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Purchasing Practices and Their Impact on Toy & Children’s Juvenile Product Factories: Balancing Marketplace Realities and Social Compliance Standards
April 24, 2013 Slide 2
Question and Answer Period
Please keep all questions general … details about specific issues will not be addressed.
To communicate with the webinar moderator at any time during this session, please select either of the following options:
– Send a question using the “Q&A” drop down menu near the middle of the LiveMeeting navigation bar
– Start a private chat by double-clicking on “Stacy Leistner – TIA Administrator” in the list of participants under the “Attendees” drop-down menu
To submit a question for review during the open dialogue, use the “Q&A” drop down menu near the middle of the LiveMeeting navigation bar
Download a copy of the presentation slides from the “Handouts” drop down menu (the graphic looks like three sheets of stacked papers) on the right-hand side of the LiveMeeting navigation bar
April 24, 2013 Slide 3
Objective
During this one-hour webinar – part of an ongoing series of TIA education updates – toy industry stakeholders will gain a deeper understanding of updates on recent and upcoming ICTI CARE Process activities aimed at eliminating substandard health, safety and labor practices in toy factories around the world.
April 24, 2013 Slide 4
Today’s Presenters
MODERATOR
Ed Desmond Executive Vice President
External Affairs
PRESENTER
Mark Jones Chief Marketing and
Product Officer
PRESENTER
Christian Ewert CEO and President
April 24, 2013 Slide 5
Overview of Today’s Presentation
This webinar will consist of two parts:
– Part One … 50 minutes • Introductions • Global Industry Observations • Children’s Products Industry Perspective • Best Practices in the Children’s Products Industry • Business Case
– Part Two … 10 minutes • Question and answer period
NOTE: Questions may be submitted throughout the session via the
Question/Answer component of LiveMeeting
The Uniqueness of Industry Categories
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Category Practice Social Issue Solution
Electronics New product launch Recruiting – student workers Longer lead time
Apparel Lead times, seasonality Working hours Longer lead time
Discounters One off buys Wages, working hours
Consolidate purchasing
Footwear Lead times, multiple factories, small orders
Everything Consolidate purchasing, longer lead time
Direct importers Price chase smaller factories Everything Pick the right
factory
Sourcing Strategy
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Units Purchased
Total Production 10,000 25,000 50,000 75,000 100,000 125,000 150,000 175,000 200,000 250,000 300,000 350,000 400,000 500,000 600,000 700,000 800,000 1,000,000 1,250,000 1,500,000 2,000,000 2,500,000 Total
100,000 46 1 1 48250,000 32 1 3 36500,000 15 1 2 6 4 7 2 37
1,000,000 6 7 1 1 1 1 2 2 4 3 2 301,500,000 2 6 1 1 1 1 3 4 3 1 2 1 262,000,000 4 1 2 2 2 1 1 2 1 2 2 6 2 2 5 352,500,000 9 2 2 4 3 1 4 1 2 2 4 2 363,000,000 1 1 1 1 3 2 1 1 113,500,000 4 3 4 2 2 2 2 2 1 224,000,000 2 1 1 45,000,000 3 1 46,000,000 4 1 1 2 1 1 2 127,000,000 8 4 1 1 1 3 2 2 2 3 1 28
133 20 17 2 14 13 5 4 4 18 11 9 4 3 18 9 6 14 4 5 11 5 329
1. High purchasing leverage = high influence 2. Top 3 customer = some influence 3. Consistently growing orders – some influence
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Unstable Workforce
Transactional Strategic
Selecting the Right Supplier
Immature Mature
Stable Workforce
The Factory Perspective
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Purchasing practices that contribute to CSR challenges: – shorter lead times – nominating suppliers – late approvals – smaller order quantities – excessive sampling – payment terms – poor planning
2012 GSCP Survey and Interviews
The Reality
• Retailers and brands will source according to the demands of their customers.
• A factory is not going to be able to change a retailer who is trying to reduce the design to shelf cycle.
• Similarly, factories are not going to change order sizes when retailers are trying to better manage inventory.
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It’s About Choice Retailers/Brands • Pick the right suppliers –
match your approach • Adopt SRM - supplier
relationship management • Be a better buyer
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Suppliers • Pick the right customers • Align with the right agents • If bad buyer practices are
really an issue, document it, quantify the impact and share the findings
About the ICTI CARE Process
• Who We Are – ICTI CARE Foundation, chartered in the US in 2004 is an independent non-profit organization (501.c6 ) that oversees the worldwide children’s product industry’s ethical manufacturing program, the ICTI CARE Process.
