Rapid Fire Manufacturing

He Went to Buy a Tool, and Bought the Entire Machine Shop: Gavin Giguere’s Leap to Launching REIGN Manufacturing

21 min · I går
episode He Went to Buy a Tool, and Bought the Entire Machine Shop: Gavin Giguere’s Leap to Launching REIGN Manufacturing cover

Beskrivelse

What happens when your business plan collides with a massive, unexpected opportunity? You throw the script out the window and get to work. In this episode of Rapid Fire Manufacturing, host David Turner sits down with Gavin Giguere, founder and owner of REIGN Manufacturing in Springfield, Massachusetts. Gavin's journey into manufacturing started in his mom's driveway restoring trucks at 13, led him through trade school, and eventually saw him building out entire advanced manufacturing departments for industry giants like Smith & Wesson. When he finally decided to strike out on his own, a routine trip to buy a single piece of used equipment turned into a snap decision to buy out an entire closing machine shop. Gavin shares the chaotic, high-stakes story of moving nine machines, riggers, and an entire inspection department into his building in the exact same week his brand-new Okumas arrived. David and Gavin strip down the realities of running a modern shop floor, covering: * The Power of Intraprenuership: How building a department from the ground up at Smith & Wesson gave Gavin the ultimate blueprint for business ownership. * The First Check You Write: Why joining the National Tooling and Machining Association (NTMA) was Gavin's absolute top priority on day two of his business, and how it drives his sales pipeline today. * AI as an Employee: How a lean startup shop utilizes AI tools to handle administration, marketing, and programming optimization to stay ahead of the curve. * Changing the Trade School Stigma: Why the industry needs to reach middle schoolers early to rebuild the manufacturing talent pipeline. Gavin is proof that real-world grit, adaptability, and a willingness to get comfortable being uncomfortable trump a rigid boardroom presentation every time.

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82 episoder

episode He Went to Buy a Tool, and Bought the Entire Machine Shop: Gavin Giguere’s Leap to Launching REIGN Manufacturing cover

He Went to Buy a Tool, and Bought the Entire Machine Shop: Gavin Giguere’s Leap to Launching REIGN Manufacturing

What happens when your business plan collides with a massive, unexpected opportunity? You throw the script out the window and get to work. In this episode of Rapid Fire Manufacturing, host David Turner sits down with Gavin Giguere, founder and owner of REIGN Manufacturing in Springfield, Massachusetts. Gavin's journey into manufacturing started in his mom's driveway restoring trucks at 13, led him through trade school, and eventually saw him building out entire advanced manufacturing departments for industry giants like Smith & Wesson. When he finally decided to strike out on his own, a routine trip to buy a single piece of used equipment turned into a snap decision to buy out an entire closing machine shop. Gavin shares the chaotic, high-stakes story of moving nine machines, riggers, and an entire inspection department into his building in the exact same week his brand-new Okumas arrived. David and Gavin strip down the realities of running a modern shop floor, covering: * The Power of Intraprenuership: How building a department from the ground up at Smith & Wesson gave Gavin the ultimate blueprint for business ownership. * The First Check You Write: Why joining the National Tooling and Machining Association (NTMA) was Gavin's absolute top priority on day two of his business, and how it drives his sales pipeline today. * AI as an Employee: How a lean startup shop utilizes AI tools to handle administration, marketing, and programming optimization to stay ahead of the curve. * Changing the Trade School Stigma: Why the industry needs to reach middle schoolers early to rebuild the manufacturing talent pipeline. Gavin is proof that real-world grit, adaptability, and a willingness to get comfortable being uncomfortable trump a rigid boardroom presentation every time.

I går21 min
episode The $2.9T Manufacturing Ecosystem: Market Truths, Tariffs, & Team Culture | Kevin Bowers (AMT) cover

The $2.9T Manufacturing Ecosystem: Market Truths, Tariffs, & Team Culture | Kevin Bowers (AMT)

Is the American industrial sector cooling down, or are the mainstream headlines masking a massive capital investment super-cycle? In this episode of Rapid Fire Manufacturing, David Turner sits down with Kevin Bowers, the Vice President of Research at AMT (The Association For Manufacturing Technology), to deconstruct the real economic, operational, and structural forces shaping the modern shop floor. Kevin brings over twenty-five years of deep-rooted industrial experience across machine tool OEM operations, technical sales management, and global market intelligence to provide a clear, data-backed view of where the manufacturing sector is heading. David and Kevin dive straight into a massive, immediate financial development catching many industrial executive teams off guard: the launch of the federal IEEPA tariff refund mechanism. Following a landmark legal reversal on broad international emergency trade actions, U.S. Customs and Border Protection officially launched Phase 1 processing for a staggering $166 billion refund universe. Kevin outlines the operational scale of this correction, which spans over 330,000 businesses and 53 million individual import entries, all being paid back with interest. For any shop owner, distributor, or equipment builder who paid these fees over the past year, this episode provides a vital warning on how to navigate incoming customer claims if those original tariff expenses were passed downstream. Beyond international trade policy, this episode acts as a comprehensive breakdown of the latest U.S. Manufacturing Technology Orders (USMTO) tracking. While general business sentiment reports hint at macro-level hesitation, the actual hard capital equipment data tells an entirely different story. Machine tool orders skyrocketed by 22.5% over the full year, with the opening quarter continuing that momentum with a 27.8% surge year-over-year. They examine the specific industry verticals driving this growth, including the intense capacity demands of aerospace and defense manufacturing alongside a massive rise in investment from the engine, turbine, and power transmission sectors fueled by the rapid expansion of electrical infrastructure for data centers. Crucially, David and Kevin look past the raw data to focus heavily on the human elements driving these physical results. They address the skilled labor deficit by exploring how leading shops are successfully defeating the workforce retirement wave. Kevin details why modern machine shops must lead their recruitment efforts with advanced technology, moving past outdated, dirty factory stereotypes into highly clean, automated environments. They discuss the critical value of building deep localized partnerships with community colleges, structuring high-yield apprenticeship programs, and treating workforce training as a company’s single most sustainable competitive advantage.

