50% Rejection Rate For iPhone Casings Produced In India Show Scale of Apple's Challenge (9to5mac.com) 123
A 50% rejection rate for iPhone casings produced by an Indian company is a stark illustration of the difficulties Apple faces in reducing its dependence on China. 9to5Mac reports: Apple's target for casings that fail to pass quality control is 0%, with Chinese suppliers reportedly getting extremely close to this. The attitude of Indian suppliers is also said to compare poorly with the can-do approach of Chinese companies, with one former Apple engineer saying that there is no sense of urgency in its Indian supply chain...
The Financial Times reports that poor yields is a key challenge faced by Apple in attempting to replicate its Chinese supply chain in India: "At an iPhone casings factory in Hosur run by Indian conglomerate Tata, one of Apple's suppliers, just about one out of every two components coming off the production line is in good enough shape to eventually be sent to Foxconn, Apple's assembly partner for building iPhones, according to a person familiar with the matter. This 50 per cent 'yield' fares badly compared with Apple's goal for zero defects. Two people that have worked in Apple's offshore operations said the factory is on a plan towards improving proficiency but the road ahead is long."
Tech entrepreneur and academic Vivek Wadhwa said that it will likely take three years or so for Indian suppliers to be capable of the kind of volume production needed to make a noticeable dent in Chinese production. [...] He also suggested that Apple, too, will need to adapt -- especially when it comes to dealing with the bureaucratic government: "He suggested its engineers learn the art of jugaad -- a way of 'making do' or transcending obstacles. 'Because everything in India is an obstacle,' he said."
The Financial Times reports that poor yields is a key challenge faced by Apple in attempting to replicate its Chinese supply chain in India: "At an iPhone casings factory in Hosur run by Indian conglomerate Tata, one of Apple's suppliers, just about one out of every two components coming off the production line is in good enough shape to eventually be sent to Foxconn, Apple's assembly partner for building iPhones, according to a person familiar with the matter. This 50 per cent 'yield' fares badly compared with Apple's goal for zero defects. Two people that have worked in Apple's offshore operations said the factory is on a plan towards improving proficiency but the road ahead is long."
Tech entrepreneur and academic Vivek Wadhwa said that it will likely take three years or so for Indian suppliers to be capable of the kind of volume production needed to make a noticeable dent in Chinese production. [...] He also suggested that Apple, too, will need to adapt -- especially when it comes to dealing with the bureaucratic government: "He suggested its engineers learn the art of jugaad -- a way of 'making do' or transcending obstacles. 'Because everything in India is an obstacle,' he said."
Part of it is just culture shift (Score:5, Interesting)
If you get enough people together that value quality then over time, that culture will take hold in new people working and in the end they can get much closer to the target they seek. It takes some time to change teh culture of workers in a company.
It's a worthwhile effort and one that while they should have started a while ago, is at least underway now.
Re: (Score:2)
That's adorable..
Meanwhile:
D E S I G N A T E D
E
S
I
G
N
A
T
E
D
Re: (Score:2)
Seems China can do quality after all. (Score:1)
Who has egg on their face now?
Seems China can do quality after all.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
> China can do quality when you make them.
Yup. See, for a shining then tarnished example, ThinkPads. Even when they were IBM branded, they were made in China by Lenovo. But with IBM's QC people riding herd on them, the quality was kept up to the point that they were pretty much the best PC laptop money could buy. And you'd have been a fool to buy anything else outside special cases like toughbooks ir of you just could not deal with that eraser thing instead of a trackpad. But when IBM sold the busine
Re: (Score:2)
I think that's also a good description of how quality was in the USA back in the "good old days" when the USA was the world's factory. Quality level was related to price. We did cheap, shoddy stuff, and we did premium-priced, premium quality stuff, and we did levels in between. It's fascinating now to look back on how this changed. As wages went up, and inflation and competition from overseas markets put pressure on US manufacturers, at first things got more and more shoddy. Then all the companies maki
Re: (Score:3)
"You get what you pay for" is certainly a factor, but it's not the only one. In my admittedly limited experience working with Chinese factories, they will see what they can get away with... If you have someone personally vested and interfacing with them regularly, it will keep the quality up a bit. I don't know if it's because they respect the attention to detail more, or they simply don't want to see you showing up at their facilities to inspect. My boss went to check out our molds for some parts and find
Re:Seems China can do quality after all. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:1)
How do you explain the Chinese number being, and I quote, "extremely close to zero".
