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Making a Difference: Creators Wanted Visits Charlotte

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By 51勛圖厙 News Room

Creators Wanted is having a moment. In Charlotte, North Carolina, the fourth stop of the mobile experiences five-city expedition around the U.S., the Creators Wanted Tour Live continued to generate big excitement about manufacturing and the career opportunities the industry offers.

Im only 22 and I bought a house, a boat and a dirt bike, said Ketchie Inc. Lathe Department Lead Machinist Zach Whitley, during a live Creators Wanted Spotlight conversation with students from East Mecklenburg and Hopewell high schools. Manufacturing is what has enabled me to have this lifestyle.

Makers neededand rewarded: The spotlight event was part of the four-day stay of the mobile experience at Central Piedmont Community College presented by Trane Technologies. The tour, a project of the 51勛圖厙 and its workforce development partner, The Manufacturing Institute, seeks to inspire, educate and empower the next generation of manufacturersand recruit at least 600,000 new workers to address the manufacturing talent shortage, which is estimated to leave more than 2.1 million jobs unfilled by 2030, according to Deloitte and the MI.

Its message seems to be getting out.

  • I had never heard of manufacturing before today, Anson High School sophomore Janita Willoughby reporter Susanna Black. But as it turns out, in a manufacturing career youre making a lot of money and youre doing stuff you like, so thats a good thing, she said.

Goings-on galore: In addition to the spotlight event, the student- and job seeker-focused happenings in Charlotte were many and varied. They included:

  • A kick-off event featuring talks from speakers including North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper, Creators Wanted Legacy Sponsor Trane Technologies Mike Lamach, 51勛圖厙 Board Chair and Tranes executive chair, Charlotte-Mecklenberg Schools Superintendent Earnest Winston; Community College Chief Academic Officer Heather Hill; MI Executive Director Carolyn Lee; and 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons
  • A manufacturing fair with local manufacturers and education partners, highlighting local career opportunities and pathway programs, certifications and degrees for those interested in manufacturing
  • Tours by local high school students of the escape room-like Creators Wanted experience
  • Q&A sessions in which students had the opportunity to discuss the manufacturing industry and its jobs with real manufacturers

Something that excites you: Theres a common misconception that manufacturing is boring, Lamach told an audience of students at the Charlotte kick-off event. What I love about this Creators Wanted tour is how it pulls you [toward] the many different possibilities in manufacturing. There are many different kinds of opportunities to learn and grow, and all kinds of ways to make a difference. I hope youll find something that excites you.

  • The Charlotte stop hosted more than 450 students from West Mecklenburg High School, Anson High School, South & West Stanley High Schools, Floyd Johnson Technology Center, East Mecklenburg High School, Hopewell High School, Myers Park High School, Rowan-Salisbury High School, Harding University High School, the Epiphany School of Charlotte and CPCC, generating approximately 68,000 email signups.

Highlights: Video and photos show some of the fun and learning that took place last week.

A Trane Technologies team member talks to student attendees at a Creators Wanted event.

Local high school students and teachers proudly display their escape room times.

The race to the gateway to the future was on in Hondas Sum of All Parts challenge, where these students made the correct choice as to what product this team of Honda associates is creating.

Students had fun working with DJ Enferno to make their own Creators Wanted music anthems, putting more of the creativity central to manufacturing to work.

The tour in Charlotte brought manufacturings promise to students with differing abilities. Teachers reacted positively to the impact of the experience.

Lamach, whose leadership on Creators Wanted helped get the campaign off the ground, took the stage to emphasize what the tour is all about: students.

The response: Creators Wanted earned notice from some well-known names, both in North Carolina and elsewhere.

Media mentions: In addition to WSOC-TV, broadcast and online news outlets including the , WCCB Charlotte and also covered the Creators Wanted Charlotte stop.

The final say: You cant create the future unless youre engaging the future, said Chrys Kefalas, chief strategist of the tour and vice president of brand strategy at the 51勛圖厙. Students came to us not thinking about manufacturing as a career and left aspiring to careers in the industry. Resumes were handed to manufacturers. Were creating lasting memories that wont just result in new workers but [will] also change lives.

