Welcome Home...THANK YOU FOR BEING A PART OF OUR COMMUNITY

Here's the scenario: You are the head of a production/tactical knife company. The board of Directors, mostly family, wants a good year. Do you talk to customers,the webmaster for your internet site, the  head of product development or the new guy heading up sales who is some how related to the family?

Do you roll out the old standbys that have sold well in the past? Do you make the designers work overtime? What do you do, what direction do you take, where do you go for ideas... and it better be right because your brother-in laws' sister would just love to have a chance to run the company!

Tags: CEO, Production, Tactical

Views: 236

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

.. and Hog .. if you get a feel for "which ones" are going off-shore first .. give me a heads up  !!!!!!

 

I'm gonna need at least one more drafter .. maybe 2 if it's HOT .. I've gotta go through EVERY drawing before it leaves house .. it's more than just a matter of converting everything to metric ..

 

That's one function .. 3 keystokes .. .. .. .. when we get that 3D solids CADD package .. (hint hint hint)

 

It's the tolerance stack-up .. we've got to check every dimension against it's mating dimension .. at both extreme ends of the tolerance ranges .. for ea dim .. individually @ ea tol extreme .. against each mating part .. @ ea tol extreme .. BECAUSE .. the metric conversion is actually to "STD" metric gauges / thicknesses / dim tolerances ... and worst case .. clearance issues exist .. parts DO NOT / WILL NOT  fit !!!!

 

Oh yeah .. draftings probably going to want just one guy to assign to the std gauge / thickness / dim tol portion of it .. get somebody working with one of our matl's vendors on that one maybe .. get our comptroller to set up the initial contact between our supplier & .... whoever's needed  in drafting on our end.  That's something we could get rolling now .. start out based on whatever we're sorcing the most from them ..  ..  ...  ..  .. We may very well end up doing everything anyway !?!?!  ... did the lil twit make it in today even ???

 

If this is really HOT when it get's turned on .. we're going to need some warning .. Serious !!!

 

How's your blood pressure, Hog ?.?.?. .. 'n just how is the little twit ...... O0ah .. forget I said anything ???? 

All speculation as to what the internal processes may be and as complicated as it all seems it may well be what they go through and its an engaging scene you painted there. makes you wnder if it indeed goes on.

Dale said:

.. and Hog .. if you get a feel for "which ones" are going off-shore first .. give me a heads up  !!!!!!

 

I'm gonna need at least one more drafter .. maybe 2 if it's HOT .. I've gotta go through EVERY drawing before it leaves house .. it's more than just a matter of converting everything to metric ..

 

That's one function .. 3 keystokes .. .. .. .. when we get that 3D solids CADD package .. (hint hint hint)

 

It's the tolerance stack-up .. we've got to check every dimension against it's mating dimension .. at both extreme ends of the tolerance ranges .. for ea dim .. individually @ ea tol extreme .. against each mating part .. @ ea tol extreme .. BECAUSE .. the metric conversion is actually to "STD" metric gauges / thicknesses / dim tolerances ... and worst case .. clearance issues exist .. parts DO NOT / WILL NOT  fit !!!!

 

Oh yeah .. draftings probably going to want just one guy to assign to the std gauge / thickness / dim tol portion of it .. get somebody working with one of our matl's vendors on that one maybe .. get our comptroller to set up the initial contact between our supplier & .... whoever's needed  in drafting on our end.  That's something we could get rolling now .. start out based on whatever we're sorcing the most from them ..  ..  ...  ..  .. We may very well end up doing everything anyway !?!?!  ... did the lil twit make it in today even ???

 

If this is really HOT when it get's turned on .. we're going to need some warning .. Serious !!!

 

How's your blood pressure, Hog ?.?.?. .. 'n just how is the little twit ...... O0ah .. forget I said anything ???? 

Nada wrong with OSHA Don !!!!  I do care about safety in the work environment. Not every one does though. OSHA has certainly improved safety in the work environment. Unfortunately .. their jurisdiction is limited to w/i the US.

 

We're just playing here .. but as Don suggested .. there are still some crap businesses out there that have minimized their safety concerns ... hence the hints toward the greedy lil twit that would forego employee safety in pursuit of the almighty $$$$$

Don said:

and just whats so wrong with OSHA??? made crap businesses clean up and be more safety oriented. as per your reply, states you must be hooked up with a crap business. or not give a rats ass for safety...


