Samsung
The next big bet
The world’s
biggest information-technology firm is diving into green technology and the
health business. It should take care; its rivals should take notice
Oct 1st 2011 | SEOUL | from the print edition
IN 2000 Samsung
started making batteries for digital gadgets. Ten years later it sold more of
them than any other company in the world. In 2001 it threw resources into
flat-panel televisions. Within four years it was the market leader. In 2002 the
firm bet heavily on “flash” memory. The technology it delivered made the iPhone
and iPad a reality, and made Samsung Apple’s biggest supplier—and now its
biggest hardware competitor.
The handsome
payoffs from these ballsy bets made the South Korean company a colossus; last
year its sales passed $135 billion. Now it is embarking on a similarly
audacious plan to move away from electronics into technologies where it barely
has a presence today. It intends to spend $20 billion over ten years on solar
panels, light-emitting diodes (LEDs) used for lighting, electric-vehicle
batteries, medical devices and biotech drugs. These businesses shift Samsung
away from easily substitutable gadgets towards more essential industrial goods
(see table)—or from “infotainment” to “lifecare”, as the company puts it. Just
as electronics defined swathes of the 20th century, the company believes green
technology and health care will be central to the 21st.
With these plans
Samsung sees itself bringing technologies that are vital for society into much
broader use. The company has always had an eye for more than just the bottom
line, seeking both to epitomise and to further the progress of its home
country. Now it talks idealistically of improving the world by driving down the
costs of zero-carbon power and providing poor countries and rural areas with
medical equipment and drugs that they cannot afford today.
But the plans
are also an ambitious industrial power play, one that challenges some of the
world’s biggest companies. Success would raise Samsung to new heights. Failure
could lead to the firm losing what it already has, no longer able to flourish
just as a maker of commodity gadgets and components.
The 83 firms
that are tied together in Samsung’s remarkably complex structure provide 13% of
South Korea’s gross exports. Samsung Electronics, the biggest of them, started
making transistor radios in 1969, and has since evolved into the world’s
leading manufacturer of televisions and much else. It is on track to unseat
Nokia as the biggest maker of mobile phones by volume next year. Interbrand, a
consultancy which seeks to calculate brand value, puts it in the world’s top
20, ahead of Sony and Nike. It has come second only to IBM in the number of
patents earned in America for five years running.
Yet Samsung
wants to diversify away from consumer electronics, a market that suffers from
falling prices, thin margins, fast product cycles and fickle customers. Chinese
rivals may do to Samsung what Samsung did to Western and Japanese firms in the
past. “The majority of our products today will be gone in ten years,” Samsung’s
patriarch and chairman, Lee Kun-hee, told executives in deliberately alarmist
tones last January.
To survive, he
said, the company must not only go into the new businesses it has identified,
but open itself up to work with partners and even make acquisitions. Samsung
has long been a closed world from that point of view, a disposition reinforced
after the disastrous acquisition of a PC maker in the 1990s. But now the
company knows it needs new skills, sales channels and customers.
Doing it the
Samsung way
By 2020
Samsung’s Mr Lee wants the five new business areas to provide $50 billion of
revenue, and Samsung Electronics to be a $400 billion company (for all his
provocations to his staff, there are still going to be a lot of flat screens
and memory sold). It is a brash goal, admits Inkuk Hahn of Samsung’s strategy
team. But ten years ago people were incredulous when Mr Lee insisted that
Samsung, which then had sales of $23 billion, could be the number-one
technology company, with sales of $100 billion. It claimed that crown just
eight years later. “This is why you have to believe us,” Mr Hahn insists.
The new
businesses look remarkably disparate, but they share a need for big capital
investments and the capacity to scale manufacture up very quickly, talents the
company has exploited methodically in the past.
Samsung’s
successes come from spotting areas that are small but growing fast. Ideally the
area should also be capital-intensive, making it harder for rivals to keep up.
Samsung tiptoes into the technology to get familiar with it, then waits for its
moment. It was when liquid-crystal displays grew to 40 inches in 2001 that
Samsung took the dive and turned them into televisions. In flash memory,
Samsung piled in when new technology made it possible to put a whole gigabyte
on a chip.
When it pounces,
the company floods the sector with cash. Moving into very high volume
production as fast as possible not only gives it a price advantage over
established firms, but also makes it a key customer for equipment makers. Those
relationships help it stay on the leading edge from then on.
The strategy is
shrewd. By buying technology rather than building it, Samsung assumes execution
risk not innovation risk. It wins as a “fast follower”, slipstreaming in the
wake of pioneers at a much larger scale of production. The heavy investment has
in the past played to its ability to tap cheap financing from a banking sector
that is friendly to big companies, thanks to implicit government guarantees
much complained about by rivals elsewhere.
