Automation Unplugged

- Global Shifts in a New Age

By : Jim Pinto,
San Diego, CA.
USA

Review of automation business, with predictions of continued consolidations. Discussions of new technologies and trends. How Outsourcing and Offshoring will impact future business as China and India emerge as global competitors. Keys for success. Future global challenges.

Outline of the slides presented
for The Rimbach Lecture Series
Keynote speech at ISA
Houston, Texas, October 6, 2004.

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Click Automation World: Global Shifts in Automation


1 - Automation business overview

  • Over $1 billon - 13 companies
    • Siemens, Schneider, GE, ABB, Honeywell, Emerson, Rockwell, Tyco, Yokogawa, Omron, Eaton, Danaher, Invensys
    • Will consolidate to 5 this decade
  • $100m - $1 billion – only 3-5
    • Divisions of conglomerates
    • Europeans - German ‘mittelstand’
    • Exception - Nation Instruments
  • 90% – around $1-10 million

2 - Automation advantages lost

  • Core products
    • Features-Advantages-Benefits easily duplicated
    • Quality manufacture of commodity hardware
    • Software easily copied – functional equivalents.
  • Automation products are commodities
    • Available from several sources with marginally different features and benefits
    • Low margins – stiff competitions, drastic price reductions - general business decline
    • Recession makes the competition more brutal

3 - Automation Majors strategy

  • Shift to solutions/integration
    • Low margins
    • Services intensive
    • Compete with SI customers
  • Going offshore to reduce costs
    • Losing technology advantage
    • De-motivating employees
  • Consolidation – M&A
    • Pig + pig = more pigs

4 - Technology Shift

  • Old technology - commodities
    • PLC, DCS, SCADA
    • Software – HMI, MES
    • Sensors, valves, equipment
  • New technology – inflection points
    • Nanotech, MEMS
    • Wireless sensors – pervasive Internet
    • Complex adaptive systems
  • Old dinosaurs will die, new leaders will emerge

5 - Productivity is the key

  • Productivity is now a global race between regions and nations.
  • Those who can make things cheaper, faster, better – win!
  • US and Europe losing technology advantage
  • Factories & process plants moving
    • Closer to customers
    • Closer to raw materials

6 - Knowledge work - anywhere

  • Internet makes physical location irrelevant
    • Low-cost telephone Help lines
    • Availability of trained people
  • Knowledge is power
    • US is losing the big advantage
    • Outsourcing moving up the food-chain

7 - US Offshore Outsourcing

  • It's NOT cost
    • Better, cheaper, faster
    • Local investment in automation & equipment
    • Availability of trained labor
  • Job losses—especially in manufacturing
    • US does not like manufacturing – puts roadblocks
    • Little or no investment in equipment & automation
    • Offshore locations provide BIG tax breaks and assistance

8 - China – Manufacturing

  • Manufacturing prowess
    • Good, repetitive quality.
    • Worldwide market-share - 50% of cameras, 30% of air conditioners and televisions, 25% of washing machines, 20% of refrigerators
    • One private Chinese company - 40% of all microwave ovens sold in Europe
    • City of Wenzhou, Eastern China - 70% of the world's metal cigarette lighters
  • Wal-mart – Buys $ 12 billion from China

9 - Chinacosm – Hitech looms

  • 700,000 engineers a year, 37% of all college graduates
  • University system - growing in size and quality
  • Engineer pay ranges - $4,000 to $8,000/yr.
  • New CISCO competitor
  • Biotech advances – genome sequencing
  • Space technology advances

10 - India in a new century

  • World's most populous country (mid-century)
    • Advantage - English-speaking
    • China's pop. growth is under control; India's is not
    • Already the world's largest democracy
  • US Software – $6-8 billion, 60% growth
    • Infosys - 2003 revenue $750m, profit 25%, growth 38%, Nasdaq market-cap $11.5 billion
    • Wipro - 2003 revenue $ 900m, profit 18%, growth 29%, NY stock exchange market-cap $9 billion

11 - Global HiTech

  • Other regions/countries are competing strongly
    • Central & Eastern Europe
    • Ireland
    • Russia
    • Brazil
    • Mexico
  • US steadily losing advantage in many key technologies

12 - World competition brews

  • Third-world
    • Hungry
    • Innovative
    • Competitive
  • Fundamental problem - you cannot simulate hunger
  • Big offshore tax-holidays to lure shifts

13 - Jobless recovery

  • Offshore outsourcing – small impact
    • Only 300,000 (15%) of jobs lost
  • Unemployment caused by increased productivity
    • Automation has reduced headcount
    • Computers & Internet

14 - US Govt. involvement

  • Govt. assistance programs inhibit new hiring
    • Insurance and other overheads
    • Equal opportunity protection
    • OSHA & environmental restrictions
  • Maintaining American jobs
    • Tax breaks – minimal advantage
    • Not a level playing field – trade subsidies
  • US is preoccupied with terrorism
    • Cost exceeds $1 trillion

15 - Outsourcing Solutions

  • Use the best resources of the global village to build business
    • Focus on building the right technology & solutions – the end result
    • Outsource "picks, shovels, rakes & hoes" – build the railroad
  • Unions
    • Too restrictive and protective
    • Stop subsidies and adversarial posture
    • Compete

16 - Keys for success

  • Proprietary products
    • Customer productivity important
    • Continuous upgrade to maintain leadership
    • Outsourcing is irrelevant – productivity is the key
  • High-value-added
    • Proprietary knowledge
    • Tailored to specific customer needs
  • Go global – think local
    • Special needs, custom requirements must be handled locally
    • Partnership and proximity

17 - Outsourcing Panel session

Debunking the Myths:
The Good, the Bad, and the Future of Outsourcing
      Panelists:
      • Jim Pinto – Chair
      • Dick Morley – Industry guru
      • Walt Boyes – Editor CONTROL magazine
      • Jim Teegarden – Valpers Partners

Read ISA TODAY News coverage Read ISA TODAY news coverage


18 - Futures prognostications

  • The "good old days" will not return
    • We have NOT "found the bottom"
  • Future is already here – it's exciting
    • Not just a reflection of the Past
  • Change is good – ride the waves
    • Look for inflection points

19 - Capitalism - short-term goals

  • The Achilles heel of Capitalism
    • Selling the knowledge advantage with a short-term profit motive
  • Old globalization was "cheap labor"
    • New globalization is "knowledge"
  • Up into the 1990s, few perceived how globalization and free trade trends would cause massive disruptions in where and how the world’s goods are produced

20 - China – new world power

  • Capacity to launch nuclear weapons on intercontinental missiles
  • Space technology
    • Orbital communications, GPS satellites
    • Military surveillance
    • Seriously affect commercial and security aspects
  • NASA - high costs price US out of outer space
  • Limited US ability to control militaristic advances
  • Long term (Political) problem with China

21 - McWorld vs Tribalism

  • Growth of multi-nationals
    • Pure profit motive, sell consumerism
    • No cultural context
    • Integration and uniformity
    • No allegiance to any specific country
    • Too much political power
  • Tribalism
    • Culture is pitted against culture, people against people, tribe against tribe
    • Sub national and ethnic links
    • Terrorism – high cost of control

22 - Future global challenges

  • Global energy problems
    • Energy independence
    • Nuclear energy
  • Environmental concerns
    • Water
    • Waste
    • Humanitarian dilemmas
  • Religious Extremism
    • Tolerance & understanding to counter terrorism

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