In the example Dale constructed it is entirely possible that some decisions were driven by companies seeking to avoid involvement with regulatory agencies. It does make you wonder if the agency you discuss has anything to do with production/tactical knife manufacturers halting domestic US production of low-end knives. (See Forum discussion: IS THIS THE END OF LOW END PRODUCTION KNIVES)

Don said:
and just whats so wrong with OSHA??? made crap businesses clean up and be more safety oriented. as per your reply, states you must be hooked up with a crap business. or not give a rats ass for safety...

@ Hog ..

 

I was involved with the transfer of a couple products … FROM stateside production TO off-shore manufacturing facilities.

 

The tolerance stack-up was a serious issue .. but just a small technical issue in the overall scheme of things.  We ended up transferring ONLY the technical data on a few key product lines .. most everything else followed along the lines of their std existing off-shore production .. just stamped with our name on it.

 

…’n I was literally taken aback with some of the conversation I witnessed.  It never ceases to amaze me .. what people will do for  $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$

 

And when you tossed in the "family member" .... just exactly what extremes people will go to in their pursuit of  $$$$$$ ... 'n I didn't say happiness ... must now be considered  !!!!!


Hog Hanner said:

All speculation as to what the internal processes may be and as complicated as it all seems it may well be what they go through and its an engaging scene you painted there. makes you wnder if it indeed goes on.

The whole (real world) excercise was an eye opener for me. I would not suggest there exist companies as a whole .. that may consider ... possible dis-reputable practices .... but,  INDIVIDUALS .......... you get the idea.

 

... and things one would not consider on the front side ... like the extreme theft of the required raw material .. copper foil / copper sheet / COPPER .. required in the manufacture of the pertinent product .. dmn near as good as money to the local brazilian employees. Scrap reclamation was abandoned in efforts to keep raw matl inventory current.

 

No, it wasn't the manufacture of knives .. and interestingly .. I looked for knives of local manufacture while I was down there .. all I could find was some kitchen cutlery. For slipjoints .. I had my choice of Swiss Army, Case, & Buck.

Evening Hog, Looks to me like you have some mighty good responses. The only thing I would add is that I would have a long conversation with my borther-in-laws' sister as well.
Thank you Jim, yes spirited discussion to say the least. I am intrigued by the level we can get to and truly wonder if any"CEO" is reading this and what his/her thought is! The scenario I pictured was a bit tongue in cheek but after reading so much about knife company history, I did think the layer of "family" was somehow appropriate.
The layer of "family" is very appropriate. After all 'family" is the foundation of cutlery manufacturing in the "good old USA". Products from this foundation is still very collectable but it is getting hard to afford, especially after retirement.

Reply to Discussion

RSS

White River Knives

Latest Activity

Eric Hall replied to Craig Henry's discussion Case Seahorse in the group Case Fans
3 minutes ago

KnifeMaker
Andy Larrison replied to Craig Henry's discussion Case Seahorse in the group Case Fans
1 hour ago

KnifeMaker
Andy Larrison commented on Andy Larrison's photo
1 hour ago

KnifeMaker
Andy Larrison commented on Mike Bryant's photo
1 hour ago

KnifeMaker
Doug Ritter posted a discussion
3 hours ago
Jan Carter commented on Mike Bryant's photo
16 hours ago
Jan Carter replied to Dennis Hibar's discussion My 2024 Christmas Giveaway
16 hours ago
Mike Bryant posted photos
18 hours ago
Randy Clendenin replied to Dennis Hibar's discussion My 2024 Christmas Giveaway
23 hours ago

KnifeMaker
Doug Ritter posted a discussion
yesterday
Dennis Hibar replied to Craig Henry's discussion Case Seahorse in the group Case Fans
yesterday
J.J. Smith III commented on Andy Larrison's photo
yesterday
J.J. Smith III commented on Mike Bryant's photo
yesterday

KnifeMaker
Andy Larrison posted photos
Tuesday

KnifeMaker
Andy Larrison added a discussion to the group Knife Repair, Modification, Restoration & Improvement
Tuesday

KnifeMaker
Andy Larrison commented on Mike Bryant's photo
Tuesday

KNIFE AUCTIONS

KNIFE MAGAZINE!!!

tsaknives.com

Click to visit

© 2024   Created by Jan Carter.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service