4. juni 202628 min
episode Matt Dvoracek | Why Manufacturing Needs You to Tell Its Story cover

Matt Dvoracek | Why Manufacturing Needs You to Tell Its Story

Everything you touch in your daily life started in a machine shop. If it was not made on a CNC machine, it was likely made in a mold that was. We build the tractors that break the ground for our homes and the gear that keeps first responders safe. Yet, the people powering this engine often act like the best kept secret in the trades. I recently sat down with Matt Dvoracek, the Machine Tool Maniac, to pull back the curtain on how to change that. Matt grew up in the shop and worked his way up to becoming an applications engineer. During our talk, we cover how to bridge the gap between technical expertise and modern growth. In this episode, we discuss: * Stop stressing about the brand: People get hung up on specific controls like Fanuc, Haas, or Okuma. At their core, they all require you to set offsets and load programs. Do not let a preference for one control keep you from learning the capabilities of another. The buttons might move, but the driver is still in control. * Word of mouth is not a strategy: The old way of making a good part and waiting for the phone to ring is a dangerous way to run a business. You have to actively market your shop. If you are not showing your face or sharing your process, you are leaving money on the table. * The power of documentation: You do not need to be a polished "guru" to succeed on social media. You just need to be real. If you are watching and not contributing, you are missing a massive opportunity. Momentum builds the moment you hit post.

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episode From Apprentice to Fives CEO: Harold Schoch on 2008 Survival, the Cincinnati Legacy, and Why People Matter More Than Profit cover

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In 2008, the wheels came off the global economy. Every shop was hurting. Yet, Harold Schoch’s machine tool rebuild business didn’t just survive; they had their best years. How? By refusing to treat customers like transactions. In this episode of Rapid Fire Manufacturing, Dave Turner sits down with Harold Schoch (Board of Directors for Fives North America, former CEO of Cincinnati) at the Schoch Museum to talk about what it really means to anchor a manufacturing business around people instead of just profit. Harold breaks down: * The 2008 Survival Blueprint: Why struggling alongside your customers builds a bond that currency can't buy. * The 3 Questions Every Leader Must Answer: Can I trust you? Are you committed to excellence? Do you care about me personally? * Wartime Grit: The jaw-dropping history of Cincinnati Milling Machine producing a tool every 17 minutes during World War II. * The Fives Academy: The critical need for workforce development and why the skilled trades gap will be solved by investing in people, not relying on AI. Manufacturing isn't powered by iron, automation, or algorithms. Every shop is powered by relationships. Tune in for a masterclass in industrial history, first-principles leadership, and real talk from a guy who went from an apprentice hand-scraping ways to a CEO leading global teams.

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episode The SWAT Mindset: Mission-Critical Leadership in Manufacturing with Johnny Goode at MSP cover

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Johnny Goode did not take the easy path into leadership at MSP. He spent over a decade as a patrol officer, narcotics detective, and SWAT operator before stepping onto the shop floor. He arrived at the family business during a global pandemic when orders were stalling and the team was facing furloughs. As the son of the owner, he knew he had to earn his seat. In this episode, we dive into how Johnny used his tactical background to rebuild the shop’s internal systems and pivot the company into defense and firearms. By leveraging his past experience with the equipment he was now manufacturing, he helped drive MSP to its highest revenue years in nearly a century. This is a masterclass in shifting from a tactical career to a technical one without losing your edge. * Earning Trust: Johnny skipped the speeches and won over a skeptical team by rolling up his sleeves to handle grueling audits and system integrations himself. * The Tactical Pivot: When the aerospace market slowed, Johnny used his military and law enforcement connections to identify new opportunities in defense manufacturing. * The 4:30 AM Standard: We discuss why physical discipline is a non-negotiable. Johnny’s morning gym routine is not just about fitness; it is about clearing brain fog and maintaining the throughput needed to lead. * Culture of Innovation: How MSP encourages employees to think like business owners, creating a "snowball effect" of efficiency and better technology implementation. * Collaborative Competition: A look at why the manufacturing community in Bloomington treats competitors like teammates, especially during times of crisis. Key Takeaways & Notes

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