From crisis to
crisis
Competitors also
balk at the way that Samsung scales up quickly to supply parts to other firms
as well as to price its own gadgets keenly. Supplying the rest of industry
drives down Samsung’s costs yet further, with its rivals in effect financing
its success. This strategy can create problems. Samsung is Apple’s most
important supplier in the smartphone and tablet-computer markets. Samsung
components, which include all the product’s application processors, account for
16% of the value of an iPhone. It is also Apple’s greatest competitor in those
markets. Apple is now suing the socks off the company for copying the look and
feel of its products. At the same time it is urgently seeking new ways to
diversify its supply chain.
Many companies
saw the potential of technologies such as liquid-crystal panels, flash memory
and rechargeable batteries. But few could or would invest billions in a single
shot. That Samsung could is in large part due to a cult of personality around
Mr Lee, who likes to keep things shaken up. “Change everything but your wife
and children,” he exhorted managers in 1993. Three years later he lit a bonfire
of 150,000 gadgets because some were defective. Other bosses often need to face
a crisis—a “burning platform”, in the memorable phrase of Stephen Elop, Nokia’s
boss—before they make changes. Samsung does so when things are going well. The
company has pushed out older managers and restructured its divisions over the
past two years despite posting record profits even in the global financial
crisis.
Management by
perpetual crisis is perhaps a reflection of the company’s national roots. In
1960, when the Samsung companies were taking off, South Korea, battered by
recent war, had a GDP the same size as Sudan’s; its last dictatorship fell only
two years before the Berlin Wall. Today, though it enjoys one of the world’s
highest living standards, South Korea is still an emerging market in some ways,
with endemic corruption and some economic structures that border on the feudal.
Find out how much of an Apple iPhone is
actually a Samsung with our "teardown"
infographic
Samsung, like
its host country, has a foot in both the industrialised and developing worlds,
which it has used to its advantage. While it has always produced things for
major IT firms and Western consumers, it has aimed products at poor countries,
too. This not only gave Samsung scale, but also market shares in the world’s
fastest-growing economies. Whereas Western firms reeled in the recent
recession, Samsung flourished, buoyed by sales in markets that never stopped
growing.
From laptop to
rooftop
Some of the five
new businesses Samsung has set its sights on are not that far from what the
company does already. Its experience in semiconductors and flat-screen
televisions fits easily with solar cells and LED lighting: the technology,
materials and production processes are similar. Likewise, its expertise in
batteries for gadgets smooths the way for making car-sized ones. The firm wants
to apply the magic of ever cheaper chips to medical devices as it did mobile
phones. Even drugs aren’t so far afield when one sees them in business-process
terms: high-volume manufacturing with low defect rates. In all these fields
Samsung believes it can sit—rather as Korea does geographically—in between
China, with its cheap products, and Japan, with its costly, high-quality ones.
In solar energy
Samsung plans to make panels for both domestic and industrial use. Producing
panels for “utility-scale” projects may allow it to lower prices for the
residential market. Changsik Choi, who heads the business, also speaks
optimistically of a “brand halo effect”: consumers whose living rooms are
stuffed with Samsung products may choose the company for their rooftops too.
Samsung’s
dominance of the television market has already made it the world’s
second-largest maker of LED components (Japan’s Nichia is the first). Since
they consume a fraction of the power of conventional light bulbs, last longer
and avoid some of the drawbacks of compact fluorescents, the first-generation
alternative, LEDs are expected eventually to become the norm for all sorts of
lighting; the market is growing by 65% a year. Samsung already sells LED
lighting in South Korea and plans soon to expand abroad. In this market it will
hew to its strategy of supplying parts to others, thereby lowering costs for
its own products.
In
electric-vehicle batteries Samsung has joined forces with Bosch, the world’s
biggest supplier of car parts and a fount of expertise on power- and
engine-management. Samsung sees their partnership, SB LiMotive, as crucial
since the car business relies on close ties between carmakers and their
suppliers. Some carmakers, like Nissan and Toyota, will continue developing their
own batteries, but Samsung thinks that many carmakers will not want to be in
the battery business, just as they are not in the petrol business, and that
they will be a rich source of demand. Chrysler and BMW are among SB LiMotive’s
first customers.
For medical
devices Samsung aims to use information technology to lower costs, add features
and make devices accessible to more people, particularly the poor. For example,
it is developing X-ray machines that expose patients to less radiation and do
away with physical film. Last year Samsung began selling a machine for testing
patients’ blood chemistry that is smaller, cheaper, uses less power and offers
more functions than rivals’ devices. In April it bought Medison, a South Korean
maker of ultrasound equipment, as a way to get further into the market: it is
looking at buying body-scanner firms too.
In biotech drugs
the company plans to begin as a contract manufacturer of biosimilars (generic
versions of biotech drugs) and has partnered with Quintiles, a drug outsourcer.
The strategy lets Samsung gain experience while assuming little commercial
risk. It is building a factory outside Seoul and has already begun developing
biosimilars for medicines with patents that expire in 2016.