You fucking maroons are a parody of yourselves. Are you that stupid? You don't understand that there's a difference between products made in China under contract and the bullshit they come up with on their own?
My HP computer might be mostly made in China, but I can be fairly certain that HP has all sorts of QA checks on the shit that is being built since it's their reputation on the line.
It's quite clear the Apple has QA checks as well. But 90% of the crap you find on AliExpress, or some such, is goin
Re: Seems China can do quality after all. (Score:2)
Actually there are a lot of people happily using Chinese brand d phones, like Oppo or Xiaomi. Huawei also used to be very good.
Re: Seems China can do quality after all. (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
If you get enough people together that value quality then over time
That's the thing, in some country that's simply not possible (or at least very difficult, to the point it's not worth the hassle).
Re: Part of it is just culture shift (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Part of it is just culture shift (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
India has no track record of precision manufacturing.
India has a space program. Sure they've had a couple of launch failures in recent years, but one of those was on a brand new rocket's first flight. They regularly have successful launches. Somebody understands precision manufacturing over there.
Re:Part of it is just culture shift (Score:4, Insightful)
> Are you really that dense? They didn't move to India for higher pay and better working conditions for their employees. When you treat your employees as members of society and not slaves, you tend to accomplish quality work.
tell me youve never worked with indians, without telling me youve never worked with indians
Re:Part of it is just culture shift (Score:5, Interesting)
To create a quality product, you need the people working on it to internalize quality as a value; to take some pride in their work. You can't impose quality upon workers without supervising their every action, which is inefficient. Your ability to improve quality by cracking the whip is limited by your ability to catch every single error with no help from the people doing the work.
Re: (Score:2)
Free trade with a country five times bigger (Score:3)
with a prevailing wage of zero is a form of national suicide.
Re: Free trade with a country five times bigger (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1, Interesting)
Oh, don't worry. No Indian wants 'free trade' with the US or any other country either. That kind of 'free trade' is what the East India Company did with India a few hundred years ago, leading to the theft of much of India's wealth that the UK built itself on.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
US elites would be happy to "squeeze the last dollar of value for themselves" as well, but 100 years or so a bunch of union organizers, socialists, and anarchists threatened to bring the whole system down around their ears and a compromise was reached. However, Neoliberals have been working on dismantling that that system for the last 40 years or so and we are probably about to enter the realm of "interesting times" again.
Re: Free trade with a country five times bigger (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I was not blaming the unions for anything, I'm not sure where you got that. Quite the opposite in fact. Those union organizers, socialists, and anarchists were heroes.
The New Deal and some prior labor concessions managed to bring labor relations in the US to an uneasy truce and pacify the labor movement. Workers put down their signs and Molotovs and went back to work. Post-war prosperity and the red scare undercut the radical roots of unions. Since the late 70s it's been the project of modern neoliberal
Re: (Score:2)
Despite the demonization of the rich, the fact US is so advanced comes down to the fact that the elites in the US are comparatively the least greedy and willing to share more with the middle class.
That was true in the 20th century, this is no longer the 20th century and our neo-feudal lords have been increasing their share of the wealth at record numbers.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Not sure if there was supposed to be a /s there. While you're right about comparing to China, more and more US people are being expected to put those hours in, see for example how Musk runs things. There is also a large number of people who have to juggle 2 or 3 jobs and end up putting in hours like you describe.
Being better then China is a low bar, like being more free then N. Korea.
Re: Free trade with a country five times bigger (Score:2)
Not just call centres then? (Score:2)
What a "surprise".
Jugaad is really easy (Score:5, Insightful)
No harm no foul for anyone. Apple gets what it wants and locals get to maintain their way of life.
