Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Foxconn could redefine region

Factory expects to buy from local suppliers

- RICK BARRETT

The massive Foxconn factory planned for southeast Wisconsin could redefine the futures of hundreds of businesses in the region, including many that could be plugged into technologi­es not yet foreseen.

Once the $10 billion plant opens — it’s projected to begin producing very high-definition LCD screens in 2020 — Taiwanbase­d Foxconn says it will make $4.26 billion in supplier purchases annually, about onethird of them within Wisconsin.

It’s an enormous amount of money that could flow through area businesses, whether they’re suppliers of advanced technologi­es, such as robotics and automation software, or more basic things like paper towels for factory bathrooms.

Think of Foxconn as a virtual village, with the factory as its town hall.

It’s likely to spawn many new businesses, said Dan Steininger, cofounder of BizStarts, a Milwaukee organizati­on that assists emerging companies.

“I think it’s going to have a dramatic effect on the business startup community. The existing marketplac­e will probably not be able to meet all of Foxconn’s needs,” Steininger said.

Constructi­on is still months away — an exact site for the complex hasn’t been named yet, although it appears likely to be in Racine County or Kenosha County — but when constructi­on work is in full swing it could be a windfall for area contractor­s while providing thousands of jobs in the building trades.

“This is going to be some big momentum for our industry. I certainly haven’t seen anything like it during my 30-year tenure in constructi­on,” said Mike Fabishak, CEO of Associated General Contractor­s of Greater Milwaukee.

Contractor­s will need more workers

Foxconn will likely hire an outside firm to oversee its interests during the constructi­on phase of the project, with that firm acting as a conduit for building contractor­s.

The company will need local connection­s that understand the nuances of Wisconsin constructi­on, including weather and the workforce.

Already saddled with labor shortages, contractor­s will need to recruit heavily for the project.

“I am not suggesting this won’t be challengin­g, but I think we are poised to respond to the labor needs better than other industries facing the same challenge,” Fabishak said.

The labor market in southern Wisconsin, northern Illinois and the United States overall is tight. The jobless rate is 3.3% in Kenosha County and 3.4% in adjacent Racine County.

“We will have to be more aggressive in reaching people who are underemplo­yed as well as unemployed,” Fabishak said.

As a contract manufactur­er

of high-tech products, such as the Apple iPhone, at huge factories in China and elsewhere, Foxconn is already focusing on using artificial intelligen­ce in industrial settings, where humans program computers to talk to other computers, which then grow smarter by themselves.

Other advantages of advanced manufactur­ing techniques include the ability to collect data on the factory floor, sync it with suppliers of parts and materials to maximize production and lower costs, and closely monitor and save energy.

On Friday, Foxconn announced that it has partnered with Milwaukee’s Rockwell Automation, which calls itself the world’s largest company dedicated to industrial automation and informatio­n, to develop advanced technologi­es for the new factory and other Foxconn sites.

“I am confident that together we will increase operationa­l efficienci­es in electronic­s manufactur­ing to new levels...” Terry Gou, Foxconn chairman and CEO, said in a statement.

Wisconsin has hundreds of companies in the energy, power and controls sector, with $38 billion in annual sales.

Foxconn’s decision to build the factory in Wisconsin affirms the work that’s been done in the state, said Alan Perlstein, executive director of the Midwest Energy Research Consortium in Milwaukee.

“They’re smart if they collaborat­e with the technology developers in this

region,” Perlstein said.

Companies big and small may benefit

The developmen­t has the potential to benefit not just large area companies like Rockwell and building-controls giant Johnson Controls, but also smaller firms with highly developed specialtie­s.

An example: Scanalytic­s Inc. of Milwaukee says its software, which tracks the movement of people in buildings, can be used to improve efficiency in manufactur­ing plants.

Its founder, UWWhitewat­er graduate Joe Scanlin, says the software can help create “intelligen­t buildings” and provide an understand­ing of how everyone in a given space interacts.

Akitabox, a Madison company whose software is used to manage thousands of components in an industrial setting, also is watching the Foxconn developmen­t closely.

“Once there are more hard deadlines on the constructi­on, and contractor­s are selected, that’s about the time we start talking about getting involved,” said Luke Perkerwicz, vice president of sales and marketing for Akitabox.

Foxconn can be expected initially to bring along some of its Asian suppliers who are familiar with the company’s operations.

“But that puts other companies in the place of being suppliers to the suppliers. I think there are going to be opportunit­ies across the board,” said Carmel Ruffolo, associate vice president for research and innovation at Marquette University.

“It really is a whole village that is going to be impacted,” Ruffolo said.

Eventually, the Foxconn operations are likely to spawn businesses — not necessaril­y intentiona­lly — as employees of the company leave to create something of their own.

“Investors will back those people because they’ve worked for a successful company. They understand the supply chain,” BizStarts’ Steininger said.

Foxconn coordinate­d its site selection efforts with regional economic developmen­t agencies like the Milwaukee 7 and the Metropolit­an Milwaukee Associatio­n of Commerce in choosing to locate in Wisconsin, and it is sure to continue that relationsh­ip as it connects with local businesses.

The resulting economic ecosystem could be huge if the Asian company follows through on its proposal to create a complex employing as many as 13,000 people.

Many smaller companies have more than 100 businesses in their supply chain, which in turn can sustain hundreds of other businesses — suppliers to the suppliers.

“Foxconn will have a supply chain the likes of which we have never seen here,” Steininger said.

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