Region Europe

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BSH[1] has always regarded itself not only as a German but also a European company.[2] It was founded in 1967 in the middle of the continent, in Germany. Consolidation and growth of BSH in Germany was followed by a phase of expansion into other European countries.

Most of the production locations and sales organizations today are located in Europe.[3] BSH is also the world’s leading home appliance manufacturer in Europe.[4]

Germany

After its foundation in 1967, BSH reinforced its economic position in Germany. Germany was and is BSH’s home market. It holds a strong market position here among home appliance manufacturers. BSH has several locations in Germany: Alongside the company headquarters in Munich there are production facilities in Bad Neustadt, Bretten, Dillingen, Giengen, Traunreut and Nauen. The BSH network in Deutschland also includes research and technology, and competence centers in Berlin, Bad Neustadt, Regensburg and Dillingen.

The Pitsos Brand. (Source: BSH Hausgeräte GmbH)

France

Gaggenau was taken over by Bosch-Siemens Hausgeräte GmbH at the end of 1994/beginning of 1995. Production and development were moved in their entirety to Lipsheim in Alsace and the company was restructured.[5]

Greece

The European expansion of BSH began with the acquisition of the Greek company Pitsos A.E. BSH acquired a majority share in the market leader for cooling appliances in Greece in 1976. Pitsos A. E. is one of the Local Heroes, the regional brands of BSH.

Spain and Portugal

BSH continued to expand its presence in Europe in the 1980s, acquiring a majority share in the Spanish home appliance manufacturer Balay-Safel, resulting in a market share of 24 percent in Spain. The strong market position in Spain also increased BSH’s overall market share in Europe. As a result, at the end of the 1980s the company is the second largest manufacturer of home appliances in Europe.[6] In 1998, BSH also acquired the remaining shares in Balay, which by then also included the Safel brand, thus making the company a wholly-owned subsidiary of BSH.

Balay and Ufesa – another BSH brand since 1998 that is marketed in Spain and Portugal[7] – are also among BSH’s Local Heroes.

Turkey

miniatur|301x301px|Die BSH im türkischen Cerkesköy, 2005. (Quelle: BSH Konzernarchiv) Thanks to the excellent potential and promising growth rates of the Turkish home appliance market, the then second largest home appliance provider in Turkey became part of BSH in 1995. The established Profilo brand proved to be extremely popular with customers and is one of the Local Heroes at BSH.

Slovenia – Small appliances since 1972

Gorenje began manufacturing mixers and other small appliances for BSH in 1972 under the BSH brands in the Slovenian town of Nazarje.[8]

During the Cold War and the accompanying East-West confrontation, the multicultural state of Yugoslavia, to which Slovenia belonged, occupied a special status. Yugoslavia was one of the founding members of the organization of non-aligned states and, despite the communist state doctrine, did not count itself part of the Soviet Union-led bloc. This unique position allowed it to also work comparatively closely with companies from the West. BSH benefited from this in its cooperation with Gorenje.

After the collapse of Yugoslavia, Gorenje broke away from its home market. The plant was also destroyed by a disastrous flood at the start of the 1990s. BSH provided loans to help rebuild it. When Gorenje was unable to repay the loans, BSH took over the plant in Nazarje in 1993. Since then, small appliances have been produced there under the BSH brand names and, since 2003, also large appliances.[9]

New markets in Eastern Europe since 1989

After the fall of the Iron Curtain in 1989, BSH turned its attention to Russia and the entire Eastern European region. Since then the region has been a focal point for expansion for the company. BSH has its own sales companies in most Eastern European countries – including the Czech Republic, Serbia, Romania and Ukraine – where it benefits from the high degree of familiarity and good image of its Bosch and Siemens brands.[10]

BSH in Poland

BSH started selling Bosch home appliances in Poland in 1990. A new plant for assembling washing machines was established in the Polish city of Lodz in 1994. It was the first new plant to be built by BSH in Eastern Europe, The company thus gained a presence in the region as a producer of large appliances, allowing it to exploit its market potential to the full. The washing machines from Lodz were initially intended exclusively for the Eastern European markets, but were also extended to EU countries from 1999. The Polish BSH subsidiary was honored again with the “Pearl of the Polish Economy” award in 2009. In 2013, BSH acquired the tradition-steeped Polish home appliances manufacturer Zelmer.