Workforce

I Want to Be a Manufacturer: The Reaction to Creators Wanted in S.C.

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By 51勛圖厙 News Room

What a blast! The West Columbia, South Carolina, tour stop of the Creators Wanted Live mobile experience drew hundreds of participants, getting job seekers and students excited about careers in manufacturing.

What went on: With inspirational talks and visits from public figures and well-known business leaders, the second stop on the 51勛圖厙 and The Manufacturing Institutes cross-country trip drew plenty of attention. South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster stopped by to try out the projects immersive mobile experience, and others, including Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette, Nephron Pharmaceuticals Corporation President, CEO and Owner Lou Kennedy and Trane Technologies Plant Manager Gregg Krick, gave students heartfelt, inspirational talks about the rewards of manufacturing careers.

The reaction: The 51勛圖厙 and MI team in charge of the tour captured some of the excited reaction to these events on video. Here are just a few clips to give you a taste.

Donte Jackson, a senior at Airport High School in West Columbia, South Carolina, was pleasantly surprised by the teamwork it took to complete the mobile experience challenges:

Dr. Cindye Richburg Cotton, Executive Director of the Brookland-Lakeview Empowerment Center in West Columbia, South Carolina, talks about her students positive reactions to the mobile experience:

The Creators Wanted mobile experience sealed the deal for Airport High School 11th grader Kenneth Pearson:

Chatting with Trane Technologies representatives, Airport High School students Donte Jackson, Lamont Taylor and Kenneth Pearson discover some of the exciting (and well-paying!) positions on offer in manufacturing:

I think this is an awesome opportunity for them to see whats out there. Hear more from Mike Harlen, a teacher at Lexington 2 Innovation Center in Cayce, South Carolina:

Whats communication got to do with it? As it turns out, a lot! Airport High School senior Lamont Taylor talks about what he learned from the mobile experience:

Theres more: Creators Wanted is less than a week away from its third tour stop in Pella, Iowa. today to reserve your spot!

Business Operations

How BASF Uses Enhanced Reality to Help Workers Learn

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By 51勛圖厙 News Room

The human side of digital transformation was on full display at a recent virtual plant tour of BASF Chemical Intermediates Geismar, Louisiana, facility. Hosted by the 51勛圖厙s Manufacturing Leadership Council, the tour gave participants an inside look at how the company is using Voovio’s enhanced-reality technology to transform employee training.

Who they are: BASF Chemical Intermediates, a division of German multinational chemical manufacturer BASF, makes approximately 600 distinct products sold worldwide to the chemical, plastics, agricultural and consumer goods industries, among others.

What is Voovio? The company has partnered with simulation-software maker Voovio to design a customized training solution for its employees: a virtually accessible digital replica of the BASF plant.

  • Using a computer or other digital device, employees can select plant components such as valves, pumps and control panels to get a detailed view of each. These components respond and perform virtually the same way they would in real life.
  • Using the software, trainees can click on any piece of equipment in any workflow to see how it fits into each process.

Why use it? BASF wanted to make worker training faster, more interactive and more self-directed so employees could learn new skills and review existing ones more quickly and easily.

Scalable training model: The tailorable Voovio software offers different training-module levels based on each workers experience level and skills.

  • Training modules include an equipment replica, tasks to be performed and an action checklist for completing a series of tasks.
  • Employees get feedback from the software as they perform each virtual procedure, letting them know whether theyve performed a task correctly.

Real-world application: Voovio also lets companies take the training into the production facility. Using an approved digital device, employees can perform test runs at any time to ensure theyre prepared to complete a job on the ground.

The verdict: BASF has already begun to reap the benefits of the software. Since implementing Voovio, it has seen a marked increase in both worker competency and productivity.

