithany, the chief appliance industry analyst for IHS Markit. Haier gets GE technology while the American brand gets access to Haier’s distributi­on network to expand its global presence and can learn from faster- paced Chinese product developmen­t.

“GE Appliances is a perfect decision for them,” Kithany said.

Zhang started his overhaul of Haier in 2005, splitting structures with thousands of employees into units sometimes as small as a few dozen people to focus on a single appliance or service.

Haier’s headquarte­rs acts as a venture capital investor: Employees propose new businesses and, if Zhang and other executives like them, receive financial backing. They have to hit financial targets but are left to manage the venture.

That network has expanded to include ventures with outside entreprene­urs who get money and other support from Haier.

“We don’t want just to produce products,” said Zhang. “We want to produce creators.”

At GE Appliances, no managers from China moved in after the $ 5.4 billion acquisitio­n closed in June. The only public change was three words added to the bottom of the U. S. brand’s website: “A Haier Company.”

Haier took a similar approach at Fisher & Paykel, a New Zealand appliance brand acquired in 2012.

Haier has tried to speed up product developmen­t by using the Internet to ask potential customers for suggestion­s, an approach taken by Chinese smartphone brands. The company said a new appliance can go from drawing board to market in as little as one year, down from more than three.

Zhang’s management changes “are more impressive than we see anywhere,” said William A. Fischer, a professor at the IMD business school in Switzerlan­d who has followed the company for a decade.

“He trusts his employees to play more of a leadership role,” said Fischer.

Fischer said a group of European executives he took to Haier headquarte­rs two years ago refused to believe its decentrali­zed style could work.

“I was struck by how daring Haier was in their thinking. And the people I was working with were hostages to very traditiona­l ways of working,” said Fischer.

The strategy appears to be paying off. Last year’s profit rose 12.8 percent from 2015 to $ 2.9 billion on revenue that increased 6.8 percent to $ 29.3 billion.

“Some of my contacts at Fisher & Paykel say they are better off now under Haier than they were on their own,” Kithany said.

Haier’s decentrali­zation could help at a time when President Donald Trump is promising to raise U. S. duties on Chinese goods and when pressure for trade restrictio­ns is growing in Europe.

Years ago, Haier identified seven “economic protection zones” including North America and the European Union that might limit trade, Zhang said. It set up factories in each one.

Haier gained a U. S. foothold in the 1990s when its mini- refrigerat­ors became a hit with college students. In 2000, it became one of the earliest Chinese manufactur­ers with U. S. operations when it opened a factory in Camden, S. C.

 ?? AP/ MARK SCHIEFELBE­IN ?? Factory workers use torches to complete air- conditioni­ng condenser units on an assembly line at a Haier factory in Jiaozhou near Qingdao in eastern China’s Shangdong province.
AP/ MARK SCHIEFELBE­IN Factory workers use torches to complete air- conditioni­ng condenser units on an assembly line at a Haier factory in Jiaozhou near Qingdao in eastern China’s Shangdong province.

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