Creating Profit Through Alliances - business models for collaboration E-book | Page 74

Chuchawal Royal Haskoning The Thai-Dutch joint venture Chuchawal Royal Haskoning was set up in the late sixties by the engineering company De Weger to supervise the design and construction of the new Bank of Thailand headquarters. To gain access to local knowledge, a US-educated Thai architect by the name of Chuchawal Pringpuangkeo was hired as an advisor. In 1974 the ongoing collaboration was formalised in a joint venture named Chuchawal-De Weger, and after De Weger was incorporated by Royal Haskoning in 1998, the alliance changed name. From the start the joint venture has been managed operationally by a representative of Royal Haskoning. Currently this is Alko Plas, who sits on a board of directors with two representatives of Chuchawal and a division director of Royal Haskoning. This board reports to the shareholders meeting, attended by Chuchawal Pringpuangkeo and a board member of Royal Haskoning. Alko explains the strategy of Royal Haskoning: “We always start from the customer's request, and then see what kind of expertise is required to arrive at a solution. This need not always be technical expertise: we recently won an assignment for the renovation of seven bridges thanks to the fact that we also took into account the communication with the municipalities involved. To obtain all the necessary expertise we frequently collaborate with various partners. That can be either one-off or for longer periods. With Nedeco, a combination of Dutch engineering agencies, we have been active in Thailand for more than 20 years and have, among other things, developed a large port complex. More recently we acquired an order for the 72 design of a tunnel plan between Hong Kong and Macau, together with engineering consultant Witteveen+Bos.” The collaboration is sometimes formalised as a new legal entity, and in other cases bids are made as a consortium on separate purchase orders. Chuchawal Royal Haskoning is a Thai legal entity that was active in other Southeast Asian countries, but these activities were sold to Royal Haskoning in 2002. Financial settlements are easy and transparent: only the salary costs for some expats and a management fee are invoiced by Royal Haskoning to the joint venture. Dividends are paid out yearly. Usually the costs of local representation are split by the various divisions of Royal Haskoning that profit from such an entity, with the country manager reporting to multiple divisions. Since the alliance partner has a direct line to the board of directors, the joint venture only reports to one division to simplify internal communications. Alko Plas: “For Royal Haskoning this is the only country in the world where we have such a continuous joint venture with a local partner. Due to Thai legislation, it is the only way to have a permanent entity here. Of course you have to adapt to your partner and to jointly determine your strategy and operational approach.. We make our investment decisions together and hold budget rounds. What I see is that the Thai partner is more entrepreneurial than Royal Haskoning, which is more cautious in bidding for projects . At the same time the joint venture gains from the long term contributions of Royal Haskoning in items such as a code of conduct and knowledge around sustainability.”