Powersports Business April 2024 | Page 16

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PSB looks forward with BRP ’ s Sandy Scullion , president of Powersports and Marine

Sandy Scullion , located in Sherbrooke , QC , Canada , has been with BRP for 30 years as of this spring . “ I started as a DSM 30 years ago ,” he says . “ Just the idea of selling snowmobiles and having magazines in my portfolio to sell to the dealers was magic at that age . Never tell HR , but I could have worked for free for the first year ,” he laughs .
“ It ' s been pretty much clockwork every three years , moving in different roles and different parts of the organization touching sales , marketing , a little bit of development , distribution , logistics and so on .”
From 2007 to 2014 , he took charge of the P & A business . He mentions his role overseeing the Western Europe and Middle East regions for two years before honing in on global retail and services . In 2016 he represented all BRP brands except Marine . About a year and a half ago , he became president of the Powersports Group , including all manufacturing in Mexico , Canada and Finland and about 15,000 employees .
SCULLION ’ S NEW ROLE Recently , BRP announced changes to its organizational structure and Scullion was named president of Powersports and Marine while CEO Jose Boisjoli directly oversees manufacturing .
“ Manufacturing is now a service to the division , R & D is a service to the division and the chief marketing officer is a service to the division . But , in charge of Powersports and Marine , I have full P & L responsibilities ,” Scullion says .
He says that he directly oversees everything that falls under retail and services , which includes parts , accessories and apparel , product planning , distribution , salespeople , sales programs , network strategy , support of the network and call centers . “ Everything that touches those channels , whether a dealer , distributor or even D2C for the P & A business , that ' s under my direct oversight ,” he says .
OPERATIONS DURING COVID-19 “ We made it look like we had less issues with the supply chain , but it was the same for everyone ,” Scullion says . He explains that , because it became difficult to get parts to manufacturing plants , the company made a strategic decision to produce units without all necessary parts and ship them to dealers incomplete .
“ We also had this opportunity , we saw , of getting the holeshot . In our business , this is really important . We deal with Asian competitors , we deal with American competitors and obviously , we ' re Canadian . We ' ve got manufacturing plants pretty much everywhere in the world , but the majority of our production is from Mexico . We don ' t have any labor issues like most of our competitors , so we saw this big opportunity to get that holeshot and be in the market faster than anyone .”
He says BRP introduced the concept of shipping incomplete units owned by the company to dealers . “ As parts were coming in from our suppliers , instead of restarting the line , rebuilding these units and then the transfer from our plants to the dealers , we just shipped air all these parts to the dealers so that they were able to assemble and retail these units . I believe this was one ofthe
Sandy Scullion has been named president of Powersports and Marine and has been with BRP for 30 years .
big moments that made us gain so much market share I would say in the last year , year and a half . We were pretty happy with that strategy .”
“ Hats off to the dealers because we put a lot of burden on these folks ,” Scullion adds . “ It ' s teamwork . We got there because of our dealers and our desire to always win . That ' s a part of our culture .” BRP IN 2024 Scullion shares that now all OEMs are shipping to dealers and that supply outweighs demand . Coinciding with this , he says the economy is softer than planned , powersports consumers are buying less , and interest rates are high . So , although the company has momentum coming out of Covid−19 , BRP will possibly readjust inventory levels to better benefit dealers and the company over the next quarter or two .
“ The idea is to get to next fall as clean as possible so we can focus on model Year ‘ 25 and get that holeshot once again . That ' s the bigger picture ,” he says . “ In the transition , we want to make sure that we support the dealers , and we are investing significantly in the engagement funnel : getting that traffic going and having quality traffic walk into the showrooms .”
He says that , with eight product lines , it is expected to be wrong in terms of planning sometimes and that this is a normal course correction for the company . “ We adapt to the context a little more carefully these days because we understand the pressure that the dealers are living right now . But this is not a short-term strategy . We ' re going for the long term , so we need to keep the family happy .”
EXPECT ELECTRIC Scullion states that BRP is committed to offering 50 percent of its products as electric by 2035 . “ That doesn ' t mean that 50 percent of today ' s products are going to be EV , but in the overall portfolio of BRP in 2035 , that ' s the possibility ; that ' s the opportunity ,” he says .
He explains that some powersports products are more difficult to electrify than others and that certain uses for electric products are more realistic than others . “ If there ’ s a farmer working around his farm that ’ s one thing . But when you ' re going 100 or 200 miles out in the woods , the range is