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<text id=94TT0565>
<title>
Mar. 28, 1994: A Car, A Watch? Swatchmobile!
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Mar. 28, 1994 Doomed:The Regal Tiger and Extinction
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BUSINESS, Page 56
A Car, A Watch? Swatchmobile!
</hdr>
<body>
<p>What happens when you marry a Mercedes to a fashion accessory?
Nicolas Hayek wants to find out.
</p>
<p>By Thomas A. Sancton/Biel--With reporting by Margaret Studer/Zurich
</p>
<p> Most Americans think of the Swatch as a trendy timepiece that
was embraced by everyone from K Mart shoppers to the owners
of SoHo galleries. But in its country of origin, Switzerland,
the Swatch represents nothing less than an amazing instrument
of industrial rejuvenation. Before it came along, the Japanese
had more or less usurped the Swiss as the heavyweight champions
of the watch business by substituting their cheap and reliable
digital technology for Switzerland's legendary craftsmanship.
The question now is whether that industrial formula can work
for -- of all things -- automobiles.
</p>
<p> Make way for the Swatchmobile, a sassy two-seater that looks
like a cross between a Volkswagen Beetle and a Rambler. In fact,
it is the product of an odd corporate marriage sealed last week
between Mercedes-Benz, the maker of luxury cars, and Nicolas
Hayek, the man who put almost 150 million Swatches on wrists
all over the world. So far, the two companies have worked on
separate prototypes, which they plan to merge into a single
model produced by a joint company (Hayek's stake is 49%, Mercedes'
51%) for the 1997 market.
</p>
<p> The car still exists mostly in the minds of several dozen young
engineers in jeans and sweatshirts who have spent three years
working around the clock inside a secret garage in the Jura
Mountain town of Biel. If the team realizes its vision, the
Swatchmobile will combine the crash resistance of a Mercedes
with the spunkiness of the famous wristwatch. Plans call for
the Swatchmobile to be 20% smaller than a typical subcompact,
able to wheel into a parking space sideways, cost about $10,000
and reach 90 miles an hour. The car's designers hope it will
travel at least 80 miles on a gallon of fuel, thanks to an engine
one-tenth the weight of any existing engine with equal power.
Models will run on gasoline, electric power or a combination
of both.
</p>
<p> For Mercedes and Hayek's company, the Swiss Corp. for Microelectronics
and Watchmaking Industries (SMH), the project is not just a
technological challenge but also a huge marketing risk. After
all, business-school casebooks are full of stories about fashionable
companies that, in search of diversification, stretched their
brand names past the breaking point. Swatch tried to extend
its name to telephones, pager watches and sunglasses without
great success. But Mercedes, whose sales have fallen 11% in
the past three years, is eager to reach out to buyers who cannot
afford its traditional cars. Already the company has unveiled
plans to produce in 1997 the compact four-seat Vision A with
a sale price of about $18,000.
</p>
<p> Hayek may overestimate his reach -- "I am the creator of products,
kingdoms and empires," he says -- but he does have expertise
at taking a luxury product downscale while preserving its cachet.
It was he who came up with the strategy that saved the prestigious
Swiss watchmaking industry from succumbing to the Japanese hegemony
in the quartz-watch business. In 1983, when he was approached
for advice by a group of Swiss banks, the country had seen its
share of the global watch market drop from 43% in 1974 to less
than 15%. More than half the Swiss manufacturers had gone under,
and creditor banks had taken over the country's two largest
watchmaking groups. "They were ready to close them down and
sell the brand names off to the Japanese," Hayek recalls. "I
proved to the banks that we could revive the industry, then
I went on national television and told the Swiss people, `We
can be No. 1 again.' Nobody dared believe it."
</p>
<p> Hayek put up $102 million -- mostly his own money -- and led
a group of investors in buying the two companies from the banks.
He then merged them, effectively taking control of one-third
of the Swiss watch industry, including such famous brands as
Omega, Longines, Blancpain, Tissot, Rado and Hamilton. But his
big coup was figuring out that a product invented before his
arrival could be the high-quality, low-price, plastic quartz
watch that would challenge the Japanese at the lower end of
the market. The $35-to-$40 Swatch, which reduced by half the
usual number of parts by building them directly into the casing
on automated assembly lines, was an instant success, enabling
the Swiss watchmaking industry to command 53% of the world market.
