Wally Widens Appeal of Ferretti Group Portfolio: Stefano De Vivo
Ferretti Group CCO Stefano De Vivo talks about the year of Pershing, the success of Custom Line and Riva, and why he pushed for Wally to join the fast-growing conglomerate
With Wally on board, Ferretti Group has grown to eight yacht brands. Which are the biggest earners?
RivaāØand Custom Line are the two biggest brands right now in terms of revenues. If weāre talking about serial and semi custom production ā so fibreglass ā Riva and Custom Line are one step ahead of Ferretti Yachts and then Pershing and Itama.
Riva is the only brand we have that spans from runabouts to megayachts. It has a lot more product and itās the only brand that can actually do that. Thatās why it has much bigger numbers than Ferretti Yachts. Custom Line is in larger yachts, so itās easy to push up the revenues.
Alberto Galassi has even called Custom Line the Ferretti Groupās most important brand.āØ
Itās the most important because although itās not as famous as Riva or Ferretti Yachts or Pershing, itās the Groupās biggest revenue generator because of the size of the yachts. Thatās why it has become the most important.
A lot of Mr Galassiās experience on these boats comes from being a user, because one problem of a shipyard is that although we have technical knowledge, very few workers use the product. Sometimes the salespeople go on board with the clients because theyāre invited, but no one is really using them.
Ferretti Group also has Piero Ferrari as a shareholder and head of the Strategic Product Committee, which designs or looks upon all of the products. Any product that comes out, Mr Ferrari has been following every single design, from design to layout and so on.
Having people in the company that really use the yachts makes a difference, because thatās when they say, āHey, donāt forget to put a plug inside the mirror because you need to have that for an electric toothbrushā. Or donāt put this here because when you roll out of bed, you step on it. Itās the details.
Everybody makes nice boats nowadays, but itās the details that really make the difference ā and thatās why Custom Line has become so important in the Group.
Ferretti Group has stated that 2019 is āthe year of Pershingā, which so far has included the world premiere of the 8XāØat Boot Dusseldorf and the launch of the flagship 140 in Ancona. Why the big push?
Weāve also been pushing in the past years. The reality is that the 8X was slightly late. It should have been at the Cannes Yachting Festival (in September 2018).
Also, Pershing is so highly technological and complex, not to own and use but to build, so with the new limits weāre trying to push ā and when you factor in the performance of a Pershing with the design of a Pershing ā it took a little bit longer. Pershing is the hardest beast we have to tame, and nobody can tame Pershing.
So thatās why the 8X ended up coming out this year and we took it advantage of this by making a huge investment to bring the boat to DĆ¼sseldorf, where we have a very good pool of clients that visit the show from the northern and eastern parts of Europe.
Then thereās the 140 and thatās definitely a technological and technical feat, and why it proves even more that this is the year for Pershing. But itās not that we decided this year we were going to push. We try to push on every brand every year.
It looks like being a big year in Asia for Ferretti Group, with a Pershing 140, Riva 90ā Argo and 110ā Dolcevita, andāØa Custom Line Navetta 33 among expected arrivals. How important is Asia to your business?
The demand is actually across the spectrum of yacht sizes and I āØthink Asia as a whole is growing steadily, at least at the same paceāØof the company. When I joined in 2014, Asia was 15 per cent of the revenues. Today, itās about 18 per cent and the company has more than doubled its revenue. That means it has been growing nicely.
I think Asia is coming along the right way instead of companies just sending over tonnes of product that got old, which was a mistake the industry was starting to make in 2005, 2006, except for Hong Kong, which was much more established. Now, I think all the companies are doing things properly and achieving nice growth without exaggerating.
Mr Galassi credited you with the leading role in the Wally acquisition, over 15 months.āØ
Actually, a big team worked on it. I think Mr Galassi was trying to say it has been a long journey. It hasnāt been easy. There has been a big team of advisors behind it because itās very complicated.
Mr Galassi also said this because every time he didnāt know why the deal wasnāt closed and questioned if it was going ahead, I was always the one to say yes. He knows itās because I have a big sailing heart!
Iām glad and happy. Itās recognition of all the work Iāve doneāØwith my team, strategically, for the Ferretti Group. I think I needed something new to stay on top of my game. We need our motivations and I think he feels the same himself. Wally is a great challenge weād like to take up ā and I especially want to take up.
The sailing part is important, but the power side will be the biggest revenue generator. Wally has done some amazing things on the power side, but then sailing is my heart and I have to listen to my heart, finally, after 20 years in the business with motor yacht brands.
What are Luca Bassaniās hopes for this partnership?
He was looking for the next step because he wants Wally to live past himself. And I think what he has already started doing, and what weāre working together to do, is to ensure is that this DNA is taken out of him and put into a format, and systems put into place, so there will always be Wally and it will always be 20 years ahead because of his genius.
Heās 62 and one day I hope heās going to retire. I think only very clever men realise that what theyāve done is nothing unless it lasts beyond their own involvement.
Ferrari was one of these people. Carlo Riva was one of these people that thought, I need to make sure this company Iāve created, this myth, this beauty, this iconic brand, lives past me. I think Ferrari and Riva have demonstrated that this can be done, and the people that have managed this are working with us.
What was Wallyās production situation when you announced your acquisition?āØ
The reality is that Wally was only producing sailing boats and will keep on building them. We need to learn about building sailing yachts, so Luca needs to teach us.
For powerboats, we need to move the production. In the last few years, because of low volumes, Wally was producing a few in the north of France, north of Italy, Tunisia, so we want to give Wally a house to build their projects.
Have you discussed scaling up the Wally motor yacht side again?
Do you know what an atomic battery is? Itās made with plutonium and when you start it, it basically never stops. Thatās Mr Galassi. Now, weāve been joined by a volcano, Luca Bassani, so I have to deal with an atomic battery that never sleeps and never stops, and a volcano!
So, yes, weāve definitely started working on new things, bigger things, any size, from sailing to motor boats to ships. You name it, we have already started thinking about it. We have a strategy and have started working on a few models.
Note: The full version of the interview appears in Yacht Style Issue 46
Ferretti Group, C&N Sell Custom Line 120ā New Build to Asian Client