Incumbents and
incomers
The markets are
certainly promising, but they entail huge risks. Nor is the size of Samsung’s
commitment quite on a par with the overwhelming force it has deployed in the
past. The solar and LED businesses already struggle with oversupply, meaning
Samsung may get walloped by the same dramatic price erosion as it has seen in
liquid-crystal flat panels. Electric-vehicle batteries may be in similar
straits if demand for the cars they might power remains sluggish. They are also
in the crosshairs of Chinese companies, as are medical devices and drugs. In a
bid to escape the vagaries of consumer electronics, Samsung may be ploughing
headlong into the areas most ripe for invasion by a new breed of
emerging-market titans.
Acquisitions, a
way of life in the drug business, are also a challenge: knowing what to buy and
when is a skill that Samsung has never developed. The same applies to dealing
with government regulators: Samsung’s towering importance at home may give it a
false confidence in its ability to handle governments elsewhere.
Its position as
a domestic titan could be a hindrance in other ways. Working with partners
entails sharing information and a view of joint success that is at odds with
its insular corporate culture. The international talent the company will need to
attract is also less likely to be moved by the admonishments and appeals to
national grandeur that Mr Lee has used to build Samsung’s success. They might,
indeed, find such things wearisome.
Samsung’s rivals
are ready for a fight. Philips and GE have been preparing to compete with firms
in emerging markets for years, devising cheap products and building on existing
relationships with clients. Toshiba plans to spend an extra $9 billion in the
energy and environment sectors over the next three years on top of its normal
capital expenditure, research and acquisitions. Fumio Ohtsubo, Panasonic’s
boss, praises his Samsung rivals for their low prices but believes his company
develops superior technology. “If we can get the same conditions in terms of
free-trade agreements, low corporate taxes and other incentives, then we should
be able to compete,” he says.
In medical
devices Samsung will be up against firms like Philips, Siemens, Toshiba,
Hitachi and GE (for which Samsung made medical equipment between 1984 and
2004). GE’s Indian office famously reduced the cost of an electrocardiogram
machine from $2,000 to $400. And the fact that hospitals prefer to buy
different equipment from a single vendor so that, in principle, everything
works together puts a maker of this-and-that at a disadvantage, even if it is
cheap.
Perhaps the
biggest challenge, though, will be one of succession. The 69-year-old
chairman’s son, Jay Y. Lee, 43, was named president last December. Educated in
Japan (like his father and grandfather, the firm’s founder) and at Harvard
Business School, he has been groomed from the start. His first test will be
reforming the jumble of opaque, interlocking relationships and conflicts of
interest that passes for Samsung’s corporate governance.
The “Samsung group”,
as it is often known, has no legal identity. The 83 firms sit under an umbrella
company called Everland, in which the Lee family has a controlling 46% stake.
The family also has minority positions in other Samsung firms, which often hold
shares in other members of the group, and indeed in Everland. For example, the
family and related interests own 21% of Samsung’s life-insurance firm, which
owns 26% of its credit-card business, which in turn owns 26% of Everland. Get
it? Nobody other than the Lees really does.
The company must
change if only to avoid South Korea’s devastating 50% inheritance tax after the
elder Lee’s passing (his father died at the age of 77). That would further
whittle the family’s stakes, notes Shaun Cochran of CLSA, a broker. He expects
a holding company to be formed, so investors have clearer exposure to the
different parts of Samsung’s businesses. The younger Lee will also need to root
out corruption, which his father often complained about without rising above
it; the elder Lee’s 2008 conviction for tax evasion was pardoned in 2009 on the
ground of his importance to the country.
When the dealing’s
done
Chairman Lee’s
fear is that successful companies get flabby when they hit middle age. He saw
that in Sony, founded in 1946, which has been struggling since the 1990s.
Samsung Electronics turned 40 in 2009, which prompted Mr Lee to lay the
groundwork for the five new growth areas. Diversification is essential. In the
mid-1990s almost all of its profits came from DRAM memory chips: when the
market soured in 1996, its profits shrivelled by 95%.
Samsung may be
swapping “infotainment” for “lifecare”—but it is still in the hardware
business, and that may leave it more vulnerable than it thinks. Many of today’s
computer and electronics giants are getting out of the manufacturing businesses
altogether. IBM has shifted to services, trailed by Japan’s Fujitsu, while
Philips and Siemens both sold their IT businesses to focus on other areas. But
getting out of things is not something Samsung is good at. Despite a commitment
to perpetual crisis, a mixture of implicitly subsidised capital, weak
shareholder pressure and family control has allowed it to stick too long with
dodgy decisions—such as its move into cars, brought short only by the Asian financial
crisis, and its only-now-ended commitment to hard-drive manufacture.
Even with a $20
billion bankroll, bets can be spread too thin. Perhaps the biggest risk for
Samsung is not that none of its wagers will win, but that it won’t be able to
stop betting on the ones that don’t. Knowing the right time to bet is a great
gift. So is knowing the right time to walk away.
from the print
edition | Briefing
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