Posts Tagged ‘job shop management’

Debate spending, not debt

August 8th, 2011
By: Tim Heston

When Standard & Poor’s officially downgraded the U.S. credit rating on Friday, several conversations ran through my mind. One was with Vivek Gupta, managing director at Texas ProFab, a Dallas-area fabricator, who told me how conservative the company’s balance sheet was, and how the small firm built relationships with larger suppliers by always paying early. The small job shop perhaps didn’t order as much metal as larger manufacturers did, but it always paid on time.

I also recalled Jeff Cupples, vice president of engineering and estimating at Cupples J&J Co., a Jackson, Tenn., contract fabricator. As Cupples explained, "My father [company founder James Cupples] has not borrowed anything since 1979,” when the company moved to its current location in Jackson. “He borrowed $50,000 to build the building. It drove him crazy. He doesn't like to owe anybody. He's a child of the Depression; things could always get worse. So within a few years he paid for the building, and he hasn't borrowed anything since.”

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Job shop managers, the next generation

June 14th, 2011
By: Tim Heston

At every gathering of shop managers in this business--at events like FABTECH® and The FABRICATOR®’s Leadership Summit--I always notice how diverse people’s backgrounds are.

Most of the metal fabrication that goes on in this country happens in small businesses, firms much like Amtex Precision Fabrication, a 13-person job shop outside Houston. Last week I called Jacob Melton, vice president, and learned he had entered the field six years ago after a decade of working at a corporate job in Chicago, where he commuted to the office and worked on carefully planned software projects to help financial services firms sell products.
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