I know this might sound harsh, sarcastic or even a little bit racist, but I dont meany it that way. If a culture wants to move at a slower pace, they should have the right to, and be respected for it.
But Im under no obligation to follow the lead. If I’m writing the checks, a manufacturer that manufactures at half the rate will get half the revenue stream. That’s not disrespectful, that’s how a spreadsheet works.
Re: (Score:2)
Thank you for this new term I didn't know.
Added to internal dictionary.
Re: Jugaad is really easy (Score:2)
Most of this, but Apple doesn't want to be rejecting parts, they don't want to even receive them.
Re: (Score:3)
Most of this, but Apple doesn't want to be rejecting parts, they don't want to even receive them.
Especially since they are pushing and getting evaluated on their environmental impacts.
Re: (Score:3)
While the contract could stipulate only parts meeting spec are accepted, a high failure rate will impact volume. Not receiving enough parts is an indirect cost to Apple.
Re: (Score:2)
In other industries (e.g. the film industry) if you come up with an ugly solution to a problem, it's called a 'shitty rig'.
Re: (Score:3)
If a local company wants to shrug it’s shoulders and accept a 50% reject rate, they just jugaaded themselves into half-the-revenue-they-could-have-made.
That really depends doesn't it. If it costs 25% of the cost to have 100%, to have a 50% success rate then you are making more money. So true they are making half the revenue but twice the profit.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
And after all, they manage to produce 50% that meet specs, so that wouldn't happen if they built anything for a quarter of the cost. Getting the success rate from 90% to 99% might cost money, getting it from 50% to 90% doesn't.
Re:Jugaad is really easy (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm not sure if that's true. There can be many causes for such a high failure rate. It may be that the company is cutting corners and using substandard defective machinery - getting better equipment costs money. It may be that the workers are making mistakes because of inadequate training and supevision - again, fixing that costs money. It may be that the workers have a "they pretend to pay us and we pretend to work" attitude - again only fixed with better pay and working conditions which again requires money. In software industry the impression I get is that Indian subcontractors main selling point is often speed of delivery and low cost rather than quality, if that's also the case in manufacturing, then such a high reject rate is not very surprising.
Re: (Score:2)
Speed of delivery and low cost are legitimate selling points but in the long run software quality is worth paying for and the local contracting industry will sell out their future if they do not do everything practical to improve it where it is lacking. That goes for software developers in all other countries as well.
Re: (Score:2)
Oh I agree absolutely. Unfortunately it seems the management of both the subcontractors and people who employ them often don't see it that way.
Re: (Score:2)
Regardless of whether you read this behavior as a ruthless attempt to control the seco
Re: Jugaad is really easy (Score:2)
I doubt itâ(TM)s about the repair market. If 50% of the output is reject and these arenâ(TM)t destroyed, then where are they going? Apple doesnâ(TM)t want their brand damaged by a marketplace flooded with poor imitations. It could be a very serious problem for them in many regards at that scale.
Re: (Score:3)
Apple pays a set price for each part that meets spec. As far as Apple is concerned, the rejects never existed.
I think Apple is starting to actually care a bit about its reputation as an environmental disaster. If I'm correct, then the last thing they'd want to be associated with - even at one step removed - is a 50% scrap rate.
Also, with that high a defect rate, they're probably considering how many hidden defects are waiting to bite them in the warranty. And yes, even things like casings can have hidden defects.
It is actually 100x harder (Score:3)
Re: (Score:3)
Apple can't rely on the manufacturer to reject parts. They need to check them all themselves. They can rely on the Chinese manufacturers to self-test because they have a demonstrated commitment to quality and a proven track record of delivering it.
If 50% are rejects then a large proportion of the 50% that were deemed acceptable will probably be borderline.
A high failure rate means a higher failure rate (Score:2)
As far as Apple is concerned, the rejects never existed. If a local company wants to shrug it’s shoulders and accept a 50% reject rate, they just jugaaded themselves into half-the-revenue-they-could-have-made.
No harm no foul for anyone. Apple gets what it wants.