• Our Commitment – To improve working conditions for factory workers by eliminating substandard, health, safety and labor practices.
• Our Focus – Factory auditing and monitoring, auditor training, worker education and training, social compliance management, capacity building and best practices sharing.
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ICTI CARE Process Overview: Current Status
Registered Factories
2,289
Certified Factories
1,490
ICP Committed
Companies
900 ____________________________________________________________
Class A 77%
Class B 4%
Class C 4%
On Probation 15%
As of March 2013
% of Certified Factories
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ICTI CARE Process Overview: Current Status
Growing Acceptance of ICP
• Factory commitment up 5% in 2012.
• Toy brands signed up to ICP Committed Program (previously Date Certain) cover more than 75% of the global toy business.
• Five National Toy Associations have made the ICP Committed Program a firm condition for membership (Germany, Spain, Sweden and the US) – special solution for UK.
• Recognized by a growing number of retailers and licensors.
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18 See full list on www.icti-care.org
And 900 more……
Growing Acceptance of ICP ________________________________________
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Risks to ICP and Brand Reputation
Macro Economic Environment in China
• Seasonality of the Business
• Sluggish Business Environment
• Buyer “Just in Time” Delivery Expectation
• Constant Appreciation of the RMB
• Increasing Raw Material Costs
• Complexity of new Toy Safety Requirements (EN71-3 effective July 2013)
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Risks to ICP and Brand Reputation Social Environment in China
• Shortage of labor (PRD & YRD)
• Low worker return rate following CNY
• Raise of worker’s compensation
• Urbanization/worker’s cost of living
• Limited factory management knowledge of HR management and worker expectations
• Different expectations from Generation “Y”
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4th Annual Factory Survey: Factory Manager Views
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Survey was conducted by ELEVATE (formerly INFACT Global Partners) on ICP’s behalf.
Most Significant Business Issues
2012 2011 Increasing raw material costs 1 50.5% 1 67.0% Economic downturn 2 36.0% 4 40.0%
Worker retention throughout the year 3 34.4% 6 26.4%
RMB currency appreciation 4 28.9% 3 51.2%
Wage and compensation increases 5 28.6% 2 56.1%
Finding good workers 6 27.4% 5 33.0%
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4th Annual Factory Survey: Factory Manager View
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Things that can help business the most 2012 2011
Better production planning (no last minute changes, realistic deadlines) 1 57.0% 1 55.1%
Larger order sizes 2 52.1% 2 52.3% More long-term/strategic partnership 3 46.4% 3 43.6% More insight into your customers strategic needs 4 30.5% 5 34.6%
Early order placement 5 29.1% 4 35.8% Efforts to improve worker-management communication 6 27.3% 6 26.3%
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ICP Helpline: Factory Worker View Top issues cited from 1 Jan-15 March 2013 (584 total)
17.3% • Dismissal
16.6% • Resignation
12.7% • Delayed Payment
11.1% • Holiday Leave/Leave Application
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Three ICP Studies Conducted in 2012 Studies: • Misereor/University of Mannheim: Examines ICP contribution to improving
labor and social standards in the Chinese toy industry. • Shift: High-level gap analysis of how ICP aligns with the UN Guiding
Principles on Business and Human Rights. • Oxford University: A teaching case study, “ICTI CARE – A Case for Change”. Key Findings: • The factory auditing process and worker empowerment through capacity
building (“Train the Trainers,” CARE Card & Helpline) has been effective. • There are gaps that endanger validity and credibility of the ICP program: - No way to verify fulfillment of brand commitment and no penalties for non-fulfillment • One-sided focus on factories, with little brand/retailer/licensor/national
ICTI association involvement. All need to be equally committed.