Zelmer-Fabrik im polnischen Rogoznica, 2012. (Quelle: Pressebilder BSH Hausgeräte GmbH)

BSH in Russia – from importer to manufacturer

BSH has enjoyed a presence in Russia since 1994.[11] The Bosch and Siemens brands are also very well known there and sell well. By 1995, BSH was already the largest Western European importer in Russia.[12] In 1997, the company then started looking into options for further involvement in Russia, including production partnerships.[13] It ultimately opted to develop its own production facilities. In 1998, BSH opened an assembly plant for gas cookers in Chernogolovka, 60 kilometers east of Moscow, making it the first home appliance manufacturer from the West to have a plant in Russia.[14] BSH defied the economic crisis of 1998/1999. with the Gaggenau and Neff brands being launched on the Russian market between 1998 and 2005.[15]

New production facilities

Construction of a new refrigeration plant and a logistics center in St. Petersburg began in 2007. The center not only sells locally produced appliances, but also BSH imports. The majority of the cooling appliances produced in St. Petersburg are destined for the Russian and Ukrainian market.[16] After just three years, BSH is the market leader with Bosch in the segment of free-standing static fridge-freezer combinations. An assembly plant for washing machines was opened additionally in 2012 in St. Petersburg.[17] In 2008, BSH was able to proudly proclaim that it had a base of 3.5 million customers in Russia.[18]

Onward and upward in Russia despite the crisis

In 2015, the home appliances market in Russia experienced a drop of 14 percent compared with the previous year.[19] Despite the serious economic situation caused by the EU sanctions due to the Ukraine crisis, BSH has maintained its presence in Russia.[20]

File:PED(1) BSH Regensburg.jpg
Der Produktbereich Electronic Systems, Drives (PED) in Regensburg hat seinen Fertigungsstandort im slowakischen Michalovce. (Quelle: BSH Hausgeräte GmbH)


Slovakia – drives and controllers for BSH

The home appliance market in Slovakia is served from BSH's Czech sales company in Prague.[21]

The incorporation of the Regensburg-based Electronics, Drives and Systems (EDS) department of Siemens AG in BSH in 1998 also meant integrating the associated EDS production location for drives (engines) and electronic controllers in the Slovakian town of Michalovce.[35] At the time of the BSH takeover, there were around 930 people working at the location.[22] Since 1999, EDS has specialized completing in developing and manufacturing electronic systems for home appliances.[23] In 2009, EDS was raised to the status of a product division and renamed PED - Product Division Electronic Systems, Drives.

Sales companies in European countries

In a number of European countries sales companies, organized as BSH subsidiaries, are responsible for selling home appliances locally. These include: Denmark (Ballerup), Norway (Oslo), Sweden (Solna), Finland (Helsinki), Austria (Vienna), Belgium (Brussels), Luxembourg (Senningerberg), France (St. Oen), United Kingdom (Milton Keynes), Italy (Milan), Switzerland (Geroldswil), Czech Republic (Prague), Croatia (Zagreb), Serbia (Belgrade), Bulgaria (Sofia), Romania (Bucharest), Hungary (Budapest), Ukraine (Kiev).[24]

BSH-Showroom in Hoofddorp, Netherlands. (Source: BSH Hausgeräte GmbH)

Netherlands

The Netherlands is home to the oldest representative offices of the parent companies of BSH, Bosch and Siemens outside of Germany. Siemens & Halske products were represented in The Hague by the company Wisse, Piccaluga & Co. as far back as 1879.[25]. The company Willem van Rijn then took over as sole representative of Bosch products in the Netherlands in 1903.[26]

The subsidiary Willem van Rijn Huishoud-elektro B.V. was founded for sales and distribution in 1986. In a move to merge the Dutch representative offices in one company, a joint venture between Willem van Rijn, BSH Huishoud-Elektro B.V. and the Consumer Products Department of Siemens Netherlands was concluded in January 2009. From this time on, the Bosch, Siemens, Gaggenau, Neff and Constructa brands were distributed by the new Dutch BSH subsidiary, BSH-Huishoudapparaten.


