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LEGO Group

Published on Nov 18, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

Untitled Slide

LEGO GROUP

KELVIN LEE, KARLO OLANDIA, MARK TARABOCCHIA, DAVIS WATKINS
Photo by Squiggle

AGENDA

  • LEGO History, Vision, and Products
  • LEGO Financial Crisis
  • LEGO's New Strategy
  • Flextronic Partnership
  • Lessons Learned and Conclusion

LEGO'S HISTORY

  • Ole Kirk Christiansen
  • Founder of the LEGO Group
  • 1934 - Leg godt
  • Danish phrase for "play well"
  • 1947 - Christiansen started making plastic toys
Photo by sayamindu

LEGO'S HISTORY

  • 1949 - Early version of LEGO Brick Created
  • 1958 - Ole Kirk Christiansen dies
  • 1958 - modern LEGO Brick created
Photo by obiwanjr

LEGO'S VISION

  • "Inspire children to explore and challenge
  • their own creative potential"
  • Motto: "Only the Best is Good Enough"
  • "It is in the philosophy that 'good play' enriches
  • a child' life - and its subsequent adulthood"

LEGO'S PRODUCTS

  • 1958 - Modern LEGO brick
  • 1969 - LEGO DUPLO
  • 1977 - LEGO Technic

LEGO'S PRODUCTS

  • 1997 - LEGO Video games
  • 2009 - LEGO board games
  • 2014 - The LEGO Movie

LEGO CRISIS

THE FINANCIAL CRISIS OF 2004

HOW?

  • Declining demand of traditional product
  • Massive diversification of new products
  • Multitude of suppliers amounting to 11,000
  • High costs associated with new ventures
  • More products brought complexities

A NEW STRATEGY

  • New CEO Jorgen Vig Knugstrop
  • Backed by Founding Family
  • Handle finances carefully
  • Analyze the supply chain
  • Analyze distribution and production operations
Photo by emrank

STRATEGY IMPLEMENTATION

  • Forecast demand fluctuations
  • Manage inventory levels more efficiently
  • Reduce investments on specialized molds
  • Analyze profit margins from retail partners
  • Focus on more profitable retail partners
Photo by Ian Muttoo

DISTRIBUTION

  • Distributed products from Germany, Denmark, and France
  • Centralize European distribution centers in Czech Republic
  • Reduce complexity of managing multiple distribution centers
  • Reduce costs of running the centers simultaneously

PRODUCTION PROCESS

  • Develop the necessary mold
  • Mold the required shapes
  • Assemble the parts
  • Pre/Post-Package the products
  • Assembly and Post Package were the most costly
Photo by Problemkind

PRODUCTION

  • Produced products at high cost countries
  • Denmark, the US, South Korea, and Switzerland
  • Incentivized to outsource their production
Photo by Problemkind

ASIA?

95% OF TOY PRODUCTION
Photo by eva.pébar

EUROPEAN MARKET

  • The Biggest market for LEGO
  • Served 60% of the sales
  • Move to cheaper countries and have proximity
  • Move to Czech Republic and Hungary
  • Closed the Switzerland and South Korean plant
Photo by cemre

AMERICAN MARKET

  • Second biggest market
  • Served 30% of sales
  • Produced in Enfield, Connecticut
  • Transfer production to Mexico

FLEXTRONICS

  • Based in Singapore and established a strong reputation
  • Developed manufacturing facilities in 30 countries
  • Partnered with major companies such as Cisco, HP, etc
  • Managed most of the outsourcing for LEGO Group 80/20
  • Relied to reduce complexity, standardize, and document routines
Photo by sayamindu

FLEXTRONICS

  • Collaboration ended after 3 years
  • Complexity increased even further
  • Extreme pace of transition made collaboration difficult
  • Incompatibility in terms of business models
  • Demanded flexibility from a more stable operation
Photo by oskay

LESSONS LEARNED

  • Importance of documenting processes
  • Importance of communication throughout all activities
  • Importance of standardizing their processes and products
Photo by marcus-e

LESSONS LEARNED

  • Importance of managing the complexity of their supply chain
  • Developed a Sales and Operation Planning process(S&OP)
  • Used the S&OP to coordinate different production facility
  • roles, capacities, and responsibilities in relation to supply
  • Installed this policy to have a constant overview of operations
Photo by marcus-e

CONCLUSION

  • LEGO Brick became the "Toy of the Century"
  • LEGO had fallen into trouble by overextending their product
  • LEGO decided to outsource most of their product with Flextronics
  • LEGO learned valuable lessons after their failed partnership