One Summer of One Hundred
Manufacturing is the ultimate training ground.

One Summer of One Hundred

Ridge Tool Company celebrates it 100th anniversary this year. Prior to its founding, a portion of the plant was home to Bender Body Company, the coachmaker for Willys-Overland. Most people think of Willys as the precursor of the Jeep but drag racing fans will recall the Willys cars of the 1960s with a certain wistfulness.

No alt text provided for this image
I think @JohnMcCandlish drove this in high school

I know about the Willys history because I had to learn it. Ridge Tool is located in my hometown of Elyria, Ohio (shout out to any E-town subscribers) and during the summer of 1981 I worked as a production planning trainee there. Part of my job required me to visit every department in the plant on a daily basis, including the old Willys shop. To say that the job changed my life is not hyperbole, it's a fact.

It was at Ridge Tool that I learned about how a business actually worked and - more importantly - how people worked. It also gave me a chance to recognize that I was a decent problem solver. There was one situation that I recall vividly in this regard, and it involved - of all things - electric motors. Ridge made many of their own and parts and there were lots of machines used to make those parts, many of which used electric motors. Most of the time, if a motor stopped working it was just replaced. After many years of this practice, there was a giant pile of motors that the plant manager wanted removed but nobody knew what to do with. I made a call to a local recycler who bought them all because of the value of the copper windings. The lesson I learned was that a good idea can come from anyone, including a nineteen-year-old meathead. I certainly remembered that when I was at sea a few years later and was surrounded by equally arrogant nineteen-year-olds, a few of whom were extraordinarily talented and just needed someone to listen to their ideas.

The other thing I recognized was that managing and directing staff is pretty simple: be respectful and learn the real motivations that people have, not what you (or your organization) think they have. This one I experienced in a very focused, very intense two-day event called annual inventory. I was - shockingly - named a team lead for the inventory and was assigned a team that included two employees who were parents of kids I had played sports with. Of course, I did all the nerdy things that were unnecessary and had a team meeting, etc., all of which was a total waste of time. These people knew what to do and wanted to get it over with and go home, which totally surprised me, since they were getting paid by the hour. I realized this was the case after about the first fifteen minutes, so I stopped everything (what an arrogant punk) and basically told them that if they finished the count and the count audits they could leave. I didn't ask for permission, I just did it. Chris Keith will likely recall that I used this same approach to address an inventory challenge with the Georgia Health Partnership over twenty years after my summer at Ridge.

I think that the fact I learned these lessons at a young age are important, but I think that where I learned them was equally so. Manufactuing generates lots of operational challenges that require agile thinking. Strategies to address these challenges can be assessed almost in real time, meaning that they can be changed back or modified just as fast. In other words, it's a great environment in which to "fail quickly" and learn from it.

In today's hyper-transaction-driven, cloud-based, AI-enhanced world "failing quickly" likely means "getting terminated quickly." That's a shame, because it makes the adage "We all learn from our mistakes" simply of figure of speech. I'm certainly glad I had the opportunity to work in manufacturing, where I was truly allowed to learn from mistakes.

#thatisall

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Stephen Smith MBA的更多文章

  • No Gold Watch for Me

    No Gold Watch for Me

    For those of you hardy souls who have endured this blog since its inception, first let me say how much I appreciate…

    1 条评论
  • Tulsa King is a Management Savant

    Tulsa King is a Management Savant

    Thank you to all of my 446 subscribers. I'm still on the Drive to Five (Hundred) so I would appreciate it if you would…

    2 条评论
  • Going "Slide Blind"

    Going "Slide Blind"

    I'm not sure what was the harder part of writing this post, editing the photo or finding one that wouldn't offend…

    1 条评论
  • Real Leadership is Emotional

    Real Leadership is Emotional

    If you read LinkedIn posts as often as I do, you probably find that many of them that purport to be about leadership…

    3 条评论
  • The New Economics of Work

    The New Economics of Work

    I have been off the topic of layoffs and recruiting for a few editions, but I'm back at it today because of one thing I…

    3 条评论
  • It's Fractional Experience Ownership, not "Contracting"

    It's Fractional Experience Ownership, not "Contracting"

    I took a bit of a sabbatical from this blog because I have been busy with three clients. Yes, clients.

    5 条评论
  • Buzzword Illiteracy is the Key to Better Critical Thinking

    Buzzword Illiteracy is the Key to Better Critical Thinking

    I'm still over here trying to figure out how to become an "influencer" and what I have realized is that I may never get…

    3 条评论
  • Everyone Has to Know What Everyone Else Knows

    Everyone Has to Know What Everyone Else Knows

    A bit of "Above the Fold" today before we get started. My friend and former colleague Ashley Nicholson, PMP, CSM has…

    5 条评论
  • The Symptoms are Not the Problem

    The Symptoms are Not the Problem

    At the time I write this I have 405 subscribers, which is a gain of 10 over the past week when I didn’t post a single…

    1 条评论
  • Influencer Influenza

    Influencer Influenza

    A recent LinkedIn post by a celebrated social media influencer reads - verbatim - "Effective communication begins with…

    2 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了