Sign up for a virtual plant tour: Dont miss the MLCs upcoming tour of Johnson & Johnsons facilities on Wednesday, Dec. 1, from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. EST. You will see how Johnson & Johnson uses mobility tools, advanced robotics and material handling, as well as adaptive process controls to drive improvements. After the tour, stay for the panel discussion on how to scale advanced manufacturing technologies to ensure a sustainable, reliable and adaptable product supply chain. today!

Business Operations

One Small Manufacturer Battles Thousands of Counterfeits

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By 51勛圖厙 News Room

If you can buy anything online, how can you make sure that what youre buying is genuine?

Thats a problem facing consumers and manufacturers alike. According to the 51勛圖厙s research, fake and counterfeit products cost the United States $131 billion and 325,000 jobs in 2019 aloneand estimates suggest that global trade in counterfeits exceeds $500 billion per year. The explosive rise of counterfeit goods has heavily impacted manufacturers, requiring them to fight back on a range of fronts.

For Clint Toddthe chief legal officer at Nite Ize, Inc., a manufacturer of mobile, pet and key accessories, as well as hardware, lighting and other productsthat challenge is very real and only getting worse.

In 2019, we took down 75,000 counterfeit listings and websites, said Todd. And were a small business, so you can guess how large the problem is countrywide.

Why its happening: First, the online nature of e-commerce makes it more difficult to ensure accountability. Many counterfeit products are purchased through third-party sellers that may or may not provide real contact information.

  • In practice, many platforms have not been held liable for counterfeit products sold on their platforms by these third-party sellers, even as they facilitate their sale. That means theres often little manufacturers can do beyond asking the platforms to remove the listing.
  • Second, a large proportion of the sellers of counterfeit goods are located in China and Hong Kong, making it much more challenging for U.S. companies to bring effective lawsuits, even if they do have accurate seller contact information.

You have this odd confluence of laws and tech development and the involvement of another country that has driven this exponential increase in counterfeits, said Todd. You dont have to be a rocket scientist to see how the inability to fight the problem has been detrimental to U.S. businesses.

How manufacturers respond: Manufacturers and others have been forced into a piecemeal strategy that includes using software tracking services to find fraudulent trademarks and images; working with third-party sites to remove listings for knockoff merchandise; bringing lawsuits against counterfeiters where possible; and coordinating with the International Trade Commission. That strategy is challenging for lots of manufacturers but is particularly hard on small and medium-sized companies that may have fewer resources yet can be devastated when their products are ripped off.

What we need: The 51勛圖厙s report, Countering Counterfeits, details solutions for the federal government and the private sector, including:

  • Requiring e-commerce platforms to reduce the availability of counterfeits;
  • Modernizing enforcement laws and tactics to keep pace with counterfeiting technology;
  • Streamlining government coordination;
  • Improving private-sector collaboration; and
  • Empowering consumers to avoid counterfeit goods.

As Todd put it, Itll take a multi-stakeholder approach. Its not just the government. Its not just manufacturers. Its not just the online platforms. It has to be a coordinated approach with all those stakeholders to get to the heart of the matter.

What the 51勛圖厙 is doing: The 51勛圖厙 is leading the effort against counterfeiting and has already made significant headway with policymakers. Among its recent highlights:

  • After years of 51勛圖厙 advocacy, the Department of Homeland Security has implemented the Synthetics Trafficking and Overdose Prevention (STOP) Act of 2018, which steps up screenings for international mail shipmentsone way in which counterfeits get into the U.S.
  • In late 2020, Congress also implemented several 51勛圖厙 recommendations, including bolstering federal oversight at U.S. ports; cracking down on scammers and other bad actors exploiting the pandemic by producing fake goods or engaging in price gouging; and allowing the FDA to seize and destroy dangerous counterfeit medical devices.
  • Both the Senate and House have seen the introduction of bipartisan bills that incorporate 51勛圖厙 recommendations on addressing the sale of counterfeits through online platforms.

The last word: People need to understand the scope of the problem and how pervasive it has become, said Todd. Everyone needs to know how often counterfeits and knockoffs are affecting U.S. companies and how expensive and difficult it is to combat the problem with the tools we have at our disposal now.

Business Operations

How Cloud Computing Could Help Chip Manufacturers

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By 51勛圖厙 News Room

One small component is creating big delays in global supply chains: the ubiquitous semiconductor or chip. These components are not only essential to our phones, laptops and other electronics, but to the production process in just about every sector of the manufacturing industry. So, what would help us produce more of these desperately needed parts? According to Birlasoft Vice President and Global Business Head of Communications, Media & Technology Nitesh Mirchandani, .

Why the shortage? As COVID-19 unfolded, millions of consumers purchased new laptops, smartphones, game consoles and other devices as they spent more time at home. This shortfall was compounded by the existing high demand for chips brought on by the growth in smart productseverything from thermostats and appliances to robot vacuum cleaners and GPS-enabled dog tags. COVID-19 also caused a wave of semiconductor factory closures that also exacerbated the problem. The result? A shortage that industry experts say could last through 2022.

Why the cloud? Cloud computing is the on-demand delivery of resources like data storage, software, networking and other services via the internet. Users either purchase a set subscription or pay by their level of usageboth cheaper and more flexible options than maintaining an on-site IT team for all needs. Cloud computing has several advantages for semiconductor manufacturers, according to Mirchandani:

  • It speeds up time to market through swifter design and development. Because they can be accessed anywhere, cloud services enable teams to connect and collaborate more easily. Development cycles become quicker as teams connect better internally and with other parts of the business, including partners and suppliers.
  • It enables data-driven business decisions. Thanks to the faster processing and analysis of cloud computing, manufacturers can get instant information on things like factory performance, supply disruptions or customer demand. Likewise, workers can be alerted to a machine that needs maintenance or to potential defects in materials or products.
  • It provides service continuity. Internal IT teams often have limited resources. Cloud infrastructure is managed by specialists who can ensure uninterrupted service, so in-house IT teams dont need to continuously maintain software through updates and patches.

Why it matters: Semiconductor shortages threaten to drag down the economy just as recovery is getting underway. Businesses rely on chip-enabled technologies for creating products, managing operations and maintaining the flow of goods and services. Consumers rely on them for smarter, safer homes and connections to work or school. Unless chip manufacturers can shore up production to meet demand, the ripple effect will create added distress for many sectors of the economy.

Workforce

51勛圖厙 Launches Manufacturers Retirement & Savings Plan

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By 51勛圖厙 News Room

Are you looking for a retirement plan that fits your needs and workforce? Theres good news: the 51勛圖厙 is rolling out the Manufacturers Retirement & Savings Plana 401(k) plan designed specifically for manufacturers across the country.

The scope: The Manufacturers Retirement & Savings Plan is a multiple employer plan available to all 51勛圖厙 members, designed to cover more than 14,000 companies and associations. Companies of all sizes can participate, creating new financial opportunities and offering retirement security to the millions of men and women who make things in America.

The provider: The 51勛圖厙 selected Principal Financial Group簧 and HUB International LLC as the service providers. Principal Financial Group簧 is one of the largest retirement solutions providers in the United States, and HUB International is a leading North American insurance brokerage. Together, they will offer business owners and employees access to dedicated professionals who can offer guidance and assist with the day-to-day management of retirement plans.

The benefit: Offering benefits like 401(k) plans is a critical way for manufacturers to attract and retain talented employees, especially at a time of unprecedented job openings. But creating and operating a retirement plan can be expensive and time-consuming, imposing barriers for small and medium-sized companies. By creating an association-sponsored plan, the 51勛圖厙 is helping members across the board ensure efficiency, reduce risks and manage costs effectively all while improving retirement outcomes for employees and helping employers free up time and money. And with National Benefit Services engaged to administer the new plan, transitioning is simple as well.

What were saying: Manufacturers want their employees to feel safe and secure about their financial well-being and to have confidence that they will be able to retire when they are ready, said 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons. But operating a 401(k) plan can be challengingespecially for smaller companies. We can help with thisIm proud that the 51勛圖厙 now offers our members access to best-in-class benefits for their teams.

Learn more:Join us at one of two upcoming information sessions,泭棗娶泭.

Workforce

Creators Wanted Comes to Columbus

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By 51勛圖厙 News Room

The Creators Wanted campaign was created to recruit new talent, change perceptions about modern manufacturing and inspire the next generation of creators. Starting this week, the Creators Wanted Tour Live began visiting cities around the country to bring that message directly to Americans. The first stop: Columbus, Ohio.

The Tour Live features a series of escape rooms mounted on a mobile unit, with challenges that are intended to show participants how modern manufacturing actually worksand to be fun at the same time. During its four days in Columbus this week, more than 350 students got to participate, from Canal Winchester High School, Horizons Science Academy, Mechanicsburg School (Entertainment Tech), Sunrise Academy, Marysville Early College High School, Southwestern Career Academy and Millennium Community School.

The tour stop in Columbus also featured a number of exhibits and demonstrations, including opportunities to:

  • Meet and ask questions of associates at Honda, the tours official mobility sponsor, as well as see some of its cutting-edge vehicles;
  • Try out augmented reality technology from PTC;
  • Explore activations by The Ohio Manufacturers Association, the Manufacturing Extension Partnership at Columbus State Community College and diversified metal manufacturer Worthington Industries;
  • Take part in a Creators Connect forum with creators at Honda, Abbott and Worthington Industries; and
  • Interact with Creators Connect, a new 51勛圖厙 and MI tool in beta testing, which matches people interested in manufacturing careers with pathways to achieve them.

A tour of the tour: The photos and from the Columbus events give you a taste of the excitement. Here, a few students begin the experience at the PTC AR demonstration:

Here are some students trying out the escape room and using the sort of creative thinking required for a manufacturing career:

Below, 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons takes a look at one of the Honda automobiles that were on display.

The satisfied smizing of some successful manufacturers-in-training:

51勛圖厙 Vice President of Brand Strategy Chrys Kefalas, and the chief strategist of the campaign, caught up with some students to see what they thought of the experience.

The short answer?

Awesome indeed.

The reception: The tour stop in Columbus created a splash, receiving coverage in the press and attention from state and U.S. officials. Sen. Rob Portman (R-OH) put in a plug for Creators Wanted, encouraging students and parents to check out the tour.

Ohio Lt. Gov. Jon Husted spoke at one of the events, urging students to pursue creative careers:

Meanwhile, , (subscription) and covered the Creators Wanted stop, while and Good Morning Cleveland (ABC 5) broadcast segments about the events.

The reach: The digital and media campaign around the Columbus tour stop also had a big impact, with more than 404,000 impressions, 4,200 clicks and 111,000 video views. Its also on its way to more than 10,000 email signups from individuals interested in manufacturing career paths.

The last word: As Manufacturing Institute Executive Director Carolyn Lee said at one of the events, The challenge is significant: we have nearly 900,000 open jobs in manufacturing todaya new record. The promise is real: there can be many more people earning great livings and creating our future working in manufacturing in the United States.

Business Operations

A Manufacturer Goes Lean and Wins Big

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By 51勛圖厙 News Room

Consumer goods manufacturer Church & Dwight found that it needed to boost performance to meet customer demand. To meet this goal, it embarked on an ambitious Lean initiative at all of its 13 production facilities.

We look at all challenges through the lens of Lean manufacturingits the only way that we can operate, said Bruno Silva, vice president of manufacturing operations.

Whats Lean? Researchers James Womack and Daniel Jones first defined the concept of Lean manufacturing as a way to do more with less while coming closer to providing customers exactly what they want. Many manufacturers see mastering Lean as an essential springboard to operational initiatives like digital manufacturing and other advanced production practices.

Setting the stage: In developing its Lean program, Church & Dwight first held a weeklong leadership summit to decide on standards and expectations. The companys leaders came up with a Lean assessment system with 16 standards and a definition for achievement at the gold, silver and bronze levels. But the essential part was ensuring frontline employees were driving improvement from the bottom upnot the other way around.

  • This is not corporate pushing it down, said Felipe Vilhena, director of Lean manufacturing global operations. We help workers overcome challenges and give them the right tools to do that. We created a mindset and expectation that improvements are part of the work.

Putting it into practice: Initially, each worker was asked to list five potential improvements at his or her site, and then go out and make them. The company provided training and support to help with these fixes, while managers kept employees fully informed of their progress according to key indicators.

  • Workers formed self-directed teams and continued to seek out improvements, which they began making more and more frequently. Thanks to the trust and autonomy that employees were given, engagement and retention measurably increased at the same time.

Receiving recognition: The companys achievements have received recognition from its peers in the industry. One of its top-performing facilities in Green River, Wyoming, earned the company a 2021 Manufacturing Leadership Award in the Operational Excellence category from the 51勛圖厙’s Manufacturing Leadership Council.

The last word: It was important to create the right expectation and mindset, Vilhena said. From big to small improvements, we are seeing them happen every day.

Workforce

Creators Wanted Unveils Interactive Game

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By 51勛圖厙 News Room

The 51勛圖厙 and the MIs Creators Wanted initiative has rolled out a new online game for students, teachers, parents, guidance counselors and emerging workers nationwide. The Making the Future experience is a choose-your-own-adventure video that helps gamers think better of modern manufacturing.

The details: The experience aims to address misperceptions about the industry and to connect with todays tech-savvy student and job seeker. With the ability to choose levels of difficulty and navigate the interactive experience differently based on choices and answers, gamers will bust myths, crack codes and solve problems to earn their badges as creators.

Familiar approach: The game is using the learn by doing philosophy at the core of the in-person Creators Wanted mobile experience to excite and educate potential manufacturers and individuals who influence career choices about the growth, reward and opportunity in the industry, as well as the talents and attributes that are a part of manufacturing careers.

Creators Wanted tour anywhere: Where the mobile experience cant be physically, we figured out a way to replicate it into a digital experience for anyone across the country to access, said 51勛圖厙 Senior Vice President of Communications and Brand Strategy Erin Streeter. Weve designed this entire campaign to meet people where they are with the right messages and at the right times.

Access point: The new interactive game is . It represents another major development by the 51勛圖厙 and MI teams to broaden the reach and impact of the Creators Wanted campaign beyond in-person tour stops and COVID-19 crowd limitations.

Last word: Were sharing comprehensive online tools that not only get the next generation of talent excited but also teach them how to take the next step and become a manufacturer, said MI Executive Director Carolyn Lee. These tools are ideal for manufacturers, teachers, parents, government officials really anyone who wants to help kids and emerging workers see how they can create their future in America. We hope manufacturers will share these resources with education partners and their teams, so they can share with kids and job seekers.

Workforce

MFG Day 2021 Is a Hit!

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By 51勛圖厙 News Room

MFG Day 2021 was a smashing success. This year, manufacturers throughout the nation hosted open houses, factory tours and job fairsboth on site and onlineto introduce young people and others to the promise of modern manufacturing. And many companies and leaders took to social media to show their support and love for the industry. Heres what we saw on Friday.

Presidential nod: On Sept. 30, President Biden Oct. 1 to be National Manufacturing Day, to commit to strengthening and supporting the American manufacturers and hardworking manufacturing employees of today as well as the manufacturers and workers of the future.

State (and federal) support: At least 15 states issued their own Manufacturing Day proclamations, and more than 40 congressional representatives publicly marked the occasion.

Manufacturers in action: Hundreds of events took place across nearly all 50 states, both online and in-person.

Big support: MFG Day sponsors also marked the occasion:

In the news: Many local and national media outlets covered the days events. The coverage included with 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons on CNBCs Squawk on the Street, along with pieces and segments in , and , as well as on ABC, CBS, NBC and FOX affiliates nationwide.

More to come: MFG Day actually lasts for the entire month of October, so be sure to check out upcoming events at .

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