A new beginning
Part of the global Philip Morris International (PMI), Philip Morris Japan (PMJ) is a strong number 2 in the Japanese tobacco market.
Having executed its sales promotion activities through two separate subsidiaries of Japanese trading firms, PMI decided to acquire these two firms, leading to a transformation process in which Capgemini has played a major role.
From fragmentation to focus
In 2002, PMI acquired the two sales force organizations previously owned and
managed by Japanese trading firms. This would enable significant efficiency gains
by rationalizing support systems and cutting out wastage. In addition, the inconsistent
operational methods previously used in east and west Japan would be consolidated
and improved by introducing best practice methods from other markets.
With this acquisition, PMJ’s organization expanded extensively, and it needed strong support for a smooth and fast transition. PMJ Management recognized the need for expert consultancy support during this period and decided that Capgemini was the partner they needed. With the help of Capgemini, the company identified significant opportunities to eliminate redundant back office infrastructure and to build new infrastructure and processes that would lead to better sales planning and execution. Jim Mortensen, PMJ’s VP for Marketing & Sales Promotion, explains why: “Capgemini had a far more collaborative approach than anyone else,” he tells us. “Their proposals and approach was extremely clear and simple. They pulled no punches in explaining how they believed our business relationship should work. From day one there was real openness in the way we worked together. Nothing ‘fell through the cracks’ due to lack of clarity about roles.”
Transformation on an ambitious scale
To tackle the challenges of this transition, Capgemini, in collaboration with
PMJ, established several work streams to cover organization, IT, processes, and
customer experience. Work started on these streams in parallel and fast progress
was made. Comments Jim Mortensen: “The first big achievement was gaining in-depth
knowledge of the two companies PMI acquired. We could not identify, or address
key issues until we gained insight into culture, process, systems, back office
architecture, structure, compensation, and performance metrics of the acquired
companies.”
With the advice and proposals from Capgemini, PMJ started streamlining its organization and processes to achieve its goal. Masayoshi Fuse, Capgemini’s vice president, tells us: “This relationship is all about collaboration in action. We have worked closely with PMJ to apply best practice while simultaneously building a new company. The collaborative approach is definitely the key to success.”
Written in collaboration with:
Jim Mortensen
Vice President Marketing & Sales Promotion Philip Morris Japan K.K.
Masayoshi Fuse
Vice President Capgemini
