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A Future in high-tech: opening a computer chip plant in China teaches many lessons. Ask Richard Chang.


The busy Huangpu River in Shanghai serves as a delineation point for this bustling city of 14 million people. On one bank is the Band and its long boulevard of buildings with European architecture from the colonial era. On the other is The Grand Hyatt, a silver sheen that is the world's tallest hotel, the landmark Pearl of the Orient TV Tower and high-rise apartment buildings. This is the Pudong zone. Heading further east, construction cranes, honking cabs and careening The careening of a sailing vessel is laying her up on a calm beach at high tide in order to expose one side or another of the ship's hull for maintenance below the water line when the tide goes out.  bicycles are everywhere before the landscape opens up to marshy marsh·y  
adj. marsh·i·er, marsh·i·est
1. Of, resembling, or characterized by a marsh or marshes; boggy.

2. Growing in marshes.
 plains and canals, and farther out farther out

Of or relating to an option contract with a later expiration date than a contract that is currently owned or being considered. For example, a contract with a May expiration date is farther out than a contract with a February expiration date of
, numerous high-tech industrial parks.

One of the larger high-tech parks in Pudong is Zhangjiang. Here, glistening glis·ten  
intr.v. glis·tened, glis·ten·ing, glis·tens
To shine by reflection with a sparkling luster. See Synonyms at flash.

n.
A sparkling, lustrous shine.
 new semiconductor plants have begun producing chips for computers, cell phones and consumer electronic products. Zhangjiang is being compared more and more to Taiwan's acclaimed Hsinchu Science-Based Industrial Park, as China's fledgling semiconductor business attempts to emerge as a rival to Taiwan.

A sign at the gate of one such plant, Semiconductor Manufacturing Industrial Corp. (SMIC SMIC Salaire Minimum Interprofessionnel de Croissance (French: guaranteed minimum wage)
SMIC Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (Shanghai)
SMIC Side Mount Intercooler
), reflects this burning ambition. Big, bold letters spell out in English, "We're Your Foundry in China."

In the executive suite, CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  Richard Chang, whose family fled the mainland for Taiwan when he was a child, shuffles around in sneakers sneakers
Noun, pl

US, Canad, Austral & NZ canvas shoes with rubber soles

sneakers npl (US) → zapatos mpl de lona; zapatillas fpl 
 meant only to be worn inside the buildings.

Chang brings 20 years of experience in developing and operating semiconductor foundries worldwide. Yet he's surprisingly humble and gracious as he describes a business strategy for S-MIC S-MIC STP Medium Interface Connector . The business plan could just as well have come from Silicon Valley in its heyday: Start with a vision for transforming a marketplace, expand rapidly and capture market share, become profitable, go public, pay off investors with large returns and reward the employees who own stock.

The scale of this project is one major difference. SMIC has financial backing of $1.5 billion from foreign investors, including Goldman Sachs, Toshiba and several venture capital firms Name Location Founding date Managing Partners/Directors Specialty Capital managed
5AM Ventures Menlo Park, CA; Waltham, MA 2002 John Diekman, PhD (managing partner), Scott Rocklage, PhD (managing partner), Andrew Schwab (managing partner) life sciences $200M [1]
 in Asia and the U.S. "When Richard came to us, he had a piece of land, a dream, a vision and a commitment by the Chinese government to turn Zhangjiang into a science park because they had seen what semiconductors had clone for Taiwan," says David Chao, Hong Kong-based vice president at Goldman Sachs, the lead investor in SMIC.

Chao says Goldman "got comfortable" with the deal after eight to 10 months of due diligence Research; analysis; your homework. This term has caught on in all industries, because it sounds so "wired." Who would want to do analysis or research when they can do due diligence. See wired. , which proved the need for more advanced chipmakers in China. Chang's back ground, including experience building foundries worldwide for Texas Instruments and the successful sale of his own Taiwanese chip-making startup for $515 million in 1999, were also major factors. Chao says that once SMIC goes public, Goldman Sachs expects to earn a return that is double its $50 million investment.

Chang, a devout Christian who says he sought God's blessing for this project, is working all his waking- hours except Sunday morning. This is the first time he's been involved in setting up a chip plant in China and he admits that it's been a lot harder than he could have imagined.

One hiccup hiccup or hiccough, involuntary spasmodic contraction of the diaphragm followed by a sharp intake of air, which is abruptly stopped by a sudden, involuntary closing of the glottis (opening between the vocal cords); the consequent blocking of air  occurred when customs officials held up the arrival of his chip-making equipment for several weeks.

But the most difficult challenge he's laced, he says, is training SMIC's 3,100 employees, who have been recruited mostly from China. Chang says he has been forced to hire more overseas engineers--up from 400 originally to 850 today--to make up for shortcomings A shortcoming is a character flaw.

Shortcomings may also be:
  • Shortcomings (SATC episode), an episode of the television series Sex and the City
 among local hires. One issue is their skills, but another is their attitude toward work. The task of the overseas staff is not only to design the latest chips but also for each of them to train two young Chinese engineers. The mainlanders get lessons in technical skills and what Chang regards as a must: character-building exercises meant to inspire teamwork, ethical behavior and creativity. Chang says SMIC "is overcoming the challenges one by one."

The first of Chang's two chipmaking plants in Zhangjiang was constructed in a record 13 months and was cranking out the tiny integrated circuits by September 2001. A second foundry began operating three months later, and in September 2002, the company cleared ground for another plant in Beijing. Last year, SMIC had $80 million in revenues and is aiming for revenues of $360 million this year.

SMIC needs to reach break-even, which Chang predicts will happen this year despite weak worldwide demand for semiconductors. But the going could actually get tougher in one key respect: Competition has been slim. Of some 30 foundries in China today, only four use advanced technology, and SMIC has two of those foundries. Motorola and NEC (NEC Corporation, Tokyo, www.nec.com, www.necus.com) An electronics conglomerate known in the U.S. for its monitors. In Japan, it had the lion's share of the PC market until the late 1990s (see PC 98).

NEC was founded in Tokyo in 1899 as Nippon Electric Company, Ltd.
 have the remaining two.

But by 2005, Chang expects to see at least 10 more advanced foundries, driven in part by the arrival of the major Taiwanese chipmakers starting later this year. That could alter the dynamics of the market, throwing a another potential curveball at SMIC. "Doing business in Chiua, if you do it right, is very profitable," says Chang. "But it requires patience, trust, time, training, government support--and many lessons."
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Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Regional Report
Author:Fannin, Rebecca
Publication:Chief Executive (U.S.)
Geographic Code:9CHIN
Date:Aug 1, 2003
Words:834
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