Posts Tagged ‘Chris Kuehl’

American business success: Optimism peppered with pragmatism

March 19th, 2013
By: Tim Heston

So said Don McNeeley, president and COO, Chicago Tube & Iron Co., and professor at Northwestern University, speaking Feb. 27 at The FABRICATOR’s Leadership Summit in Palm Harbor, Fla.

After conversations with various fabricators since then, most tend to agree with him. Business is OK, not great, but big things may be on the horizon. One attendee said she was working through a massive pile of request-for-quotes and was wondering how she was going to get through them all. That’s not a bad problem to have. The recession purged many local markets, and fabricators that performed poorly (or were just unlucky) fell by the wayside. Now OEMs and top tier suppliers are calling on top-performing fabricators to deliver the goods.

Meanwhile, before this week’s troubles thanks to the mess in Cyprus, the stock market pushed into uncharted territory.

“The markets are nuts.”

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The competitive cluster in metal fabrication

December 13th, 2012
By: Tim Heston

A recent Wall Street Journal article pointed out the strength of U.S. manufacturing when it comes to--get ready for the technical jargon--“big stuff.” By that the Journal reporter meant mining equipment and heavy machinery.

Economist Chris Kuehl pointed out this fact in a recent edition of Fabrinonics, an e-newsletter from the Fabricators & Manufacturers Association Intl. Both Kuehl and the Journal article brought up the benefits of “clusters,” a group of like companies in highly collaborative supply chains. Taiwan has it for semiconductors. We’ve got it for extremely heavy equipment, like mining trucks.

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