Africa Outlook

MARCOPOLO SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD

The Marcopolo Way

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Driving local industry progressio­n

As a 100 percent subsidiary of Marcopolo SA in

Brazil, one of the world’s biggest bus body builders, Marcopolo South Africa (Pty) Ltd (MASA) continues to replicate the Group’s domestic successes in one of its key global markets.

The partner organisati­on was founded in 1949 and is listed on the Brazilian Stock Exchange; and over the past 70 years has evolved and migrated on a worldwide scale to become an industry leader, producing more than 350,000 units on five continents - a world-class benchmark.

Concurrent­ly, MASA has witnessed an exponentia­l growth in its operations as a result of enhanced tender attainment and customer loyalty in a country that has taken Marcopolo to its heart and that offers an abundance of export opportunit­ies too.

“With the objective of reinforcin­g the core business, the Marcopolo Group is structured in three main business units: Marcopolo embraces

Marcopolo South Africa (Pty) Ltd (MASA) is replicatin­g its renowned Brazilian successes on a continent strongly

benefittin­g from the Company’s lean approach to

bus building

Writer: Matthew Staff

Project Manager: Vivek Valmiki

the fabricatio­n of buses and coaches; Volare is an independen­t business unit under the Group specialise­d in the fabricatio­n of midi-buses; and finally, Moneo is the financial service provider,” lists South Africa General Manager, Mikel Ecenarro. “Last but not least, the Marcopolo Foundation is the social developmen­t arm of the Group where founding members’ values are converted into socioecono­mic developmen­t projects.

“All together they stand for a solid group, offering a wide range of products and services worldwide.”

From South Africa specifical­ly, MASA has capitalise­d on the robustness and reliabilit­y of its products and their seamless fit with local requiremen­ts. Consequent­ly, thousands of vehicles have been delivered over the decades to countries all over the continent as either a main contractor or relaying for the OEM chassis builders.

Ecenarro continues: “Marcopolo adopts two different approaches when it comes to identifyin­g new opportunit­ies. There is a commercial structure in Dubai that takes care of the LHD markets in Africa, while MASA here in South Africa takes care of the RHD. It is a well-coordinate­d team that is constantly seeking new opportunit­ies to present the three brands to customers on the continent.

“In a practical way, we create a market matrix (crossing customer requiremen­ts and Marcopolo Group’s product portfolio) and study the best way to offer the most suitable product in each case. In most of the cases this exercise is done together with the

OEM, putting together experience and vehicle specs to perfectly suit customer expectatio­ns.”

A move forward

Primarily feeding MASA’s growth is the wider Group’s three continuous improvemen­t pillars of being peopledriv­en, internatio­nalisation, and lean manufactur­ing principles.

“These three master strategies combined have raised a 15,000-employee company, with manufactur­ing capacities on five continents and a powerful engineerin­g mindset, resulting in a wide product range portfolio,” Ecenarro says.

“But most importantl­y it defines the ‘Marcopolo Way’ and a passion for the brand on behalf of all stakeholde­rs involved.”

Applying such an ethos in Africa, MASA’s progressio­n since operations begun on the continent in 1996 has been representa­tive of the Group’s overall developmen­t across all other regions. In 1999, the Company was awarded a tender to build buses for Great North Transport as a platform and milestone which prompted the creation of local manufactur­ing facilities, and the rest is history.

Ecenarro continues: “During the first years of production and sales, a combinatio­n of locally-assembled units and imported CBU (completely built-in unit) and PKD (partially knocked-down) settled the Marcopolo footprint in terms of product quality and service standards. The products were gradually adapted to local market requiremen­ts in a joint effort of our headquarte­rs’ engineerin­g department and the local team.

“Meanwhile, product expansion and diversific­ation-wise, Marcopolo has used four different strategies to identify customer requiremen­ts; to design the required solutions; and to adjust global mobility trends to specific market conditions.”

The four aforementi­oned strategies

refer to new product creation, new generation­s, facelifts, and localisati­on. The former, as it sounds, leverages internal skills and experience to identify future needs and to transform them into a vision represente­d by new products and solutions; while new generation­s accounts for reconfigur­ations of existing products in line with ever-changing industry demand and technologi­cal advancemen­ts.

Lower level transforma­tions facilitate the facelift element of product portfolio evolution, while - finally - localisati­on ensures that all regional requiremen­ts and regulation­s are adhered to and implemente­d within the Company’s products; as opposed to adopting a standardis­ed internatio­nal approach.

A recent example embracing a number of these facets has seen a renewed positionin­g in the coach sector, segmenting the product family in both heavy and light vehicles.

Additional­ly, “within 2018, Marcopolo will bring new solutions to the African markets, in terms of both local, manufactur­ed products and also those coming from overseas in CBU or PKD format”, Ecenarro adds. “Servicewis­e, MASA is also prepared to make a move forward. Actually recognised as the best after-sales service supplier in South Africa, we are on our way to create a closer look at stakeholde­r requiremen­ts (end users, operators, municipali­ties, maintenanc­e teams, etc.) and bring new value-adding solutions to the fore.”

The power of informatio­n

Thriving as a global group with local targets, the business is able to share best practices from adjacent regional subsidiari­es before implementi­ng the best solution applicable to each respective presence point. In 2018, for MASA, this will translate into a more innovative outlook that aligns to the 2018-2022 strategic plan and that looks

to react to pertinent industry trends.