Notes

  1. Die BSH wird 1967 als Bosch-Siemens Hausgeräte GmbH gegründet - abgekürzt BSHG. 1998 wird der Name in BSH Bosch und Siemens Hausgeräte GmbH geändert, die neue Abkürzung lautet BSH. Seit dem Verkauf der Siemens-Anteile der BSH an die Robert Bosch GmbH heißt das Unternehmen BSH Hausgeräte GmbH und wird weiterhin mit BSH abgekürzt.
  2. „Der europäische Markt erfordert Unternehmen europäischen Ausmaßes." Aus der Präambel des Vertrages über die Interessengemeinschaft (IGH) von 1965, dem Vorläufer der BSH, BSH-Konzernarchiv, F-BSH-001, 40 Jahre BSH – Eine Chronik, München 2007, S. 26.
  3. https://www.bsh-group.com/de/unternehmen/bsh-weltweit (abgerufen am 29.08.2017)
  4. BSH-Konzernarchiv, A01-0035, Geschäftsbericht 2015, S. 2.
  5. Die Historie von Gaggenau (BSH Präsentation), Materialien zur Geschichte der Eisenwerke Gaggenau, BSH-Konzernarchiv, C03- 0296, Folie 3.
  6. BSH-Konzernarchiv, A05-0012, inform 02/1989, S. 2f.
  7. http://www.ufesa.com/ (abgerufen am 30.08.2017)
  8. BSH-Konzernarchiv, F-BSH-001, 40 Jahre BSH – Eine Chronik, München 2007, S. 56; A01-0011, Geschäftsbericht 1993, S. 3; inform, A05-0017, 1994/3, S. 1-3.
  9. BSH-Konzernarchiv, A05-0026, inform, 2003/4, S. 18.
  10. BSH-Konzernarchiv, A01-0013, Geschäftsbericht 1995, S. 5.
  11. BSH-Konzernarchiv, A05-0037, inform 2014/2, S. 11.
  12. BSH-Konzernarchiv, A01-0013, Geschäftsbericht 1995, S. 5.
  13. BSH-Konzernarchiv, A05-0020, inform 1997/2, S. 29; A01-0015, Geschäftsbericht 1997, S. 6.
  14. BSH-Konzernarchiv, A01-0016, Geschäftsbericht 1998, S. 10.
  15. BSH-Konzernarchiv, A05-0037, inform 2014/2, S. 11.
  16. BSH-Konzernarchiv, A05-0028, inform 2005/4, S. 8; A01-0025, Geschäftsbericht 2007, S. 7; F-BSH-001, 40 Jahre BSH – Eine Chronik, p. 122.
  17. BSH-Konzernarchiv, A01-0030, Geschäftsbericht 2012, S. 46.
  18. BSH-Konzernarchiv, A05-0037, inform 2014/2, S. 11.
  19. BSH Corporate Archives, A05-0038, inform 2015/3, p. 7.
  20. https://themoscowtimes.com/articles/sanctions-dont-matter-on-russian-market-says-germanys-bsh-ceo-49468 (last visited 7.12.2016).
  21. BSH Corporate Archives, A05-0020, inform 1997/4, p. 19; A05-0025, inform 2002/3, p. 4.
  22. BSH Corporate Archives, A01-0018, Geschäftsbericht 2000, p. 25.
  23. BSH Corporate Archives, A05-0022, inform, 1999/3, S. 20 f. Heute heißt die Abteilung EDS Produktbereich Electronic Systems, Drives (PED). BSH-Konzernarchiv, A05-0036, inform 2013/5, S. 3.
  24. https://www.bsh-group.com/company/bsh-worldwide (abgerufen am 30.08.2017)
  25. Siemens History: Siemens in the Netherlands.
  26. BSH Corporate Archives, Tochtermann Historie, Ordner 5, 100 Jahre Bosch – Willem van Rijn, Amsterdam 2003, p. 1.