Brazil’s Low-End Furniture Maker Eyes Foreign Market

Móveis WW , based in the small city of São Geraldo (southeastern Brazilian state of Minas Gerais), started out in the 1950s as a small manufacturer of carts, barrels of cachaça (a traditional alcoholic beverage made of sugar cane), chariots, and other items typical of the time.

When the company was already run by 'Didi' (the nickname of Nadir Correa Lopes, the founder's son), of the second generation of the owning family, customers started ordering tables and beds. The transition from one production to the other was natural.

Currently, Móveis WW is run by the family's third generation, has 180 employees and two factory units – one for dining rooms and another for bedrooms only -, distributes its pieces to nearly all of Brazil and intends to go further: they are looking at exporting to African and Arab countries.

This year, according to administrative manager Luiz Carlos de Amaral Júnior, the company took the first step toward its new goal. Since August, it has been exporting to Angola. "We have joined a consortium with ten other local companies in order to export to them," says Amaral.

Exporting turned out more rewarding than the company had expected, after so many years in operation. "We realized there were much less concerns involved than we thought. It is well worth it," claims the manager.

"In the future, we are even considering unifying the two existing plants and establishing a new one, turned to exports alone." Anything goes in order to make the dream. According to Amaral, all employees at Móveis WW are currently taking English lessons.

International trade shows have also become an issue for the company owners, brothers Walmir and Wilmar Rocha Lopes. "Up until now, we have only been to one trade show in South Africa, via a representative," says Amaral.

Also this year, WW participated in a bidding process for the reconstruction of Iraq. The company developed a new product: school desks. But according to Amaral, the deal did not go through. "Anyway, we discovered one more product, school desks, which we may produce in the future."

The furniture produced by Móveis WW is made out of MDF (Medium Density Fiberboard) and sold both to small stores and large low-end furniture chains, such as Kolumbus and Marabraz.

The company's monthly output is 1,870 dining rooms and 1,760 bedrooms. Revenue varies from 1.5 million reais (US$ 670,000) to 2 million reais (US$ 930,000) per month.

Revenues are expected to grow between 5% and 10% in 2007. "Furthermore, should our plans materialize, 30% of our revenues will come from exports alone," says Amaral. Even if it entails creating one or two more work shifts.

Móveis WW
Telephone: (+55 32) 3556-1145
Website:
www.moveisww.com.br

Anba – www.anba.com.br

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil’s Brasil Telecom Talks About Banner Year and 2006 Plans

Brazilian telecommunication company Brasil Telecom Participações presented the firm’s business plan for 2006 to ...

Brazil Can Count on Portugal for UN Council Seat

In a press conference in BrasÀ­lia at the residence of the new Portuguese Ambassador to ...

Brazil Wants to Relax More Restrictive Agricultural Code

Brazil’s minister of Agriculture, Reinhold Stephanes, during a meeting with journalists last week in ...

In Brazil, Police Are Bandit, But Also Victim

Fourteen-year-old schoolboy Douglas Brasil de Paula was playing pinball in a bar. João da ...

Brazil’s Lula in Davos: Preacher and Salesman

A day away from the official opening of the world’s most important capitalist encounter, ...

After Denouncing Fraud at Petrobras to Police, Ex-director Refuses to Talk to Congress

Paulo Roberto Costa, former director of the supplying department of Brazil’s state-owned oil multinational ...

Brazilians Meira and Castroneves Shine at Dramatic Indy 500

Seven Brazilians had qualified for the Greatest Spectacle in Racing, three in the first ...

Brazil’s Reason to Fight Inflation: To Narrow Inequalities

Inflation represents a "powerful" mechanism of income concentration and must be controlled to prevent ...

Murder of US Nun Deeply Shakes Brazil

Dorothy Stang, 76, a Catholic missionary from the US has been murdered Saturday by ...

Brazil Scolds Mexico for Visa Requirement and Threatens to Bar Country from Mercosur

The Brazilian Minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, commented today in New York about ...