Boating, Online
Chandlery & Best Prices
The industry has gone global
The world has shrunk! The speed and flexibility
of modern communications and the improved speed of
shipment by sea and air, coupled with lowering
manufacturing costs from new locations such as China and
India has put the latest products in front of consumers
all over the world.
The global market for goods and services has
arrived and is having an impact on the boating industry.
Leisure industries compete not only within their own
industry, but also with the growing number of other
leisure activities. They are also liable to pressure in
times of recession.
Marine equipment and engine manufactureres have
long had a global perspective, but for boat
manufacturers, it has only developed over the past two
decades as exports and imports have risen.
Now boats built in the USA are exported to
Thailand for use by an English expatriate working in Hong
Kong with a holiday home in Phuket and some of the
equipment on the boat will have originated in China,
Mexico or other low cost manufacturing areas.
As boat manufacturing becomes more global, with
new areas of lower cost production opening up, we will
see the industry develop new partnerships and grasp the
synergies of working together in manufacturing and
marketing, making a truly global market place.
Consolidation of the industry
Coupled with globalisation the number of boat
manufacturers has reduced in the last decade with large
multi-brand industry groups such as Brunswick, Genmar,
Ferretti, Azimut and Beneteau dominating the market with
some rationalisation still to come.
Smaller boat manufacturers can now only survive
when operating in ‘niche’ markets that need special
skills or are not large enough for the bigger players to
consider. The equipment and component sector of the
industry has seen major changes.
Manufacturing of many components has moved to
Asian countries with China a key player. Equipment
distribution has seen the decline of the smaller chandler
and the rise of online chandlers as the internet has
revolutionised the way a customer can
purchase.
Best Boat prices
As everyone in the industry is aware, production
of boats is labour intensive compared with most other
consumer products, and price will be a real problem for
the future.
Without the massive economies of scale created by volume
production, as in the car industry, it is not economic to
fully develop processes to automate boat
manufacturing.
Consequently, as labour costs increase in the
developed countries, boat prices increase faster than
most consumer products and demand falls, further
compounding the problem. Research carried out in the UK
in the late 1990’s confirmed that in the UK (with the
exception of small sailing cruisers) all boats were
relatively less affordable than the equivalent car in
1967.
On the other hand, the prices of equipment and
services in the marine industry have all become
relatively more affordable. There is no doubt that sales
of smaller boats have been adversely affected.
Larger boats sales (fuelled by the existing
customer base trading up in size) has been buoyant. Boat
sales revenue is up, while the number of units has
reduced. Complacency could result!
Boat
manufacturing locations
With the rising cost of manufacturing in the
developed world and growing environmental restrictions on
fibreglass production, companies are increasingly looking
for lower cost locations to manufacture.
Boat manufacturing at the lower end of the scale
is low tech, labour intensive, environmentally polluting
and crucially, low cost and easy to start up. This makes
it an ideal industry for locations that have an abundance
of low cost labour, giving rise to a developing industry
in Poland, China, Sri Lanka and Mexico.
With resultant savings on total manufacturing
cost of up to 30%, boat manufacturers have the
possibility to establish new manufacturing plants or
outsource their production to sub-contractors and gain
competitive advantage.
The increasing cost of sea freight due the
strength of global trade is another factor encouraging
new manufacturing locations as considerable savings in
cost and delivery time can be made by manufacturing
regionally closer to new boating markets in Russia, the
Gulf States and Asia.
New consumer boating markets
As can be seen from the confidence surveys in
this report, the lack of marina berths in most developed
boating markets worldwide is a continuing problem with
environmental and planning issues a major restriction on
the growth of new marinas and boating
facilities.
Boat owners in the northern part of Europe,
encouraged by their unreliable weather have increasingly
gone south for their boating, just as North Americans
have been going to Florida and the Caribbean.
For Northern Europeans it’s historically been to
the Mediterranean. In recent times the growth of low cost
airlines has expanded this and the number of boat owners
has created a berthing shortage restricting boat sales.
This has encouraged the growth of new and more exotic
locations in Turkey, Dubai, Oman and even further away in
South East Asia.
Many of these locations have less stringent
planning restrictions and are seeing rapid growth in
waterfront residential developments with marinas. There
are also advantages to be had in lower boat operating
costs, lower taxes and sunny weather
guaranteed.
With Asia now comprising 60% of the world’s
population and moving to centre stage, much industry
effort is focussed on new markets in this region
particularly China. However, the verdict is still out on
how long they will take to materialise as cultural and
Government restrictions on boating have to be overcome.
The imposition of a 10% luxury tax on leisure boats in
China earlier this year is not a positive
sign.
New entrants to boating
The increasing cost of boat ownership is a
worrying factor that has been masked in recent years by
the trend for existing boat owners to trade up to larger
boats. This has enabled many of the world’s larger boat
builders to prosper and grow on the back of an existing
client base.
It’s only in recent
years that the industry has been alarmed by the lack of
new entrants. Today, unlike the
inflationary 1970's and 1980's nobody counts on
spiralling home equity or high inflation to finance their
dream boat. With most boat prices high compared to other
consumer products and activities, the value for money
factor is lacking, especially for those vital new
entrants to boating.
The 21st century is a
leaner and meaner place and we must make our industry even
more efficient in manufacturing, distribution and service
with the aim of making boating more affordable and value for
money.
In this respect we can learn a lot from
the car industry especially in lean production, just in time
supply chain processes and how to attract new customers and
retain them with superior service. In this respect the
concept of total boat warranty being introduced by many boat
manufacturers, is a valuable lesson
learnt.
Over the horizon – industry
threats
The boating industry worldwide is undoubtedly
stronger than it was twenty years ago, it has
consolidated and rationalised and is much more orientated
to customer service. On the production aspect, just in
time supply of components, lean manufacturing and the use
of CAD and CADAM systems, (production methods that were
virtually unknown two decades ago) are revolutionising
the development of new designs and the manufacture of
tooling.
However, we live in a dangerous world and as an
industry we need to be aware of the bigger picture and
how we might be affected us and take these risks onboard.
There are two key threats, oil supply and price and the
threat of terrorism and regional conflict. The two are
interconnected, the price of oil being very vulnerable to
regional insecurity in the Middle East.
High oil prices in the rest of the world will
make boating more expensive to the customer and put
pressure on oil based materials used in boat
manufacturing. Already demand from China for Stainless
Steel and other raw materials is pushing up global
prices.
In the past decade terrorism or the perceived
threat of it, has become a major threat factor to be
considered when making business decisions, especially in
industries such as ours which are dependent on the
discretionary spending power of the consumer.
If security concerns were to tighten regulations
on leisure boating, the effects would be numerous to an
activity the main attraction of which is the freedom to
escape from a regulated world.
In the past four years boating has been subject
to restrictions and controls in many parts of Asia and
the Gulf for security reasons, it’s likely that we will
see these spread to more developed boating markets,
especially if terrorism attacks spread from the aviation
environment to the marine one.
Apart from these direct effects the impact on
the global economy would have massive implications for
leisure boat sales. The worst scenario for the industry
would be a major terrorist strike on the oil production
facilities in the Gulf, with production centred on a few
massive facilities; any prolonged reduction in supply
would have far reaching implications for oil prices and
likely put western economies into recession if not
depression.
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