Chapter: 1 Location Planning and Analysis: Need For Location Decisions Nature of Location Decisions
Chapter: 1 Location Planning and Analysis: Need For Location Decisions Nature of Location Decisions
Chapter: 1 Location Planning and Analysis: Need For Location Decisions Nature of Location Decisions
Labor Factors
Other Factors
Community Considerations
Community Considerations
Site-Related Factors
Multiple Plant Manufacturing Strategies
Product Plant Strategy
Market Area Plant Strategy
Process Plant Strategy
Service and Retail Locations
Global Locations
8-3 Location Planning and Analysis
CHAPTER
8
Location Planning
and Analysis
decisions.
LOCATION OPTIONS
Managers generally consider FOUR options in location planning:
o Expand
o Move to a new location
o Keeping the old location and add to a new location while retaining
the existing ones
o Doing nothing maintaining the “status quo”
8-12 Location Planning and Analysis
Marketing Strategy
Cost of Doing Business
Growth
Depletion of Resources
8-13 Location Planning and Analysis
Regional Factors
Labor factors
INTANGIBLE FACTORS
Not all measures of a location’s desirability can be expressed in
dollars and cents. People must be induced to come to work there, so
the appeal of a locality as a place to live and rear a family is
important. The local environment may also have important effects on
a company.
1. Zoning and Legal Regulations
Local, state, and federal pollution control regulations may limit the
locations available to some companies. Zoning regulations control
the types of businesses that may operate in certain areas.
2. Community Attitudes
Community relations should be an integral part of location decisions.
Public opinion in some areas may be unfavorable to particular types
of businesses, even though there is no formal legislation against it.
8-21 Location Planning and Analysis
INTANGIBLE FACTORS
3. Expansion Potential
A site for a manufacturing or nonmanufacturing facility should
offer some flexibility and room for expansion. The size and
contour of the plot of land should allow for expansion of the
facility without a sacrifice of efficiency.
4. Living Conditions
Often a company's top-echelon personnel are obtained from other
branches or other companies. Today some people decline
promotions with their own or offers from other companies
because they do not want to move to the job location.
8-22 Location Planning and Analysis
Community Considerations
Quality of life
Services
Attitudes
Taxes
Environmental regulations
Utilities
Developer support
8-24 Location Planning and Analysis
Land
Transportation
Environmental
Legal
8-25 Location Planning and Analysis
Information Technology
8-32 Location Planning and Analysis
Table 8.3
Evaluating Locations
Cost-Profit-Volume Analysis
Factor Rating Method
Centre of Gravity Method
Transportaion Cost Method
8-34 Location Planning and Analysis
L o c a tio n F ix e d V a r ia b le
C o s t C o s t
A $ 2 5 0 ,0 0 0 $ 1 1
B 1 0 0 ,0 0 0 3 0
C 1 5 0 ,0 0 0 2 0
D 2 0 0 ,0 0 0 3 5
8-36 Location Planning and Analysis
Example 1: Solution
F ix e d V a r ia b le T o ta l
C o s ts C o s ts C o s ts
A $ 2 5 0 ,0 0 0 $ 1 1 (1 0 ,0 0 0 ) $ 3 6 0 ,0 0 0
B 1 0 0 ,0 0 0 3 0 (1 0 ,0 0 0 ) 4 0 0 ,0 0 0
C 1 5 0 ,0 0 0 2 0 (1 0 ,0 0 0 ) 3 5 0 ,0 0 0
D 2 0 0 ,0 0 0 3 5 (1 0 ,0 0 0 ) 5 5 0 ,0 0 0
8-37 Location Planning and Analysis
Example 1: Solution
$(000)
800 D
700
600 B
500 C
400 A
300 A Superior
200 C Superior
100 B Superior
0
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16
GLOBAL LOCATIONS
Recent trends in locating facilities, particularly manufacturing
facilities, reflect a combination of competitive and technological
factors. One trend has been that of foreign producers, especially
automotive firms, to locate plants in the United States. The United
States represents a tremendous market for cars, trucks, and
recreational vehicles. By locating in the United States, these firms
can shorten delivery time and reduce delivery costs. Furthermore,
they can avoid any future tariffs or quotas that might be applied to
imports.
A development that affects location decisions was the passage of
GATT in 1994. One of its provisions was the reduction and
elimination of various tariffs. Consequently, location within the
borders of a country to escape tariffs is now much less of an issue.
8-46 Location Planning and Analysis
GLOBAL LOCATIONS
An ethical issue has been the use of "sweatshops," which employ
workers at low wages in poor working conditions. Consumer protests
have caused a number of companies to cease this practice.
Another trend is just-in-time manufacturing techniques, which
encourage suppliers to locate near their customers to reduce supplier
lead times. For this reason, some U.S. firms are reconsidering decisions
to locate offshore. Moreover, in light manufacturing (e.g., electronics),
low-cost labor is becoming less important than nearness to markets;
users of electronics components want suppliers that are close to their
manufacturing facilities. One offshoot of this is the possibility that the
future will see a trend toward smaller factories located close to markets.
