Video Highlights (M4V)
Get QuickTime

Smith Students Get Up-Close View of
Chinese Manufacturing
In the wake of several U.S. recalls
involving products made in China, six
Smith School students traveled China in
early September 2007 to get an up-close
look at manufacturing in that country.
The students, including one second-year
MBA and five undergraduates, toured four
factories as part of the trip, which was
arranged through the schools Dingman
Center for Entrepreneurship. Three of
the factories were in Hangzhou and
included those for Siemens, the global
electronics and engineering company;
Mary Kay cosmetics; and Ting Hsin
International, Chinas largest
manufacturer of instant noodles, bottled
water and biscuits.
 |
|
Smith undergraduate Scottie
Siu (center) and MBA
Laura Bennett speak with a
Siemens representative.
Smith undergraduate Shania
Lin is in the background. |
At each factory stop, the Smith
students peppered representatives of
each company with questions about
quality control, human resources and
supply chain management, among other key
business issues. At the Siemens plant,
which manufactures high voltage circuit
breakers for electric utilities,
students wanted to know about plant
safety, work hours and benefits for
workers. Siemens officials explained
that employees work one eight-hour shift
per day and get a 45-minute lunch break
as well as morning and afternoon breaks.
They also said that many measures are in
place to keep workers safe.
For example, we supply each of our
workers with special shoes to withstand
a significant amount of weight, said Zhu
Qinghai, the human resource department
manager for Siemens, speaking through an
interpreter.
The students and others in the
Dingman delegation were impressed by
what they saw on the Siemens plant
floor, where some 600 employees coiled
heavy power cables, assembled metal
parts, and performed testing on large
pieces of equipment used by power
companies.
I noticed that its air conditioned,
its very climate controlled and
everything is very neat and in its
place, said Nicholas Singer, a Smith
School senior. They allowed us to look
around and go places where I feel if you
were on a factory tour in the United
States, you wouldn't be able to do that,
said Singer.
Students were also impressed with the
Mary Kay cosmetics plant, which opened
in Hangzhou in March 2006. Once they
were on the other side of the factory's
bright pink faade, students saw large
shiny chrome vats filled with face cream
and watched employees test and package
the products, 90 percent of which are
sold in China. At this plant also,
students were interested in learning
about quality control. Mary Kay
officials explained that many of the
ingredients used at the Hangzhou plant
come from the same suppliers used by the
company's U.S. plant in Dallas. Asked
how Mary Kay's China market differs from
that in the U.S., factory officials said
the market for colored products, such as
lipstick and eye shadow, is much smaller
in China and that impacts manufacturing
in Hangzhou.
It was a wonderful tour, said Shania
Lin, a Smith undergraduate. The people
were very friendly and informative. We
asked a lot of questions and got very
good answers. It was very interesting,
said Lin.
The tour of the Ting Hsin instant
noodle factory, well-known for its Chef
Kang brand of noodles, was perhaps the
most visually interesting. The
delegation followed a long assembly line
as the noodles went from being wet and
hundreds of feet long, to being
separated into single package sizes and
then dried and packaged with spoons and
flavor packets before being placed in
bulk boxes for shipping.
Seeing all these factories, seeing
how they make different types of
products, how they are marketing
different audiences in different
provinces, is just amazing, said Scottie
Siu, a Smith undergraduate, after
leaving the noodle factory.
The automation in this factory was
tremendous, added John LaPides, an
entrepreneur-in-residence at the Dingman
Center. But some of the hands-on things
that the workers had to do was really
amazing and its fascinating to see such
a high volume output of a product like
this, said LaPides.
Trips like these are an important
part of the Smith Schools emphasis on
preparing students to succeed in a
global economy. The students were
selected for the trip through the
Dingman Centers Pitch Dingman contest,
which required students to submit
proposals on how they would benefit from
the opportunity.
This is a global economy in which we
are operating and its important to
understand what labor forces and
economic forces have an impact on global
trade, said Asher Epstein, managing
director of the Dingman Center.
Understanding factory conditions,
quality control, cost of production,
manufacturing capabilities, and assembly
issues and challenges around the world
is important for being competitive in
global business, said Epstein.
The Dingman trip, which also included
stops in Suzhou and Shanghai, concluded
in Beijing, where the delegation
attended the final round of the Smith
Schools annual China Business Plan
Competition. The school awarded $50,000
in prize money to the three winning
teams.
Read more about the competition here.
Video Highlights (m4v)
Get QuickTime
▓ Jeff Heebner, Office
of Marketing Communications