Product and process innovation key to future success of components firms

16th June 2017

By: Irma Venter

Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

     

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South Africa’s components industry will be well served by implementing innovative growth strategies in the short to medium term.

This emerged as one of the recommendations of the ‘South African Automotive Supplier Performance Report 2017’, produced for the National Association of Automotive Component and Allied Manufacturers (Naacam).

The research for the report was conducted by specialist benchmarking consultancy B&M Analysts as part of its regular benchmarking activities in the automotive sector.

Comparators

The benchmarking research comprised comparators from Hungary, India, Mexico, South Africa, Thailand, the UK and the US.

“It is clear that the better-performing South African suppliers over the past two years were innovative in how they conceptualised business development opportunities in a domestic assembly space that has not grown at significant levels,” says Naacam executive director Renai Moothilal.

“The report shows that such strategies included pursuing increased value addition of products through forward or backward vertical integration; assessing whether the company’s existing manufacturing capability and technology fitted the needs of what was driving domestic and targeted export markets; as well as securing contracts linked to large-scale export platforms.”

Leading companies were also growing by investing for the future, added Moothilal.

Investments made in product and process technologies have been central in enabling new business opportunities.

Moothilal lauds the role government support programmes such as the Department of Trade and Industry’s Automotive Investment Scheme and the wider Automotive Production Development Programme have in driving such investment.

Industry Trends ‘

The South African Automotive Supplier Performance Report 2017’ is part of Naacam’s efforts to keep its membership apprised of industry trends, while also providing empirically assessed performance information.

At the recent Naacam Show, held in Durban, Naacam president Dave Coffey noted that regular and measured checks of the components manufacturing sector “help unlock blind spots”, and, at the same time, allow stakeholders, including the public, “to have a sense of what is happening in the automotive supply chain”.

Moothilal says Naacam will soon release a quarterly snapshot report to reflect on key competitiveness metrics within the components industry, such as domestic localisation rates, productivity, quality and employment.

The automotive industry remains a priority manufacturing sector in South Africa. The sector contributed 7.4% to the country’s gross domestic product in 2016. It is commonly accepted that the largest eco- nomic spin-offs in any automotive sector lie within components production.

Edited by Martin Zhuwakinyu
Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

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