SEMA awarded $300,000 federal grant

Sept. 18, 2014

The Specialty Equipment Market Association (SEMA) has been awarded part of a $2.2M federal grant which aims to expand exports of automotive aftermarket products into foreign markets including Russia, the United Arab Emirates and China.

The grant, under the Market Development Cooperator Program within the Commerce Department’s International Trade Administration (ITA), will assist SEMA in its efforts to provide exporting opportunities for its more than 6,800 members.

The grant will fund a new yearly fact-finding and sales mission to Russia plus help SEMA work with government officials to seek pro-industry regulations that allow U.S. products equal market access and organize overseas vehicle measuring sessions in key emerging markets.

SEMA measuring sessions give member companies the opportunity to study and measure vehicles in order to develop quality products and accessories consumers can use to personalize and customize their cars, trucks and SUVs.

The $300,000 portion of the grant allocated to SEMA will enable the association to expand the program overseas and hold such measuring sessions in each market, augmenting its popular three-year program of importing non-U.S. vehicles to the SEMA Garage at its Southern California headquarters under special exemption.

For the program’s initial phase, SEMA imported a Toyota Hilux, Ford Ranger T6, Mitsubishi L200 and a UAZ Hunter, none of which are sold in the U.S. but have strong followings in Europe, Australia, the Middle East, China and South America.

"As a global trade association, SEMA seeks to help member companies grow and expand their businesses," says Linda Spencer, international and government relations director at SEMA. "One of the many ways SEMA helps its members grow is through exporting. For many of our members, exporting products to key international markets is integral to their success, and SEMA is available to help identify strategic markets and guide members along the way."

U.S. exports hit an all-time record of $2.3 trillion in 2013, and supported more than 11 million American jobs, according to the Department of Commerce.

SEMA’s export initiatives

Over the past two decades, SEMA has developed a successful track record regarding its overseas work. SEMA places a high priority on assisting SEMA-member companies diversify their customer base and assisting its members in taking advantage of export opportunities as the global demand for the automotive industry's products soars.   As the typical SEMA-member company has a relatively small staff and modest budget compared to larger firms, SEMA’s export programs and services serve as an extension to their staffs and fill a vital void by providing needed global expansion resources, says the association.

For SEMA members, new geographic markets offer opportunities to create new revenue streams and reach new customers. Numerous studies have shown that exporters outperform non-exporters in terms of wages, productivity and innovation and, equally important, this diversification can make firms more resilient during economic downturns.

SEMA assists U.S. companies to identify strategic markets and guide its members along the way. Initiatives include everything from international research to identify developing markets, to working with international officials on legislative issues, to creating venues for SEMA members to connect with international buyers, to trade missions to key countries throughout the year. Additionally, they include importing vehicles popular outside the United States but not sold in the United States in order to assist U.S. companies create export-ready product are just some of these efforts.

A partnership with the U.S. Department of Commerce enhanced with a 2011 Market Development Cooperator Program (MDCP) award was a key factor to growing the range and depth of SEMA’s programs beyond the traditional markets to which U.S. manufacturers export such as those in Europe, Australia and Japan.

Since September 2011, nearly 300 U.S. companies have traveled to China and/or the Middle East with SEMA, and/or have measured vehicles popular in key overseas markets but not sold in the United States in order to create export-ready product. Export sales, by participants in our one-on-one programs in the Middle East and China has resulted in nearly $50 million in export sales.   Thirteen SEMA member companies taking advantage of the expanded SEMA international programs have received Department of Commerce Export Achievement awards with additional awards expected to be presented at this year’s SEMA Show taking place in Las Vegas in November.

For more information, see www.sema.org.

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