In some industries, small, automated microfactories with narrow product
focuses will be located near major markets to reduce response time.
8-47 Location Planning and Analysis
GLOBAL LOCATIONS
• It is likely that advances in information technology will enhance the
ability of manufacturing firms to gather, track, and distribute
information that links purchasing, marketing, and distribution with
design, engineering, and manufacturing. This will reduce the need for
these functions to be located close together, thereby permitting a
strategy of locating production facilities near major markets.
• Two other factors are causing companies to locate manufacturing
facilities in countries that contain their markets (e.g., Japanese auto
companies establishing factories in the United States). One is to
counter negative sentiments such as "not made in this country." Thus,
Japanese factories in the United States produce cars made by U.S.
workers. The second factor relates to currency fluctuations and
devaluations. These changes can have a significant impact on demand
and. hence, on profits. Changes in currency value alter the price of
foreign goods, but not the price of goods produced within a country.
8-48 Location Planning and Analysis
GLOBAL LOCATIONS
• For instance, if the value of a country's currency falls relative to that of
other countries, prices within the country don't change, but foreign-
produced goods become more expensive. If demand is elastic, then
demand for those foreign goods will fall. Furthermore, currency changes
may result in increased costs of parts supplied by foreign producers. By
locating and selling within a country, and buying from suppliers in that
country, manufacturers can avoid the impact of currency changes.
• The trend toward globalization for some organizations has meant having
facilities, personnel, and operations around the world. This has created
new challenges for managing scattered and distant operations. Added to
that are the ongoing social unrest, political instability, and terrorist acts
that have caused many organizations to be very cautious about locating in,
or even traveling to, certain counties or regions.
• Nonetheless, the benefits of globalization, coupled with advanced
communications capabilities and other technologies, make globalization
worth considering.
8-49 Location Planning and Analysis
GLOBAL LOCATIONS
• The growth in multinational operations over the past several decades
is evidence of the importance of foreign locations. Some firms are
attracted to foreign locations because of nearby deposits of
aluminum, copper, timber, oil, or other natural resources. Other firms
view foreign locations as a way to expand their markets, and still
others are attracted by ample supplies of labor. Some countries may
offer financial incentives to companies to create jobs for their people.
Developing countries may establish tariffs to protect their young
industries from outside competition, which may also reduce the
amount of "foreign'" competition a firm must face if it locates in such
a country. Until the North American Free Trade Agreement
eliminated restrictions, the Fisher-Price Toy Company factory in
Matamoros. Mexico, was not allowed to sell in Mexico the Muppet
toys it makes. U.S. companies with factories in Mexico could import
raw materials duty-free, but they were required to export all of their
output.
8-50 Location Planning and Analysis
GLOBAL LOCATIONS
Many developing countries offer an abundant supply of cheap labor. For
example, a considerable amount of the clothes sold in the United States bear
labels indicating they were made in Korea. China, or Taiwan. In some
instances, it is less expensive to ship raw materials or semi finished goods to
foreign countries for fabrication and assembly, and then ship them to their final
destinations, than it is to produce them in the United States. However, the final
cost per unit is the most important factor. In some cases, the low cost of labor
in a foreign country can be negated by low productivity and shipping costs.
High production costs in Germany have contributed to a number of German
companies locating some of their production facilities in lower-cost countries.
Among them are industrial products giant Siemens, A.G. (a semiconductor
plant in Britain), drug makers Bayer, A.G. (a plant in Texas) and Hoechst,
A.G. (a plant in China), and automakers Mercedes (plants in Spain, France,
and Alabama) and BMW (a plant in Spartansburg, South Carolina).
8-51 Location Planning and Analysis
GLOBAL LOCATIONS
• A firm contemplating a foreign location must carefully weigh the
potential benefits against the potential problems. A major factor is the
stability of a country's government and its attitude toward American
firms. Import restrictions can pose problems with bringing in
equipment and spare parts.
• Some of the problems of a foreign location can be caused by language
and cultural differences between the United States and the host
country. U.S. firms often find it necessary to use U.S. technical
personnel but find it difficult to convince workers to move to a
foreign country; workers may have to leave their families behind or
else subject them to sub-standard housing or educational systems.
Companies are now exerting additional efforts to reduce these
obstacles. Some provide housing allowances and have schools for
U.S. children. They are also improving their efforts to see that the
employees they send abroad are familiar with local customs and have
a reasonable facility with the language of the host country.
8-52 Location Planning and Analysis
GLOBAL LOCATIONS
One factor that has negatively impacted the bottom line of some
U.S. firms operating plants in foreign countries is the level of
corruption present, erasing some of the envisioned benefits of lower
labor or transportation costs.