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The flip side of offshoring
by Heather
Hayes
for Virginia Business
September 2006
Victor C. Barringer II looks for profit on the flip side
of economic trends. The president and CEO of Charlottesville-based
Coastal Lumber Co. recognized in the early 1990s that
the U.S. furniture industry eventually would move offshore.
He traveled to China several times during the decade
to network and put deals in place. As a result, his
company is now the largest U.S. exporter of hardwood
lumber to China.
“
People like to demonize China, but they are buying material
from U.S. companies like ours, which are increasing sales
and adding employees as a result,” says Barringer,
who has added 16 employees in the U.S. and seven employees
in China over the last three years.
Coastal Lumber is a 1,300-employee
business that supplies raw hardwood lumber to manufacturers
of furniture,
flooring and cabinetry. Its sales to China have grown
50 percent
annually since 2001. Exports to that country now
represent 20 percent of Coastal’s total sales. The company’s
largest customer base is still in the U.S., but sales
to Europe have fallen behind those to China.
Coastal Lumber acquired its hardwood
lumber division three years ago (the original company,
owned by Barringer’s
relatives, had timberland, softwood and plywood divisions).
He moved his headquarters and nine senior management
employees from Weldon, N.C., to Charlottesville a year
ago to be closer to the company’s 18 mills,
located primarily in West Virginia and Pennsylvania.
Barringer also sees growth opportunity
in the current energy crisis. Beginning this year,
the company
will expand to focus on the lumber byproducts
market using
primarily sawdust. “In today’s environment,
we believe that really is an untapped resource that tends
to be overlooked as a profit center,” he
says, noting that the waste material can be turned
into
wood pellets that fuel large institutional furnaces
or small
residential wood stoves.
Coastal Lumber continues to expand
its hardwood lumber business. It sells products in
44 countries
and wins
customers from competitors by being a low-cost
manufacturer. When the company acquired the
hardwood division,
Barringer immediately began a work force incentive
program modeled
after one at Nucor Corp. that has helped improve
the steel maker’s productivity. The program
requires personnel to achieve shift goals as
a group in order
to receive incentive pay. Barringer also runs
the company as if it were publicly traded,
releasing all profit
and loss statements to employees and tying
compensation to
responsibility and performance.
“
We cut costs wherever we can, and we try to get as much
out of the work force as possible,” Barringer says. “In
a tough, low-margin industry, it’s the only way
we’re going to stay alive.”
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