Chasing EMS value with low-volume / high-mix

By Mark Zetter

Mark Zetter

Mark Zetter Silicon Valley | North America
Founder at VentureOutsou
Business Services
CEO/President


With 100 employees, Bentek earned $35 million in revenue in 2008 serving such end-markets as semiconductor capital equipment, defense related as well as solar.

However, managing low-volume / high-mix operations is different from managing high-volume / low-mix operations like, for instance, consumer electronics.

“It’s much, much different”, says Schoch.  “The difference [vs. consumer electronics] is that the volatility of demand can be much more extreme. When markets are down people stop spending. We tend to see much more dramatic declines in demand in some markets, and particularly, things like semiconductor manufacturing. Whereas, on the flip side of that, when markets tend to come back, the growth is just absolutely explosive.”

EMS companies wanting to serve low-volume / high-mix sectors must be prepared for managing a lot of customization in their operations.

But customization creates even more complications when the EMS provider is building product for various countries due to country-specific issues. Not to mention there’s a far greater number of SKUs and variability of custom parts.

Bentek EMS low-volume / high-mix electronics image

Schoch says Bentek spent most of 2008 on improving continuous manufacturing, 5S, and quality to help meet these types of challenges.

He goes on to say “a killer in this business is not managing your inventories tightly. We prepared for this downturn because we took a lot of actions last year to reduce inventory; limit buying of new inventories and limiting our exposure to potentially obsolete parts.”

In addition to medical and industrial electronics, another sector gaining interest among EMS business development section heads I’ve talked with includes the post 9-11 world of security which can immediately enhance sales development strategies for many EMS companies in our New World.

EMS, ODM, and OEM organizations must move away from the easier path of focusing on the same or existing customers and markets if they want to survive.

One of the most attractive opportunities for revenue growth and for clear profit margin out-performance in the EMS sector is in low-volume, high-mix, high complexity products for the middle market. Many, if not most EMS providers (even the tier 1), seem to focus on volume products, including consumer electronics.

However, many Western OEMs with $10 million to $25 million in total available market (TAM) do not have access to low-cost, well-managed EMS work in this space.

To be successful, well-done high-mix, low-cost EMS work requires strong process engineering, good systems and infrastructure, and experienced management talent.

Many EMS companies, particularly in low-volume / high-mix are continuing to lose money, consolidate facilities, and in some cases, while they’re restructuring to try to address the cost issues in their business, they’re facing relatively significant challenges to their ability to perform, particularly in the industrial and defense-related sectors.

As the EMS industry continues to become more commoditized, with many EMS companies who had their contribution margin priced in in order to drive volume during the periods they have expanded, many of these EMS players are now finding themselves reeling in the face of this market contraction and seeing some significant losses because of the aggressiveness in how they approached the market years prior.

One EMS service provider that seems to be navigating these type of EMS management potholes fairly well Sypris Electronics, part of Sypris Solutions (www.sypris.com).

Much like Bentek, Sypris focuses primarily on highly complex, and in some instances even higher reliability type applications.

Sypris has roughly 380 employees and last year brought in $120 million in revenue against military and aerospace contracts for aircraft-type, land and sea weapon systems applications as well as electronics for satellite and spacecraft applications.

The Company’s narrow focus has helped it survive.

But the defense electronics sector is not immune to challenges and is even undergoing some industry-specific changes of its own.

There are different segment levels to the military defense and aerospace low-volume / high-mix EMS market.

There’s the lower-end, commodity segment which does not have a very high cost of materials and can also be done overseas (provided a technology assistance license can be obtained). Some of the providers in this low-end segment can clearly be defined as mom-and-pop shops. Others are much larger.

“We’ve seen a lot of typical, commercial-type manufacturers enter into the low-end of the EMS defense market thus driving a significant compression in the margins there, driving some of the defense circuit card assemblies to, what I’ll call, a commodity space”, says Sypris Electronics president, John Walsh.

Additionally, some of the manufacturers in low-end EMS, especially in the commercial aircraft segment, are even getting to a point where, “They are utilizing commercial practices in the purchasing process to the degree where companies playing in this low-end segment like Goodrich (www.goodrich.com) and Hamilton Sundstrand (www.hamiltonsundstrand.com) are pushing these types of circuit board assemblies and box builds offshore”, he adds.

Not to worry, says Walsh, “These kinds of components and assemblies are not vital from a technology standpoint. They’re old technology.”

Meanwhile, Sypris leans toward the other end of the spectrum: high-end printed circuit boards with a much higher percentage of material content, perhaps for good reason, given the competitive nature of the EMS industry.

Walsh points out that as EMS providers move from the lowest end (where the commodity aspect is) where EMS providers can begin possibly thinking about going offshore (and where the mom-and-pop shops can step in and build or, where the commercial guys can come in and start to play) the value chain requires a significantly increased complexity relative to program management; supply chain management, intellectual property associated with how the EMS provider actually puts things together, plus engineering support.

This EMS business for low-volume / high-mix defense and aerospace work is causing some difficulty for some EMS providers, however.

Walsh goes on to say that many of the top U.S. defense prime contractors, companies like Boeing; BAE Systems, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman and General Dynamics, to name a few, are having a difficult time locating EMS providers who have the infrastructure to reliably execute when it comes to doing more complex box build and systems integration and assembly of sub-systems for the end customer, the U.S. Department of Defense.

Indeed, many EMS companies, including most of the larger players who are caught up in today’s market contraction because of contribution margins priced in to get to commodity pricing, basically have stripped their overhead that’s required to do the more complex box-build, and assembly work.

Put another way, “[Tier 1] EMS firms attempting to increase their business in low-volume / high-mix segments run the risk of undercutting their own investments, if their business models, decision making paradigms, and strategies are not aligned to serve these types of contracts”, says Palma.

Sypris’ Walsh says, “And what the primes are finding is the likes of Celestica (www.celestica.com, also, read interview with Celestica’s CEO), Spartan (www.spartanelectronics.com), and [similar EMS providers] that…because they’ve really tried to drive commodity pricing into [their business], [they] have had to cut so deep they don’t have the ability to deliver anymore.”

When done correctly, low-volume / high-mix EMS models can yield considerable operating margins and even possibly help EMS firms create a market niche that can be defended.

However, the work is not easy which is why it presents above average profit potential for those that can make a name for themselves.

“We’re just trying to capitalize on the situation”, he adds.

VentureOutsource.com, July 2009


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  1. JZ
    Posted at 8:36 pm on July 23, 2009

    Interesting article on the parallel of ODM and EMS value-added.

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