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Honingcraft in the digital realm

First Quarter 2022 Other technologies

Honingcraft distributes the finest steel products and components used for manufacturing hydraulic cylinders, including honed tube, chrome bar and cylinder kits. The company owns and operates highly-specialised surface finishing and electroplating technology which adds value to commodity materials during the component manufacturing process. This includes boring, deep hole drilling, honing and precision internal and external grinding, to name a few. 

The company constantly focuses its time and energy on innovation and has fully embraced the fourth industrial revolution by conceptualising and implementing a digital transformation strategy, embarking on a three-phase plan to transform the business. The goal was simple: make the company easier to manage while maintaining and eventually improving profitability. 

Honingcraft brought Bydrae digital marketing agency on board in 2018. The engineering industry typically focuses on a sales-centric approach, so introducing digital marketing as a leading strategy was a contrarian idea at the time. Using a content marketing strategy meant initial gains were slow and no significant benefit was evident for the first 12 months of the project. Gerhard Pretorius, CTO of Bydrae Marketing Agency, says: “As with many things, we experienced improvement gradually, then suddenly. We started out by monitoring all the communication channels and consolidating the communication channels that were already in place. Using this data, we could determine which channels were benefiting the company most.” 

In 2019 Honingcraft continued its digital transformation journey, upgrading its physical infrastructure by commissioning a dedicated fibre connection with ADSL and wireless backup systems to ensure redundant connectivity. The communications networks on site were improved and renewable solar energy solutions were rolled out to keep ICT running at all times. This upgrade made it possible for Honingcraft to move its administrative operations to the cloud. Downtime to attend to customers’ needs is virtually non-existent at this point. 

Real advantages started becoming evident once the team embraced digital. Gerhard Hauptfleisch, CEO of Honingcraft, says: “The members of our team are the real stars. Without their flexibility and willingness to adopt new ideas, we wouldn’t have been able to do any of this.”

Honingcraft is now at the beginning stage of its third phase. The plan is to go completely virtual and paperless in 2022. Hauptfleisch continues: “Our ultimate goal is to make the company easier to manage while improving profitability. We’ve investigated several

cloud ERP solutions by performing soft launches and comparing productivity results in closed experiments. We’ve made this possible by digitising our marketing and improving our infrastructure to enable cloud-based operations.” 

What does this mean for the industry? Digital transformation has assisted in consolidating information and resources with appropriate business tools. Honingcraft will be able to collect data and integrate it fully for business intelligence, from the moment someone decides to look for a product through to the day that product gets delivered and even afterwards in polls and surveys. 

Customer insights have become more sophisticated, allowing Honingcraft to offer a better customer experience. Furthermore, the digitisation of Honingcraft encourages a digital culture with improved collaboration and most notably, increased profits and efficiency. 

Embracing the digital strategy has proved successful. Pretorius explains: “In the last 12 months, Honingcraft generated 775 236 impressions, which led to 45 705 interactions and 230 conversions. To clarify, we counted an impression anytime someone saw the brand online and an interaction when anybody clicked on a link that directed them to Honingcraft’s website, Facebook, LinkedIn or Youtube. Conversions are actual quotes requested for services or products through the website and exclude RFQs done via direct email and phones”.

Pretorius further adds: “It seems counter-intuitive, but the interesting thing about this project is that the website gets fewer visitors than it did in 2019. The big difference is that we are converting far more often, which has made the whole marketing department more efficient. We do a lot with a much smaller budget because we had a long-term approach that takes advantage of compounding improvement.” Hauptfleisch concludes: “At the end of the day, we want to serve our customers better. We wouldn’t know how to serve them if we couldn’t listen to them. Each phase of our digital transformation plan continues to grow our capabilities to listen to the voice of the customer and the market is rewarding us. We are humbled and grateful because without our team, we wouldn’t be able to pull any of this off.”




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