Killer Growth
In Episode 52, Samuel sits down with David May - CEO of Trinity Precision and co-founder of Akeratos, a robotics automation consulting company - for a conversation covering nearly 30 years of aerospace manufacturing, a COVID-era pivot that spawned a second business, and the kind of company culture that still feels unusual: faith-based, family-first, and genuinely protective of its people. David's career started at the bottom of the aerospace supply chain - pushing parts at Cessna, coordinating supplier deliveries, and learning fast how to tell when someone was being straight with him and when they weren't. From there he moved into commodity teams that toured over 200 suppliers across North America, from Honeywell and Rockwell Collins down to a guy making widgets out of his garage in Park City, Kansas. Those years gave him a ground-level view of how businesses actually start and grow, and planted the idea that he wanted to run something himself. After years at Textron and a stint with a PE-backed company, David spent a year putting together an M&A deal, closed on Trinity Precision, and started building. The company now sits at 107 employees, up from 32. During COVID, when commercial aerospace lost over 50% of its revenue overnight, Trinity kept its workforce as intact as possible - giving raises and bonuses through the downturn and absorbing every healthcare cost increase since 2014 so employees are still paying 2014 premiums. Their 12-month turnover rate is under 10%, compared to roughly 30% across the industry. The COVID era also forced them into deep work on automation, and what they built internally became the foundation for Akeratos - an automation consulting and integration business working across industries from food manufacturing to pressure valves to wire production. Where most automation companies lead with hardware, Akeratos works backwards from the customer's process first. David talks through the difference between traditional high-volume single-part automation and what they built at Trinity: a high-mix, low-volume system where dozens of different parts run through the same automated process because the process itself is what's designed, not just the part. The conversation also covers what David calls the 3 Ps - people, process, and principle - and what it actually looks like to run a company on Christian principles without making it uncomfortable. Seven kids, a GM he finally trusted enough to step back from day-to-day operations, and a hard-won transition from founder-operator to what he calls the "chief stay out of the way officer" round out the conversation. Learn more at https://killergrowth.com
58 episodios
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