It's not quite like that, because Apple's own quality control is necessarily imperfect. Let's say that the India manufacturer constructs 2,000,000 cases, of which 1,000,000 pass internal QC and go on to Apple, and that the manufacturer's internal QC has a 5% miss rate. Then Apple got 50,000 bad cases. If Apple's own QC checks have a miss rate of 1%, then 500 bad phones go out to end users.
In contrast, if the Chinese manufacturer constructs 10,000 bad cases and 990,000 good ones, sending them all to Apple
Re: (Score:2)
Too bad it's not really like that. If the rejection rate is 50% for the defects they found, the defect rate is also probably 50% for the defects they missed. So, probably they are accepting a large number of defective parts.
Cry me a river (Score:2, Interesting)
For a company that deliberately outsources thousands of jobs to subcontractors, this makes all the sense in the world. The profit margins on iPhones is crazy as is it for all cellphones and they want to all race to the bottom to get the cheapest labor possible on their terms. Here's an idea Apple, instead of making 90% on an iPhone make 87% and pay either your own workers or a better subcontractor to make them.
Stop racing to the bottom.
Re: (Score:2)
Stop racing to the bottom.
*checkout line at Walmart*
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Apple isn't racing to India because it's trying to race to the bottom. It's racing to India because US and China tensions are fucking up trade as we have known it for the last 2-3 decades.
Re: (Score:2)
Apple isn't racing to India because it's trying to race to the bottom. It's racing to India because US and China tensions are fucking up trade as we have known it for the last 2-3 decades.
Exactly this. Add to this the recent impact on manufacturing due to China’s Zero Covid policy.
Re: (Score:1)
They must do the needful and ask a doubt, sir. Kindly adjust to their English-knowing and prepone the upgradation of quality. Revert with any questions.
Re: (Score:2)
It's still better (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You just jugaaded then/than.
Re: It's still better (Score:2)
Quality ethos is not universal and may not matter (Score:5, Informative)
W. Edwards Deming was admired in Japan and ignored in his home country.
Not all cultures have the same view of how to make things or the same goal in making them. Not all societies reward the same things. Consider Russian engineers who may want to produce quality work but whose options are socially (organized crime is the government and the anti-government) constrained. Not all societies have identical views of professionalism civilian or military. Humans are not of identical socio-political form-factors. That diversity facilitates adaptation and evolved to suit local conditions.
Apple is only a toy maker and if it cannot get its desires from one source it can diversify. As a premium image brand it doesn't really have to race to the bottom, that's a choice.
If suppliers make a lot of scrap that's their problem as Apple need only concern itself with what it needs. It may be just fine for a supplier who can afford a 50% reject rate to produce at that rate. They or Apple can scrap the unwanted parts and use those meeting spec.
Every manufacturing process has a scrap or reject rate. Tolerable levels are just fine else they'd not be tolerated.
Re: (Score:2)
OIC, your argument is that it is likely cheaper for the newspaper to hire a team of monkeys for a couple of bananas to write articles, and they are therefore ecstatic that they turn out 50% usable articles. They save a ton of dough and are still able to churn out material, even though 50% of a paper is only half of what the public wants...
Nice...
Re:newspapers (Score:2)
I offer you most "news"papers and (current day) Slashdot as examples of management obviously ecstatic at that kind of outcome.
Re: (Score:2)
Not automated? (Score:3)
So a human is making these cases?
Re: (Score:2)
Cheaper than to make the robot.
Not about poverty (Score:3, Insightful)
People in this thread are offering India's poverty as a reason for their very low quality manufacturing quality. But that isn't the reason. Other countries still emerging from colonialism and poverty don't have the awful quality problems of Indian industry. Just look at what South Korea achieved, or China, or how Vietnam is doing as manufacturer. Post colonial India sank into corruption and stagnation with the government wanting to be the Big Socialist Authoritarian State while barely being able to enforce its will and govern. It produced a fabulously corrupt economy where rules are for idiots and laws exists but nobody cares. Everyone knows they are on their own and that to rely on the state for justice or law is suicide. So there is no live and let live, little long term outlook, everything is about screwing others over and taking what you can. Now. Or, if you have a good education, getting the hell out. It will take more decades to undo the stagnation, moral as well as economic, of the socialist experiment, and also to get past the similarly corrupt idiocy of the current sectarian and reactionary establishment.
