­It’s Just Another Smartphone Factory™

In a very typical stereotype, the campus in Shenzhen for Huawei has around 30,000 employees over 2.5 square kilometers, with some of them located in housing nearby within the local area. Perhaps quite interesting is that there are Foxconn offices across road, to the extent that at one T-junction there was a sign for left saying ‘Foxconn’ and a sign for the right saying ‘Huawei’. It has been noted that Foxconn has manufactured products for Huawei before, and thus I can imagine being so close to each other has its own benefits.

Make sure you make the right turn

Needless to say, a campus this size is very difficult to ‘tour’ around, especially as we had special presentations and meetings with the President of Huawei’s watch division discussing the Huawei Watch, lunch with the Director of Global Relations as well as a tour of the testing facilities during the short time there.

The standard rules apply for a company of this nature – there are tall corporate buildings with product areas and descriptive walkthroughs of what the company does, with professional meeting rooms that have in-house catering, whereas the technical offices and data center management are generic looking concrete places that are mostly no-go areas for media visits. This dichotomy between ‘on-show corporate’ and ‘the general workforce’ is mirrored in companies around the world, to the extent that we also had lunch in a special canteen for guests with a background band as you entered.

Musical accompaniment in the executive dining hall reception

During lunch we ate and talked with the Director for Public Relations, rather than eating in the casual employee canteen and experiencing the potential mêlée that comes with that. However, the campus is designed with an element of beauty in mind, under the premise that the CEO has a degree in architecture, and wanted the campus to reflect an element of style rather than be another box hidden in a corporate mountain. It was at this point that it was suggested by Andrei that the ultimate tech press clickbait article would be ‘An In-Depth Look at Huawei’s Architecture’ and it being about the buildings and landscapes of the campus, rather than insights into the company's silicon or devices.

Part of the tour was also to one of the smartphone testing laboratories, although we were not allowed to take images inside of the facilities. If any of our readers have seen our articles in the past about this (such as ASUS), the usual array of drop tests, twisting tests, insertion, vibration, high temperature, low temperature, humidity cycles and battery presses were also present on site, although RF testing is performed on a different campus than the one we visited. So when this page started with ‘It’s Just Another Smartphone Factory’, the reality is that almost all of them are like this, as they all need to perform similar tests dictated international and industry standards. The key here is individualization - most of the key elements to what a company does with their product is in the hardware design stage or software, rather than product testing, unless water/dust resistance is a key factor, or additional MIL-SPEC (military standard) is needed. Even then, for MIL-SPEC, one would assume that the testing would be outsourced if it only applied to a few devices, rather than purchasing all the equipment.

Why We Went It’s Just Another Smartphone Manufacturer™
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  • pedjache - Friday, December 4, 2015 - link

    gitmo_prisoner likes this.
  • ats - Saturday, December 5, 2015 - link

    Chinese prisoner looks longingly at club gitmo, wonders what it would take to be transferred to that fantasy land.
  • mobutu - Friday, December 4, 2015 - link

    such an ugly hand, yuck, look for george costanza! :)
  • s.yu - Saturday, December 5, 2015 - link

    Indeed, Huawei is spreading fear domestically that Apple devices are spied on by the US, but if any device is spied on by a government, it's probably Huawei's own.
  • Communism - Saturday, December 5, 2015 - link

    Hi operation earnest voice.
  • s.yu - Sunday, December 6, 2015 - link

    Yes, says "Communism", lmao.
  • s.yu - Sunday, December 6, 2015 - link

    Why don't you just admit that you're from CCP instead?
  • techhound - Saturday, December 5, 2015 - link

    Earnest question to editors: Would you have gone if the trip wasn't free? If the answer is no then there is no legitimate rationalization you can make for editorial independence in your future reviews of Huawei products, notwithstanding the attempts at such on the "Why We Went" page.
  • Murloc - Saturday, December 5, 2015 - link

    so in your opinion it's better not to go and thus not talk to anybody at any company and keep posting press releases and buying samples with their own money?
    How is that useful to the readers?
    The risk of being subconsciously biased by these things is low (also because every company does these) and worth it if it gets you industry analysis articles or allows you to learn new stuff.

    If a private company doesn't invite you, you cannot simply visit the company.
    Also having to pay for these trips would make it impossible because journalists usually don't have big money behind them.
  • techhound - Saturday, December 5, 2015 - link

    The fact that this lengthy article exists is proof that the "risk of being subconsciously biased" is not low. How many other in-depth editorial articles are on this site for other Chinese companies, specifically those that weren't willing to pay for such content? Even for just this trip, which was already paid for by Huawei, did the editors reach out to other Chinese companies for invitations to tour their factories? The additional marginal cost to anandtech would be low since they're already there.

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