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Management Capacity Building Program
Social Accountability
Occupational Health & Safety
Lean Manufacturing
HR Management
Communication
• COC Awareness • Wages & Working Hours • Age • Related Social Issues
• OHS Awareness • OHS Management • Fire Safety • Chemical Safety • Machine Safety
• Production Lead Time • Labor Efficiency • Production Output • Quality Yield & Rework Output • Multi Skill Levels
• Complaints/Grievance Procedures • Worker – Management Dialogue • Factory – Brands • Workers Card • Helpline
• New Staff Mentoring • Training System • Performance System
IFIS
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Social Performance is a Function of Business Performance
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Group Average
Group Leader
Country Average
Country Leader
Turnover 4.50% 10.10% 4.50% 3.20% 0.30%New Workforce to Total Workforce 42% 116% 42% 46% 16%Maximum % annual workforce change 59% 131% 59% 41% 4%
Production rate(average/month) per experienced wo 192.5 429.3 924.2 161.2 249.1Production rate(average/month) per new worker for 96.3 192.3 233.2 93.2 186.8Average Defect Rate 5.70% 7.00% 2.30% 11.80% 5.70%
Average % of workforce receiving incentives 88% 83% 54%Average Absenteeism 0.30% 0.80% 0.10% 0.50% 0.10%Injury Rate 0.10% 0.50% 0.10% 0.40% 0.00%
Average Working hours 50 58 50 50 45Average % of workers working less than or equal to 96% 76% 96% 96% 100%
Leading PerformanceAverage PerformancePoor Performance
KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS – Comparative Analysis
Based on January 2011 - December 2012 KPI Submissions
Factory A
Workforce Stability
Production
Worker Motivation
Social Performance
KEY:
Cost type Description Cost (USD)Separation Staff time for paperwork $ 1.11 Vacancy Overtime other staff less saved worker wages $ 13.63 Replacement Cost of staff to attract applicants & interview $ 4.12 Training Trainer & trainee salaries (orientation and on the job) $ 109.86 Opportunity costs
100% lost productivity during orientation and training and increased errors in the first month.
$ 231.29
TOTAL TURNOVER & REPLACEMENT COST/EMPLOYEE: $ 360.01
Total Cost Per Month - 70 replacement employees a month 25,200.43$ Annual Cost 302,405.10$
Savings from a 50% Reduction in New Hires 151,202.55$
The Cost of Turnover
Reduce turnover by 50%: savings of USD151,203
1,000 worker factory – replace 70 workers per month
Adapted from Corporate Social Responsibility in China’s Information and Communications Technology (ICT) Sector,” July 12, 2007, by Business for Social Responsibility
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ELEVATE low ELEVATE high BSR Study
Lost Workers - CNY 464.90 464.90 464.90
Cost per Worker 46.76$ 279.00$ 360.01$
Cost of workers lost 21,741$ 129,707$ 167,367$
Savings: retain half 10,870$ 64,854$ 83,683$
Investment 52,227$ 52,227$ 52,227$
Investment/Savings 4.805 0.805 0.624
Payback - months 57.65 9.66 7.49
Investment Payback
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KPMG/IDH/INFACT Report Business case analysis for responsible electronics
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Lean manufacturing
AC, heat
shields
Better recruit, training,
info
Improve relation workers
supervisors
WMD training, promote
worker involve, worker-driven op efficiency
Learnings • There is a business case for better social
performance. • Many of social compliance root causes are
related to business performance issues. By fixing the business issue, can position to address the social.
• Better reporting can help make more informed choices.
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Benefits of ICP Brand Commitment
• Capacity building - ICP Factory Improvement System (IFIS) Program trains factory managers and workers.
• Supplier transparency - Enablon software platform allows real-time visibility on supplier performance/compliance, ethical sourcing.
• Manage social compliance and reputation risks - Audits and Helpline protect workers, allow brands to meet ethical business standards.
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April 24, 2013 Slide 35
Question and Answer Period
Please keep all questions general … details about specific issues will not be addressed.
To communicate with the webinar moderator at any time during this session, please select either of the following options:
– Send a question using the “Q&A” drop down menu near the middle of the LiveMeeting navigation bar
– Start a private chat by double-clicking on “Ed Desmond– TIA Moderator” in the list of participants under the “Attendees” drop-down menu
To submit a question for review during the open dialogue, use the “Q&A” drop down menu near the middle of the LiveMeeting navigation bar
Download a copy of the presentation slides from the “Handouts” drop down menu (the graphic looks like three sheets of stacked papers) on the right-hand side of the LiveMeeting navigation bar
April 24, 2013 Slide 36
Resources
www. icti-care.org – ICTI CARE Process (ICP) website
www.toyassociation.org – Knowledge Network
(education and training services)
– Members Only Bulletins (Legislative, Safety, etc.)
– Industry Facts (research, reports and statistics)
– Press Room (news items on standards, legislation and more)
www.ToyInfo.org – Consumer-facing website