Issue StoriesQ & A: Chatting with Toshibas Edwin A. Lodgek.
With 2 years under his belt at TAMS, Lodgek recently spoke with Medical Imaging magazine about his time at the company and the strategic plan he intends to enact. Q. What have been your
priorities during your first 2 years as general manager? The other aspect has been the marketing and collateral support for that organization. Our parent company in Japan has a business structure that includes business units, which, in turn, represent the various modalities. In the United States, we did not have that structure, so I restructured our marketing organization and aligned with Japan with similar business units. Now we have a business unit director for CT who is on the same plane as a business unit director in Japan, where they are communicating about the product road map, plans, and requirements of our marketplace here in the United States as well as the applications of the products. This [new business unit] is helping us better position for the pipeline of products necessary to support the aggressive growth plans I mentioned. Q. With that in mind, which
medical imaging modalities will Toshiba emphasize in its short-term and long-term plans? We also are very intent on growing our other imaging technologies, such as MR. We have a new platform we are about ready to release. It is the 1.5T [tesla MRI scanner] with a 1.4-m short-bore magnet. It will be called the Vantage. We have a new platform with an improved gradient package in our open magnet, the Ultra. We have two new technologies in ultrasound with the Aplio and the Nemio. [Ultrasound technology] is a business that Toshiba has done well in around the world but has not been a significant factor in the United States. We have invested in the technology and in our sales and marketing efforts to change [this situation] rapidly. We are seeing results in growth rates for Toshiba ultrasound, which exceed market growth rates. In the vascular and X-ray area, we maintain a heavy priority on flat-panel development. We have clinical testing ongoing at various sites, and were making excellent progress in digital subtraction, angiography, and R/F. These are the key components of our operating plan and the products that will drive that growth. Q. What is the timetable on
the flat-panel technology? Q. What are Toshibas
plans in nuclear medicine? We also continue with research and development in Japan for various applications for these products by way of software enhancement. At this point, that will be our direction for the foreseeable future in nuclear medicine. Q. Much of the growth you
outlined is driven internally. Are there plans for expansion through acquisition? We continue to focus our investment in those modalities, as opposed to acquiring companies and other technologies. Thats not to say we dont have other partnerships; we do. We are quite focused on making aggressive operating plans and in the development of core technologies and their applications, as opposed to the expense and some of the redundancies created by making acquisitions. Many times, we think it can dilute your effort rather than complement it. Q. Following on that theme,
which other Toshiba business units complement the medical division? Q. Looking specifically at
the US market, what are the growth plans for Toshiba? We had growth in CT of more than 50% in revenues, whereas the market grew, according to NEMA, in the neighborhood of 19%. In MR, we grew at 17%; the market grew at 7%. In ultrasound, we grew at 53%; the market grew at 7%. Q. Lets switch to the
service side for a moment. What are Toshibas plans and priorities in this area? Having said that, we do have a health technical service group, which we will continue to develop as long as it applies to new commitments that support our core growth plan. Besides that, I have never been particularly impressed with the financials of multivendor service operations. A very high priority for us is to be certain that the investment in our service keeps pace with the aggressive growth plans. We are growing our installed base very rapidly, and I want to make sure that the response time and the deployment of human resources are equal to the growth rate that we have. We wont be successful if our customers are not happy with our service and support. Q. Which technologies are
missing from the product portfolio that Toshiba would like to add? Q. PET, of course, brings to
mind molecular imaging and the great potential many health care professionals see there. In Japan, the adoption of PET is at a slower pace than in the United States. It might make sense for Toshiba in Japan to take one approach and for Toshiba in the United States to take a different approach. |
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