My Three Cents: In what ways have your
operations in China bolstered your
business?
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By: Michelle
Maniscalco
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In what ways have your operations in China bolstered
your business?
Jim Buonomo, chief financial officer and chief
strategy officer
Nypro Inc., Clinton, MA
Business: Injection molding
Markets: Automotive, consumer, industrial, electronics,
telecom, healthcare, packaging
Nypro has been involved in Asia since 1973, when
we opened a tooling shop in Hong Kong. We entered mainland
China in 1993 with the opening of our Shenzhen plant, which
features over 70 machines as well as cleanroom molding. We now
have about half of our workforce (8000 out of 16,000 worldwide)
and a third of our $1 billion global sales coming from Asia,
with 90% of Asian sales out of five factory complexes in China.
Nypro would not be the company we are today without the China
component of our history.
Our customers are the world’s best companies in healthcare,
consumer, electronics, packaging, and precision automotive
markets. To serve them, we must be where they are. To be
trusted by these types of companies to make their products, we
have to become very much like those customers themselves in
style, thinking, and execution. Growing in China, and around
the world, has helped to grow Nypro in the United States.
Tom Opelewski VP, UPG, Asia
UPG International, Chicago, IL
Business: Injection molding
Markets: Medical, consumer, automotive,
electronics

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China does more than “bolster”; it’s an essential
cornerstone to our business. As a contract manufacturer, we
follow our customers and, across all our segments, they have
turned to China. Most go there for cost savings, at least at
first. But they stay for opportunity or quality.
Opportunity takes two forms in China. The first is to make the
most of a highly motivated and highly educated workforce where
there are multiple incentives for manufacturing. The second,
rapidly growing opportunity involves marketing to the
burgeoning domestic China market specifically and the Pacific
Rim in general.
Quality in China, as anywhere, is earned through continuous
effort, and China is an ideal place for finding both effort and
intelligent problem-solving. In the last five years, we have
increasingly enjoyed our position as a catalyst between
knowledgeable, global design and marketing capabilities and
timely, efficient production in one of the most promising areas
in the world.
Frank Pellegrino, VP, engineering
International Smart Sourcing Inc.
Farmingdale, NY and Shanghai, China
Business: Injection molding, moldmaking
Markets: Appl., consumer, govt., bus. equip., telecom, elec.,
power tools, sporting goods
While we still have some molding operations in the
U.S., most of our manufacturing today is done in China. In
1999, we began to outsource there to reduce our manufacturing
needs internally. We set up a network of qualified vendors for
plastics processing, and then began offering the service to
other molders. We now have offices in Shanghai and Ningbo with
teams responsible for logistics and vendor surveys along with a
plastics dept. manager, administrator, QC support, and a
tooling engineer. Orders are placed with us, and we take
responsibility for everything—tooling, production, quality, and
logistics.
Our growth in the past seven years has been phenomenal, but
this did not come easily. We had to partner with Chinese
molders, and then put our own people in the factory to ensure
success. For our OEM and molder customers, we’ve taken the risk
and liability out of manufacturing in China, and we enable U.S.
molders to remain competitive through outsourcing.
IMM - December 2006
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