The company has kept demand for the watches high by staying
on the cutting edge of new designs, turning out some 140 new
models each year plus limited-edition designer collections.
</p>
<p> But the neatest trick is the company's ability to keep labor
costs low in one of the world's most high-priced countries --
proving that moving the factory to cheap markets abroad is not
always the best cost-saving solution. Thanks to an extremely
high degree of automation, SMH keeps direct labor charges under
10% of total manufacturing expenses, in contrast to about 30%
for most watchmaking operations.
</p>
<p> Hayek, 66, was born in Beirut of a Lebanese mother and an American
father. The family moved to Switzerland when he was seven. With
a degree in mathematics and $3,400 in borrowed money, Hayek
started a one-man consulting firm in 1957 that developed a reputation
for finding waste and mismanagement in everything from the Swiss
army to the state radio. Today Hayek Engineering is a $1 billion
business whose clients range from U.S. Steel and Dow Chemical
to Krupp, Siemens and the Chinese government.
</p>
<p> Though he claims to chafe when his competitors make cracks about
his "rug merchant" bargaining methods and his "Mediterranean"
temperament, Hayek nonetheless displays what he describes as
"an exaggerated amount of self-confidence. I want to look in
my mirror every morning and say, `You're great.'" His strength
as a businessman, Hayek says, is that he has retained "the fantasy
of a six-year-old child. If you can keep and use the curiosity
of a child, you can only improve everything around you." He
describes his talent as being able to spot new ways of selling
"emotional" products. "An emotional product is something you
can love," says Hayek, "something you are involved with -- the
watch on your wrist, the telephone in your hand, the car you
drive. It's not the same with washing machines."
</p>
<p> Hayek, who is personally worth more than $1 billion, is passionate
about his playtime too. He is a fervent tennis player and skier,
owns two vacation homes in southern France, collects art (a
Dali melted-watch sculpture graces his office), adores classical
music, Cuban cigars and good food. "I'm a sensual kind of guy.
I drink life fully," he says.
</p>
<p> But some say his hunger for life has an unattractive side; it
makes him unreasonable or just plain self-aggrandizing. "He
has the qualities and defects of a child," says SMH engineer
Jacques Muller, who actually designed the Swatch. "He thinks
everything is possible. Unfortunately, everything is not always
possible." Says Hayek's rival and ex-deputy Dr. Ernst Thomke,
who claims to have originated the Swatch concept in 1979: "He
has to be the big boss, alone, and can never share opinions.
He was a consultant all his life, and he wanted to become a
marketer and product developer. But he never learned that job.
That's why he's so keen on promoting this ridiculous idea of
a car."
</p>
<p> So far, SMH has sunk about $18.9 million into the project, betting
that advanced microtechnologies developed in the watch industry
can be translated into innovative designs for a car's propulsion
and electrical systems. "We're not trying to build some little
gadget here," Hayek said on a private tour of the garage last
December. "We want to have a consumer product that you can produce
and use in the millions."
</p>
<p> Although Hayek has landed a blue-chip partner, he continues
to inspire skepticism. A short-lived joint venture with Volkswagen
broke down last year. "I have trouble believing in this project,"
says Paris-based market analyst Antoine Nodet. "Jumping from
watches to cars lacks credibility." Jean-Marc Buchet, who follows
the auto industry for the French brokerage firm Leven, says
that "there is clearly a market for a small city car" but wonders
if people will pay $10,000 for "a two-seater with no trunk space."
</p>
<p> Others are more sanguine. General Motors president Jack Smith,
who had lunch with Hayek in Biel in December, calls the Swatchmobile
"interesting" and says of Hayek: "He's for real." Roland Leutenegger,
an analyst at the Zurich-based Bank Julius Maer, argues that
Mercedes' automaking know-how and Hayek's marketing genius will
make a winning combination. "The right partners have found each
other," he says. For Hayek, predictably, the future of the Swatchmobile
is assured. "I'm not a dreamer. I've proved all my life that
I'm a down-to-earth guy. We can make this car. Believe me."
Some people apparently do: he has already received 35,000 orders.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>