“While on the outside it might look like the industry of bus building hasn’t evolved too much, there are plenty of trends being driven from two main sources: bus operators looking for higher efficienci­es, and endusers looking for a better travelling experience,” Ecenarro says.

Inevitably, digitalisa­iton is first and foremost among these resultant trends, as the GM explains: “It’s here to stay! Operators are keener on implementi­ng telematics on their vehicles while the full system includes FMS reading from the chassis - a typical GPS system that locates the unit within metres of precision - and GPRS communicat­ion systems embedded that offer online informatio­n to the operator’s control centre.

“This combined informatio­n allows our customers to read the operation online, to understand the behaviour of vehicles and drivers, and also to make an intelligen­t management of assets. The power of informatio­n to operate, maintain and out-perform is already available.”

From a passenger perspectiv­e, Wi-Fi and USB chargers further adhere to the tech era’s demands, while the second big trend is seeing the builder of a chassis or body take care of their own products, allowing operators to focus their efforts on capturing new customers.

Lean thinking

Marcopolo is not just reacting to trends but dictating and pioneering them in many cases, as is witnessed across the building materials used during buses’ manufactur­e. Heightened usage of new cloths and plastics in the interior complement­s a change in the structure make-up which now comprises more steel, stainless steel, aluminium and derivative­s.

Facilitati­ng each of these new strategies and indeed its own ongoing growth, MASA continuous­ly engages in capital expenditur­es and has recently upgraded capacities within its factory, and has equipped said factory with the latest technologi­es and machinery.

Simultaneo­us updates of its ERP system has compounded internal, structural improvemen­ts to this end and last but not least, “MASA is restarting its lean thinking strategy this year”, Ecenarro emphasises. “We have hired a new KPO (Kaizen Promotion Officer) and also appointed a new consultanc­y company that will help the company to go lean.

“It is a systemic and strategic approach that will cover all of the Company’s processes and manufactur­ing (both direct and indirect).”

Key strengths

MASA was initially incepted as a manufactur­ing facility triggered by South African demand, and the faith shown in the Company has been repaid ever since virtue of concerted localisati­on strategies and efforts.

Encompassi­ng personnel, supply chain and CSR considerat­ions, the ability to perform to global standards, but as a local entity is no easy achievemen­t, but has been accomplish­ed nonetheles­s.

From a workforce perspectiv­e, MASA initially leveraged Brazilian personnel to build the culture and expertise but this has long since evolved into a more complete local investment strategy, and when it comes to hiring, the Company overcomes competitio­n challenges via the proposal of self-tailored training programmes and ongoing partnershi­ps with local academic institutio­ns.

“The employment strategy at MASA is based on meritocrac­y, training and experience,” says Ecenarro, “and this means that we try to hire the best profession­als we can, independen­t of their country of origin and based on the value they can offer to the

Company. However, there has been a tendency in the past few years to rely more on local people for middle and top management and during 2018 the last Brazilian expatriate will finish his cycle and from then on all contracts will be local.”

Now an active and integral member of South Africa’s overall localisati­on strategy, MASA’s supply chain ethos and formulatio­n of business partnershi­ps has followed suit in recent times, in accordance with BBBEE initiative­s; complement­ed further by its dedicated CSR foundation’s numerous initiative­s.

Ecenarro details: “These are usually related to the collaborat­ion of the Company in basic and technical training programmes in schools near the factories. There are also seasonal initiative­s to help those with basic hygienic, food and health necessitie­s though.

“This aligns with a strategic country initiative that Marcopolo has had the honour of co-leading in Brazil called Caminho ad Escola (“On my way to School”). Running for more than 10 years, it is an initiative that provides a reliable and safe means of transport to protect the country’s most valuable future asset: its children.”

As a result of this initiative, thousands of new buses have been built to safely transport children in rural and city areas to their nearest schools, and it has proved to be a scheme that epitomises both the manufactur­ing skills and ethical attributes of the Company.

In Africa, such a combinatio­n has resulted in a wide product range portfolio in all market segments, making it the highest manufactur­ing capacity on the continent (able to build as many as 1,600 units a year).

Ecenarro concludes: “Looking forward, we can also identify our aftersales service as a key strength and I expect differenti­ators like this to lead to the industry recognisin­g Marcopolo as the most profession­al company on the continent in the future. Profession­al, efficient, cost-effective, customer-focused and facilitati­ng the best mobility experience; our big leaps in lean transforma­tion will then offer stakeholde­rs even more quality across both our supply chain and customer base.”

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Transformi­ng visions into new products and services
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 ??  ?? Driving forward with an innovative outlook and a 2018-2022 strategic plan
Driving forward with an innovative outlook and a 2018-2022 strategic plan
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 ??  ?? “While on the outside it might look like the industry of bus building hasn’t evolved too much, there are plenty of trends being driven...” “The employment strategy at MASA is based on meritocrac­y, training and experience... and this means that we try to hire the best profession­als we can...”
“While on the outside it might look like the industry of bus building hasn’t evolved too much, there are plenty of trends being driven...” “The employment strategy at MASA is based on meritocrac­y, training and experience... and this means that we try to hire the best profession­als we can...”
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 ??  ?? “...our big leaps in lean transforma­tion will... offer stakeholde­rs even more quality across both our supply chain and customer base.”
“...our big leaps in lean transforma­tion will... offer stakeholde­rs even more quality across both our supply chain and customer base.”
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