Re:Not about poverty (Score:4, Interesting)
It's a distinctly sectarian governing party with roots in very authoritarian non-governmental groups. It *bristles* with indignation at criticism and its natural reaction is to suppress. A good example of a party operating in an apparently democratic and constitutional arena while actually having contempt for the fundamentals of constitutional democracy.
Re: (Score:2)
It's a distinctly sectarian governing party with roots in very authoritarian non-governmental groups. It *bristles* with indignation at criticism and its natural reaction is to suppress. A good example of a party operating in an apparently democratic and constitutional arena while actually having contempt for the fundamentals of constitutional democracy.
Are you talking about India or USA here? I can't tell.
Re: (Score:2)
When was china colonized?
Re: (Score:2)
In the 19th and early 20th centuries China was colonised by several European powers, the most impactful being Great Britain. Google "Opium Wars" or "Boxer Rebellion" for example.
Re: (Score:1)
Genghis Khan also imposed himself, a little, for a while.
Re: (Score:2)
From within or outside?
The answer to both is "many times". OK, not as a whole, but that's less relevant.
Re:Not about poverty (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem is corruption. If the problem was intrinsic to socialism, China would be doing even worse since they went full on revolutionary Communism.
Re: (Score:2)
And several decades ago they abandoned socialism (they aren't stupid) but retained the authoritarian one party state structure.
Re: (Score:2)
So did Russia, but they kept the corruption and it has done them in.
OTOH, most of Europe is doing fairly well with their varying degrees of socialism.
Re: (Score:2)
You're confusing social democratic politics with socialism. No significant European state is socialist. For example, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Belgium, Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden. Some are even constitutional monarchies. Sweden is the most left but even that is not socialist - it is a monarchy, a democracy and a home to some very significant global businesses.
Re: (Score:2)
Propose any of those countries policies on social safety or economy in the U.S. and watch the rabid conservatives scream THAT'S SOCIALISM!!!
Re: (Score:2)
The US understating of socialism is totally tapped though. I agree with jullian67 - none of those countries are socialist. Social welfare != socialism: it's just putting a collar on the beast, not killing it.
Re: (Score:1)
The problem is also that in China you only need to find one corrupt party leader and by the virtue of dictatorship you will get your result, while in India you need to play around with multiple leaders in complex game of politics.
Re: (Score:2)
Sounds like a future America.
Re: (Score:3)
I'm not American. Don't live there. Never been there. But I do live somewhere which has experienced government by socialists. So fuck you.
Like the old adage goes... (Score:5, Insightful)
The best time to plant a tree is thirty years ago.
The second best time is today.
2nd Cheapest Labor, No Good Either : ( (Score:2, Insightful)
There is a simple solution (Score:2, Insightful)
Just pay your workers more. If you pay dirt cheap wages, as it is most likely the case otherwise they would not have picked India, you get dirt cheap quality. There are 1.4 billion people there, I am sure there are plenty who are really competent, motivated and ready to work for you if you pay the price.
Re: (Score:2)
No, sorry, this is not true.
Take someone with a corrupt mentality, taught from cradle to cut corners, pretend to work, stealthily pass his tasks to whoever he can, and double their pay. Hell, multiply their salary by 10 if you wish.
They will continue with their ways, all while laughing inside at how stupid you are.
I have been unfortunate enough to work with people like that, and still work with some of them. They make way more than I do (the advantage of living in a more developed country), and they are sti
Business with India sucks. (Score:5, Insightful)
Bet this means no more balloon stories (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Well if Apple wants to play in the dirt (Score:2)
How reliable is data from China (Score:2)
Robots (Score:2)
Why the heck are we still manufacturing things using human labor? That's dumb. Use a robot you nitwits.
Gavin Belson (Score:2)