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The false promise of mass customization

Build to order will be hugely expensive and challenging, and its benefits are uncertain. But there is a cheaper alternative.

10 min read
For more than two decades, mass customization has been the future of manufacturing--and for some manufacturers it probably always will be. On the face of it, mass customization is a remarkably attractive proposition for consumers and producers alike.

Consumers get a reasonably priced, tailor-made product reflecting their personal tastes. Producers, for their part, get to reduce their inventories and manufacturing-overhead costs, to eliminate waste in their supply chains and to obtain more accurate information about demand. In short, a win-win proposition.

Two relatively recent developments have given the prospects for mass customization a boost: first, the success enjoyed by Dell Computer and other high-tech companies that build products to order and, second, the emergence of the Internet.

Dell?s story is by now a familiar one. Over the phone or via the Web, customers select what they want from hundreds of components to configure the computer of their choice, which Dell doesn?t begin to build until it has the money for it in hand.

The second development--the Internet--gives manufacturers a platform for taking orders from a mass audience for customized products at almost no cost. In the past, customization of this kind was handled by skilled but expensive salespeople closely interacting with customers.

"="" alternative="" that="" could="" expand="" the="" customer's="" choice="" without="" presenting="" challenges="" posed="" by="" real="" bto."=""> But mass customization isn?t necessarily feasible for all goods. Assembling cars, for example, is more complex and difficult than building computers. Still, auto companies such as BMW, Ford Motor and General Motors have high hopes for the build-to-order (BTO) approach, a variant of mass customization. They are convinced that the costs they can wring from their business systems by switching to BTO are enormous, that the benefits to customers are numerous, and that the difficult challenges they face in implementing BTO can be overcome.

Ford and GM have already launched experiments with BTO for customers in a few cities. Other auto companies have said in their public pronouncements that they will move to broad-based BTO systems in two to three years; privately, they have been heard to say that the change may take five or six.

Nonetheless, we remain doubtful about the benefits of BTO. The challenges of implementing it in the auto industry are daunting, and it isn?t clear that the economics will work. Moving from a mass-manufacturing (or "push") system of production, which automakers have continually refined over the years, to a BTO (or "pull") system would require numerous operational and organizational changes throughout the auto industry.

Yet the payoff from all this activity is unclear. Luxury-car buyers seem eager to specify their preferences in great detail. But it is still too early to tell whether mainstream customers want their vehicles built to order, let alone how much they would be willing to pay.

Fortunately, automakers bent on a BTO future have a "virtual" alternative that could expand the customer?s choice without presenting the challenges posed by real BTO. Yet this alternative would still allow car companies to get much better information about demand than they have now.

Today, automakers have their hands full making products that customers want to buy. For mainstream volume builders, BTO may be a distraction that they can ill afford. Focusing time and assets on the lower-cost virtual alternative is a better idea.

BTO's promise
Broadly defined, BTO is already a reality: customers can place special orders for cars today. At the simplest level, customers can check the inventories of various lots within a given geographic area to see whether a car being sought already exists. Customers can also ask their dealers to order cars from the manufacturer. Most customers in the United States aren?t aware that they can order cars, and dealers generally don?t tell them.

Although most U.S. states at present have franchise laws prohibiting manufacturers from selling directly to consumers, dealers are still likely to view BTO as a threat. However, customers who want a special-order car may have to wait weeks or even months for delivery. In the United States, the auto industry is geared to building, assembling and delivering to stock--essentially through a batch method. Individual orders are worked into the system as time and inclination permit.

Consumer demand for custom-made cars is greater in Europe: About 19 percent of all cars sold there last year were special orders (compared with 7 percent in the United States), according to separate studies conducted recently by Goldman Sachs and by J. D. Power and Associates. A number of differences between Old World and New World markets explain the variance in these percentages. The lots of European dealers, for example, are typically smaller, so there are fewer vehicles on hand for buyers to select from--which prompts special ordering. BTO is more appealing to premium-car buyers, and some European markets sell higher proportions of such cars.

