Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Small Electrical Appliance Manufacturing in the US

Domestic demand for small electrical appliances has been switched off. Consumers are redirecting spending away from energy related goods and services due to rising energy costs and in compliance with government energy and environmental protection regulations to conserve energy. The plug has been pulled on domestic production with market saturation of cheap imports. The future for small electrical appliances lies in technology, innovation and new business models. Computer aided design in manufacturing, use of lighter plastics and robotic automation in production, e-commerce in retailing, rationalization in number of plants and outsourcing production to third party manufacturers in low cost courtiers.

INDUSTRY MARKET RESEARCH REPORT

This is the replacement for May 2007 edition of Small Electrical Appliance Manufacturing in the US report.

INDUSTRY MARKET RESEARCH SYNOPSIS

This Industry Market Research report from provides a detailed analysis of the Small Electrical Appliance Manufacturing in the US industry, including key growth trends, statistics, forecasts, the competitive environment including market shares and the key issues facing the industry.

INDUSTRY DEFINITION

This industry comprises establishments primarily engaged in manufacturing small electric appliances and electric housewares, household-type fans, household-type vacuum cleaners, and other electric household-type floor care machines.

REPORT OF CONTENTS

The Key Statistics chapter provides the key indicators for the industry for at least the last three years. The statistics included are industry revenue, industry gross product, employment, establishments, exports, imports, domestic demand and total wages.

The Market Characteristics chapter covers the following: Market Size, Linkages, Demand Determinants, Domestic and International Markets, Basis of Competition and Life Cycle. The Market Size section gives the size of the domestic market as well as the size of the export market. The Linkages section lists the industry's major supplier and major customer industries. The Demand Determinants section lists the key factors which are likely to cause demand to rise or fall. The Domestic and International Markets section defines the market for the products and services of the industry. This section provides the size of the domestic market and the proportion accounted for by imports and exports and trends in the levels of imports and exports. The Basis of Competition section outlines the key types of competition between firms within the industry as well as highlighting competition from substitute products in alternative industries. The Life Cycle section provides an analysis of which stage of development the industry is at.

The Segmentation chapter covers the following: Products and Service Segmentation, Major Market Segments, Industry Concentration and Geographic Spread. The Products and Service Segmentation section details the key products and/or services provided by this industry, highlighting the most important where possible to demonstrate which have a more significant influence over industry results as a whole. The Major Market Segments section details the key client industries and/or groups as well as giving an indication as to which of these are the most important to the industry. The Industry Concentration section provides an indicator of how much industry revenue is accounted for by the top four players. The Geographic Spread section provides a guide to the regional share of industry revenue/gross product.

http://www.bharatbook.com/detail.asp?id=64024

No comments: