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Transcript Adam Honig: Because I feel like the lasting impression that people have of manufacturing is from the really old I Love Lucy episode where they’re making chocolate. That’s how people think about manufacturing. Mike Nager: Yes, I went to school for an engineering degree. Adam Honig: Exactly.
I talk with company leaders about how they’re modernizing the business of making, moving, and selling products, and of course, having fun along the way. If we’ve got 10 construction companies and we want to add another 5, we can come up with a list of 25 to try to get to that 5. It opens up the door.
Transcript Randy Reed: I think there’s definitely a trend for more and more manufacturing in the US, folks decoupling from China and becoming less reliant on overseas production. Our country is on the verge of a super cycle of construction projects for manufacturing. Adam Honig: Hello and welcome to Make It. How did that happen?
He’s a manufacturer’s rep and he worked from the home. I went to work at NASA, for a NASA subcontractor as an electricalengineer. It was when they were sending up the space shuttle, like every six months there was another mission going up. I got really fired up about that. Listen to the Podcast.
For example, there are lead generation companies that provide accounting, corporate IT training, custom software development, electricalengineering, film services, privacy shield notice, technical support, etc. It outlines what you sell and to whom and describes what business problems and tasks you can solve for a particular business.
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