Finally, though Europeans must wait just as long as people in the United States for ordered cars to be delivered, rough data suggest that Europeans are more willing to wait for the right car than are U.S. buyers.

Automakers on both sides of the Atlantic are nevertheless united in their conviction that they could raise prices somewhat and reduce costs substantially if the majority of their customers bought special-order cars. Prices could be raised because customers would have difficulty comparison shopping, and they would be getting exactly what they wanted. At the same time, dealers and original-equipment manufacturers probably could cut back on the enormous discounts often required to "move the metal" from the back of the dealer?s lot.

But the far greater lure of BTO, for automakers, lies in the hope of lower supply-chain costs. A true pull system would mean a massive reduction in finished goods and in components inventories. Industry analysts estimate that if customers bought a majority of cars built to order, the industry could capture as much as 70 percent of the capital lost or locked up in the present push system--lost when inventory becomes obsolete following a change in models, production processes and assembly structures; or locked up in metal and components kept on the shelf to meet unanticipated demand. By capturing this lost or locked-up capital and by reducing discounts offered to move inventory, carmakers could realize total savings of $65 billion to $80 billion a year.

Facing challenges
But making mass customization in the auto industry real would require carmakers to deal with enormous changes in design, sourcing, manufacturing, marketing and distribution.

Mass customization would require manufacturers to rethink the way they absorb fluctuations in production. OEMs such as Ford and GM, for example, would have to idle their plants during periods of low demand, though unionized labor would still have to be paid. For that and other reasons, just breaking even requires most plants to run at no less than 80 percent of capacity.

Achieving the strategic manufacturing flexibility required for mass customization would require many operational changes. Customers may like to choose the color of their cars, for instance, but paint shops at car plants run in batch mode to cut costs and to minimize the emissions and waste that are generated every time paint guns receiving new colors are flushed.

Carmakers could achieve BTO by modularizing--that is, by fabricating individual cars not from thousands of distinct parts but from mere dozens of larger mix-and-match modules. But because carmakers might have to carry a range of modules, modules could involve greater inventory redundancy and waste within the supply chain than do nonmodular components, which can be configured exactly according to demand. In addition, modules take up more floor space than do loose parts and are costlier to ship. At both DaimlerChrysler?s Smart-car plant in France and Volkswagen?s Resende truck plant in Brazil, modular supplies have introduced a range of productivity and quality problems. As one Smart-car executive put it, "We had to learn that what makes sense in theory has headaches in real life."

Supply chain
BTO introduces even greater challenges upstream of the assembly plant, in the supply chain. Currently, the chain is designed to deliver mass quantities of standard components, not to adjust the output mix according to individual orders. The latter approach would tend to require shorter supply links, yet the low-wage areas where many current suppliers are located happen to be a great distance from the carmakers? assembly plants.

Although most U.S. states at present have franchise laws prohibiting manufacturers from selling directly to consumers, dealers are still likely to view BTO as a threat. Ironically, the dealers? resistance is reinforced by the OEMs? policy of providing free financing for the first 10 to 30 days of inventory on dealers lots. Dealers have told us that they actually value large stocks, up to a point. Said one, "A large number of cars on my lot shows I am healthy, open for business, and offering wide choice. Why should I trade that in for two demo cars in a dinky showroom?"

Automakers would face numerous organizational challenges as well. Labor unions would oppose the external assembly of modules and managers throughout the OEM organization and the value chain would at least initially resist incentives that pull parts and cars through the system in response to customer demand instead of pushing them through supply and assembly plants to dealerships.

Most players are saddled with IT systems designed to support mass production. These systems include demand management, manufacturing resource planning (MRP), enterprise resource planning (ERP), manufacturing execution and supply-chain systems, some of which are still running in overnight batch mode. Adopting BTO might require companies to update and integrate their dozens of diverse systems.

