Skip to main content

Dressta seek greater dealership reach in key emerging markets to boost sales

Dressta, the LiuGong subsidiary, is striving to increase its dealership reach in key emerging markets such as Central and South America as it aims for higher machine sales. Speaking at a recent Dressta construction machine manufacturing press event at the company’s LiuGong-owned manufacturing plant and headquarters in Stalowa Wola, southern Poland, Dressta CEO Leslaw Holysz said, “We have no [dealership] presence in Mexico and Latin America, except for Panama. Panama is a very good country for us and we
October 10, 2013 Read time: 4 mins
The Dressta TD-40E Extra crawler dozer
3420 Dressta, the 269 LiuGong subsidiary, is striving to increase its dealership reach in key emerging markets such as Central and South America as it aims for higher machine sales.

Speaking at a recent Dressta construction machine manufacturing press event at the company’s LiuGong-owned manufacturing plant and headquarters in Stalowa Wola, southern Poland, Dressta CEO Leslaw Holysz said, “We have no [dealership] presence in Mexico and Latin America, except for Panama. Panama is a very good country for us and we sold a lot of equipment this year. Mexico, Peru, and Chile – they should be open [to us]. I know that LiuGong has very good partners there, so we really hope that we will be able to sell our TD-40E’s and TD-25M’s [crawler dozers] to these countries.”

Holysz said that Dressta continued to have good dealerships in Eastern Europe, former Soviet Union countries, Poland and Central Europe. “We also have good dealers in Asia-Pacific, and very good dealers in Ethiopia and South Africa, but this is not enough. We need more sales and you cannot sell more machines without good dealers,” he added.

Plans to bolster Dressta and LiuGong’s global dealership presence are, said Holysz, in the process of being agreed. “We are encouraging LiuGong dealers to come to us, and for Dressta dealers to sell some LiuGong equipment. Some Dressta dealers are interested in selling some LiuGong wheeled loaders and excavators. Some dealers in Kazakhstan and Russia and in other countries are interested in adding LiuGong excavators to their [dealership] programme.”

Despite a drop in H1 2013 sales and revenue compared to the same period of 2012, Holysz said Dressta had achieved its first machine sales to customers in England and France. He said that Germany was a “very tough market” for Dressta to break into. “The expectations of the customers and dealers are very high, so we have to be prepared for the high expectations.”

Asked during the same press event to identify Dressta’s key problem and how it can be overcome, David Beatenbough, LiuGong’s vice president, said, “The first international harvester bulldozers were built in the 1930s, and our [Dressta’s] history goes back to that. The technology that we use in our current [bulldozer] machine also has elements that go all the way back to that. But, in the past years, through many of the changes in HSW, and as LiuGong has acquired the company, many people have forgotten who Dressta is. For me, the most critical thing is to get our heritage, our quality and our machines well-known again so people can remember our strengths.”

Beatenbough said that LiuGong is keen to balance LiuGong and Dressta-branded machine production levels in Stalowa Wola. “One of the important reasons we invested in Poland was to give us a European base of operations. In order to be successful long-term, we need to have factories running at full capacity. Being able to produce LiuGong machines in Poland allows us to have much stronger support capability: parts are that much closer; everything is better for the customer.”

Of other LiuGong Poland investment reasons, Beatenbough added, “Probably the most important reason was the understanding of quality that people in this factory have. I truly believe that our quality is second to none in the world, in terms of what we build here. The machine designs are stable, work well and are reliable. We have machines working all over the world in very difficult applications. From a quality standpoint, we’re at the top.”

During the Dressta press event, the full range of Dressta crawler bulldozers – including the TD-40E Extra (pictured), wheeled loaders, pipelayers and backhoe loaders, all manufactured in Stalowa Wola, around 250km south-east of Warsaw, were showcased to a large gathering of international construction machine manufacturing industry journalists.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • 'Growth opportunities worldwide' for construction machines
    March 19, 2012
    Wirtgen brothers Jürgen and Stefan discussed growth opportunities. Jürgen Wirtgen and Stefan Wirtgen are joint presidents of the Wirtgen Group and see business levels continuing to improve. Stefan said, “Generally speaking we are surprised with the growth levels, especially in the BRIC countries. It is giving us quite a big boost and is allowing us to grow. We are more than happy with 2011 so far as the order books are full and we didn’t expect this.”
  • Construction equipment launched at Bauma China
    February 15, 2012
    The 2010 bauma China event did, as expected, break all previous records, with companies launching more new equipment than ever. Patrick Smith reports. The queues at the entrances on the first day of bauma China 2010 indicated what the rest of the week had in store. As thousands of visitors poured through the gates each day to view the latest in construction equipment at the expanded Shanghai New International Expo Centre, the organisers knew they were looking at another successful event.
  • Future-proofing construction & quarrying equipment sustainability
    February 16, 2023
    Sustainability is a huge topic across the construction and quarrying industry – not just in terms of what can be achieved tomorrow via carbon-free hydrogen fuel cells and hydrogen internal combustion engines of machine fleets, but today, through the use of smart technology to make jobsites more efficient and sustainable by getting work done right first time, every time
  • SDLG wheeled loaders for Moscow’s new roads and buildings
    March 28, 2014
    Two factories in Russia’s greater Moscow region are using SDLG wheeled loaders to help distribute sand and gravel for use in new roads being built across the region With Russia one of the world’s fastest growing market economies, its need for infrastructure expansion has meant more roads and, as a result, a massive increased need for sand and gravel production. Two sand and gravel factories near Moscow are said to be helping produce the new roads, sidewalks, and also, buildings.