Apple CEO Tim Cook: This Is the No. 1 Reason We Make iPhones in China (It's Not What You Think)China is much more than a source of low-cost, low-skilled labor.
Inc
June 05, 2020
Link: https://www.inc.com/glenn-leibowitz/apple-ceo-tim-cook-this-is-number-1-reason-we-make-iphones-in-china-its-not-what-you-think.html
June 05, 2020
Take a look at the back
of the box from which you unpacked your iPhone and you'll see this:
"Designed by Apple in California Assembled in China."
Reading this tagline
might trigger a vision in your mind of Jonathan Ive, Apple's legendary chief design
officer, dropping the drawings and technical specs for the next-generation
iPhone into a (highly secure) shared folder that its low-cost suppliers in China can access as they manufacture and
assemble the product by the millions.
But as Apple CEO Tim
Cook recently pointed out, this picture wouldn't tell the entire story of how
an iPhone actually gets made today, or why Apple prefers to make them in China.
At the Fortune Global Forum in Guangzhou in early December (my firm, McKinsey
& Company, was the Knowledge Partner), I listened to Cook as he explained
why Apple continues to favor China as its central base for manufacturing
iPhones:
The number one reason
why we like to be in China is the people. China has extraordinary skills. And
the part that's the most unknown is there's almost two million application
developers in China that write apps for the iOS App Store. These are some of
the most innovative mobile apps in the world, and the entrepreneurs that run
them are some of the most inspiring and entrepreneurial in the world. Those are
sold not only here but exported around the world.
Highly skilled software
developers developing apps for the App Store are one reason Apple likes to be
in China. But the depth of highly skilled labor in the manufacturing space is
why Apple makes its iPhones there:
China has moved into
very advanced manufacturing, so you find in China the intersection of craftsman
kind of skill, and sophisticated robotics and the computer science world. That
intersection, which is very rare to find anywhere, that kind of skill, is very
important to our business because of the precision and quality level that we
like. The thing that most people focus on if they're a foreigner coming to
China is the size of the market, and obviously it's the biggest market in the
world in so many areas. But for us, the number one attraction is the quality of
the people.
Citing an example of the
type of a highly skilled supplier Apple works closely with, Cook talked at
length about recently visiting one company that it has collaborated with for
several years:
I visited ICT--they
manufacture, among other things, the AirPods for us. When you think about
AirPods as a user, you might think it couldn't be that hard because it's really
small. The AirPods have several hundred components in
them, and the level of precision embedded into the audio quality--without
getting into really nerdy engineering--it's really hard. And it requires a
level of skill that's extremely high.
And the idea that Apple
simply hands over the design to a company like ICT, which just manufacturers
according to spec, is simply untrue, says Cook:
It's not designed and sent
over--that sounds like there's no interaction. The truth is, the process
engineering and process development associated with our products require
innovation in and of itself. Not only the product but the way that it's made,
because we want to make things in the scale of hundreds of millions, and we
want the quality level of zero defects. That's always what we strive for, and
the way that you get there, particularly when you're pushing the envelope in
the type of materials that you have, and the precision that your specifications
are forcing, requires a kind of hand-in-glove partnership. You don't
do it by throwing it over the chasm. It would never work. I can't imagine how
that would be.
Addressing the
designed-in-California, made-in-low-cost-China impression that many people
have--an impression reinforced by the tagline that is printed on every box
containing a new iPhone--Cook had this to say:
There's a confusion
about China. The popular conception is that companies come to China because of
low labor cost. I'm not sure what part of China they go to, but the truth is
China stopped being the low-labor-cost country many years ago. And that is not
the reason to come to China from a supply point of view. The reason is because
of the skill, and the quantity of skill in one location and the type of skill
it is.
And China has an
abundance of skilled labor unseen elsewhere, says Cook:
The products we do
require really advanced tooling, and the precision that you have to have, the
tooling and working with the materials that we do are state of the art. And the
tooling skill is very deep here. In the U.S., you could have a meeting of
tooling engineers and I'm not sure we could fill the room. In China, you could
fill multiple football fields.
Cook credits China's
vast supply of highly skilled vocational talent:
The vocational expertise
is very very deep here, and I give the education system a lot of credit for
continuing to push on that even when others were de-emphasizing vocational. Now
I think many countries in the world have woke up and said this is a key thing
and we've got to correct that. China called that right from the beginning.
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