Will BTO appeal to consumers?
Assuming that BTO can be implemented, will it appeal to consumers? Automakers point to growing evidence that their customers would welcome a BTO option. Last year, a survey by J. D. Power and Associates revealed that 17 percent of North American car buyers would purchase a build-to-order vehicle the next time they bought a car.

The true depth and extent of customer demand for a build-to-order vehicle is still largely unknown. Carmakers cannot gauge the receptiveness of buyers of mass-market cars in either Europe or North America. Specifically, carmakers haven?t identified the incremental factors that prompt customers to switch from one option to another or prevent them from doing so. In addition, some customers have said in surveys that they place greater value on the dealer?s ability to help them understand whether one option or another will enhance or undercut a vehicle?s resale value than they do on expanded choice.

Automakers point to growing evidence that their customers would welcome a BTO option. BTO won?t become a reality until the industry has a better understanding of what it is about BTO that customers value. In view of these mysteries and obstacles, it is fortunate that an alternative path for OEMs exists. Indeed, some are already pursuing it. They are finding that the alternative offers many of the benefits of a true BTO system while lacking its operational and organizational drawbacks. The alternative does so by connecting customers to the vast array of cars already in existence, including vehicles on dealers? lots, in transit, on the assembly line, and scheduled for production. In this way, customers are likely to find a vehicle with the color and the options they most want.

Customers shouldn?t care whether the car they purchased was built expressly for them or found for them somewhere in the supply chain, as long as it had the features they wanted and they got it in a reasonable amount of time. For automakers, this is a low-cost solution that is easier to implement than BTO yet likely to provide high customer satisfaction. Just as important, this approach offers automakers access to customer data and insight into customer preferences equal to what real BTO promises.

But a virtual BTO system means trade-offs for consumers as well as for automakers. It might offer a more limited selection of options than true BTO, take longer to deliver the right vehicle to the customer, and force carmakers to charge more for some options. That is because neither the three distinct stages of batch auto manufacturing (stamp and weld, paint, and assemble) nor a manufacturer?s scheduling processes would change significantly when it adopted the virtual BTO model. If the customer ordered an option that was installed during an upstream manufacturing stage and wasn?t already part of a vehicle in inventory or production, the automaker would have to interrupt the production flow. And the OEMs themselves, under a virtual system, wouldn?t immediately gain any of the operational benefits promised by a true and realized pull model.

Ford and GM, among other companies, are experimenting with virtual BTO programs. Ford launched its online virtual BTO offering, FordDirect.com, in California in December 2000 and plans to launch it nationwide by the end of 2001. Through FordDirect, California customers can search for Ford vehicles in dealer inventories; in time, Ford says, it will provide information about vehicles en route to dealers and on the production line. More than three-quarters of all Ford dealers in the state are participating in the joint venture.

BTO won't become a reality until the industry has a better understanding of what it is about BTO that customers value. GM in turn launched an enhanced version of its GMBuyPower.com Web site recently for Minneapolis customers and has plans to launch the program nationwide by the end of 2001. GMBuyPower.com allows customers to research and locate existing cars with the features they desire or to get cars by special order. GM is also considering hooking up with dealers in a joint venture called AutoCentric, which would link a "locate/build-to-order" application to a Web retailer such as Autobytel.com. GM might even permit customers to use the Web to order vehicles made by competing carmakers.

In truth, changes that the auto industry must make to implement BTO are needed in any case. Automakers should take inefficiencies out of their supply-chain systems and e-enable manufacturing and distribution systems to become more flexible and responsive.

But making the attainment of true BTO the goal when the changes required are mammoth and the returns so uncertain is another matter. The auto industry has a history of disappointing returns from its investments in massive change initiatives, such as implementing ERP systems and placing robots in its plants. Should it neglect the safer, easier alternative--the virtual BTO option--the industry could be disappointed once again.