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company’s actions now can affect its future success.
Where will you be when the recession ends? This is not a
rhetorical question. We are currently living in a transformational period that
will affect not only our industry but our world. When this recession ends, much
will look the same - but don’t be fooled. Governments around the globe are in
the process of spending untold amounts of money on infrastructure improvements,
alternative-energy generation, programs that will reward the development of
advanced manufacturing strategies, and more. It is during these times that
dinosaurs perish, yesterday’s common practices become passé, and companies that
are perceptive and proactive prosper.
The past two decades have been a period of creative stagnation for most of the
world’s chemical-based manufacturing industries, including adhesives and
sealants. However, some innovation has occurred; as a result, some interesting
and worthwhile products have been introduced. For example, reactive
polyurethane hot melts are replacing solvent-based contact cements and epoxies
in panel bonding. In addition, conductive and thermal dissipative epoxies have
replaced solders. Unfortunately, these are only incremental improvements: they
may seem new and different, but they are not transformational.
Less money is being spent on research and development. In fact, R&D
spending is 60-70% of what it was 10-15 years ago, and what has been funded is
largely tactical in nature: incremental
improvement focused on value maintenance rather than the strategic creation of
value-added platform technologies and truly new products. Unfortunately, there
never seems to be a good time to team up the R&D and marketing departments
and direct them toward the future. During good times, all employees are needed
to service current business. When things are slow, workforces are reduced, and
all available R&D and marketing resources must concentrate on producing
results for the current quarter. However, slow times are the perfect time to
engage the best marketing and R&D people in strategic planning, and to act
to ensure a more secure and profitable tomorrow.
During slow times, idle production lines can be used to look at new products.
In addition, testing laboratories are able to evaluate new technological
concepts and prototype products. Far-sighted companies might choose to increase
technical and market research during slow times rather than reduce them. The
organizations that will emerge from the global recession and succeed in the
future are the ones currently investing in marketing resources, using either
inside personnel or outside firms to detect and define how things are changing
during this transformational period, and determining what will be needed when
things turn around. The far-sighted companies will translate this market
research into future technologies, such as those green, energy-efficient,
low-carbon-footprint, low-emission, higher-performing products manufactured
wholly or in part from renewable resources that will both meet future needs and
dominate future trends.
In the future, it will be increasingly difficult for major durable-goods
manufacturers to avoid the environmental and economic pressures placed on them
by both the global regulatory community and consumer demands and perceptions.
Automobiles will need to be lighter and more environmentally friendly;
adhesives and sealants will be required to achieve this, especially with regard
to strength-to-mass ratios. The same will be true for other adhesive and
sealant applications: from flexible packaging to infrastructure projects, both
new and repair; from medical applications to PSAs; from aerospace to the
proposed new digital electricity grid. Increased use will be made of dissimilar
materials that will need to be bonded. In many cases, this will mean new
technology that meets regulatory and consumer expectations for sustainability
and “green-ness.”
So, where will you be when the recession ends? It all depends upon what you are
doing right now.
For more information, call (513) 469-7555 or visit www.chemquest.com.Links