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  <title><![CDATA[Georgia Manufacturing Survey 2010: Recession Makes Innovation More Critical Than Ever for Competitiveness]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<p>The recession has expanded the business advantages of Georgia
manufacturers that compete on the basis of innovation in new or
technologically improved products, processes, organizational structures
or marketing practices.&nbsp; These innovative companies are more than twice
as profitable as firms competing on the basis of low price.</p><p>That’s one conclusion of the <a href="http://stip.gatech.edu/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/GMS-2010.pdf">2010 Georgia Manufacturing Survey</a>,
which also found that companies are preparing for post-recession
growth, expanding export capabilities, addressing sustainability issues
– and still dealing with out-sourcing and in-sourcing.&nbsp; The survey,
which included nearly 500 manufacturers, was conducted by Georgia
Tech’s <a href="http://innovate.gatech.edu/">Enterprise Innovation Institute</a>, the Georgia Tech <a href="http://www.spp.gatech.edu/">School of Public Policy</a>,
and Kennesaw State University, with support from the Georgia Department
of Labor and accounting firm Habif, Arogeti &amp; Wynne, LLP.</p><p>Georgia has approximately 10,000 manufacturers that provide nearly
350,000 jobs and account for 11 percent of the gross state product.&nbsp;
Workers in manufacturing companies earn wages averaging nearly twice
those of workers in retail companies.</p>
<p>The survey found a widening profitability gap between manufacturers
that compete on the basis of innovation compared to those that use
other competitive strategies.&nbsp; That gap has grown in each survey
conducted since 2002.</p>
<p>“Companies that compete on the basis of innovation are much more
profitable, pay higher wages and more likely to benefit from
in-sourcing opportunities than firms that compete on low price,” said
Jan Youtie, the survey’s director and a principal research associate in
Georgia Tech’s Enterprise Innovation Institute.&nbsp; “Adoption of an
innovation strategy can be useful to manufacturers regardless of
industrial segment, and is especially important during difficult
economic times.”</p>
<p>As part of the survey, companies were asked to rank six competitive
strategies for their importance to winning sales.&nbsp; More than half of
the respondents mentioned “high quality,” while approximately 20
percent chose “low price” or “adapting to customer needs.”&nbsp; Fewer than
10 percent reported “innovation/new technology” as a primary
competitive strategy.</p>
<p>Across all six strategies, innovation was associated with the
highest mean return on sales: 14 percent, compared to just six percent
for the low-price strategy.&nbsp; And those financial benefits extended to
workers, whose annual salaries averaged $10,000 per year more at
innovative manufacturers than at other companies.</p>
<p>The top five innovative tactics reported by respondents were (1)
working with customers to create or design a product, process or other
innovation, (2) signing a confidentiality agreement to access a new
product or process, (3) working with suppliers to create or design a
product, process or other innovation, (4) purchasing new equipment, and
(5) conducting research and development activities in-house.</p>
<p>While manufacturers of technology products are most often associated
with the strategy, innovative companies can be found in all industrial
segments, said Philip Shapira, co-director of the survey and professor
in the Georgia Tech School of Public Policy.</p>
<p>“Many people think that innovation is something that has to be done
in a lab, but our results show that innovation occurs more broadly,
particularly as companies partner with customers and suppliers to take
into account their needs for a new product or process,” he explained.&nbsp;
“While high technology companies tend to be innovative by their nature,
innovation occurs across all segments, and every firm has opportunities
to be innovative.”</p>
<p>Companies often cite cost as a reason for not innovating, but
Shapira noted that only 10 percent of companies take advantage of
R&amp;D tax credits; fewer still use investment tax credits.&nbsp; “While
financial incentives can assist innovation, there is a greater need to
build awareness and capabilities among more of the state’s firms to
undertake innovation,” he said.</p>
<p>Though more than two-thirds of Georgia’s manufacturers have cut jobs
or lost sales in the recession, many of these companies are now looking
toward the future with plans for locating new customers, boosting
capital investment, expanding research and development and continuing
to reduce costs.</p>
<p>“When we look at their plans, Georgia manufacturers are in an
expansive mood, looking for new customers and getting ready for the
next phase of economic growth,” Youtie said.</p>
<p>The survey found that 70 percent of respondents were looking for new
customers, 20 percent planned to expand capital investment, and 15
percent planned to increase expenditures on research and development.&nbsp;
At the same time, 60 percent of respondents said they still planned to
cut costs.</p>
<p>Another trend studied was growth in the number companies selling to
international markets.&nbsp; More than half of the responding manufacturers
said they were exporters – and those manufacturers reported 50 percent
higher profitability than non-exporters.&nbsp; Some 22 percent of
respondents had increased their export sales since the last survey in
2008.</p>
<p>“We don’t find much difference between exporting companies when
comparing them by the amount they export,” Youtie noted.&nbsp; “What seems
to be important is the capability to export.&nbsp; We think there is some
learning that takes place, and some capability that a company develops
to become an exporter.&nbsp; That capability translates into improved
performance across the board, in addition to creating new markets and
different margins.”</p>
<p>The survey also found that out-sourcing of work has leveled off,
with approximately 16 percent of manufacturers affected by the loss of
business in 2010.&nbsp; At the same time, the percentage of firms
benefitting from in-sourcing – movement of work to Georgia – has grown
to nearly 15 percent.</p>
<p>“Out-sourcing isn’t going away, but it has stabilized,” Youtie
said.&nbsp; “In-sourcing appears to be growing, which creates opportunities
for good manufacturers to benefit from consolidation of production from
other U.S. facilities or even from overseas.”</p>
<p>The study also looked at sustainability issues, and found that 60
percent of companies recycle and attempt to reduce waste – one form of
sustainability.&nbsp; However, just 11 percent of respondents had
inventoried their carbon footprints or emissions, and fewer than five
percent were using renewable energy.</p>
<p>The bottom line for manufacturers?</p>
<p>“The results of our survey can point manufacturers to a way forward
for getting ready for the next phase,” said Youtie.&nbsp; “Companies can
develop innovation capabilities; they can look into exporting and they
can collaborate more with suppliers and customers.”</p>
<p><strong>Research News &amp; Publications Office<br />
Enterprise Innovation Institute<br />
Georgia Institute of Technology<br />
75 Fifth Street, N.W., Suite 314<br />
Atlanta, Georgia&nbsp; 30308&nbsp; USA</strong></p>
<p><strong>Media Relations Contact</strong>: John Toon (404-894-6986)(<a href="mailto:jtoon@gatech.edu">jtoon@gatech.edu</a>).</p>
<p><strong>Writer</strong>: John Toon</p>]]></body>
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      <value><![CDATA[<p>The recession has expanded the business advantages of Georgia
manufacturers that compete on the basis of innovation in new or
technologically improved products, processes, organizational structures
or marketing practices.&nbsp; These innovative companies are more than twice
as profitable as firms competing on the basis of low price.</p>]]></value>
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      <email><![CDATA[rebecca.keane@iac.gatech.edu]]></email>
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      <value><![CDATA[<p>Rebecca Keane&nbsp; 404-894-1720</p>]]></value>
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