Getting Your Product/Prototype Manufactured
Presented by Northwest Wisconsin Manufacturing Outreach Center UW-Stout Not only a “How To” on manufacturing but also learn of resources that can help you design and produce a prototype Bring your Questions Meet with our many other Resources that can help you along the way NETWORKING & Hors d'oeuvres afterwards The “I&E Club” invites businesses and the public to join them at their next meeting. Come, Network with like-minded people and learn from each other. Date: Thursday Oct 31st, 2013 Time: 5:30 PM Social Networking – 6:00 PM Presentation Starts Location: Lemonweir Valley Telecom building, 127 Hwy 12/16, Camp Douglas Presentation: Getting a product/prototype engineered/designed and manufactured Speaker: Paul Easterday has over 22 years of progressive engineering and manufacturing management experience ranging from family owned business to multi-billion dollar companies. As a manufacturing engineer and production manager, Paul supervised the implementation of Lean, Demand Flow Manufacturing, Just in Time, Project Management and Six Sigma methodologies. Paul is trained and is experienced with Safety Leadership, Contract Administration, Interactive Management, Cooperative Decision Making, Applied Ergonomics, and Strategic Planning. With over 27 years in the Wisconsin Army National Guard, Paul has a wealth of knowledge in organizational behavior and management. Paul’s work as a Six Sigma Black Belt required him to lead quality, productivity, and delivery projects as well as Kaizen, 5S, and rapid improvement events. He has over 20 years resolving quality issues and directing a staff in an ISO 9001:2008 environment. He has experience in small and large group instruction from Six Sigma Green Belt to business communications to operational leadership.
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Guest Column from Terry Whipple, Executive Director, Juneau County Economic Development Corporation
- Creator, I&E Club model for rural economic development - Speaker, inaugural meeting of the Evansville Area Inventors & Entrepreneurs Club - Keynote Speaker, 2008 Evansville Economic Development Summit When I stepped into the role of helping Juneau County’s economy, I took a birds-eye view of what was happening in the rural community economy as well as workforce trends. What I saw was the following: The risks and rewards of entrepreneurialism were being downplayed; in fact, the community culture supporting entrepreneurialism had diminished to the point where even the exploration of ideas was considered dangerous. Failure at any step of the business building process was considered so traumatic that support for budding innovators and entrepreneurs was scarce. At the same time, there were noticeable changes within our communities and our economies, especially in rural areas. Overall, things were speeding up. New innovations, productivity gains, automation, off-shoring and obsolescence were quickly transforming America into a country that needed fewer and fewer employees, especially those in low skilled labor. Many low skilled labor jobs had disappeared altogether. To address these changes, Juneau County formed the first Inventors & Entrepreneurs (I&E) Club in 2003. Our goal was not necessarily to create new businesses or jobs but to bring forward a culture that supported and encouraged the exploration of ideas within our communities, thus helping to build a base of people who knew how to explore these ideas. If we were successful, we knew new businesses and jobs would follow suit. The I&E Club concept was a grassroots movement that was open to any community to copy or adjust as it saw fit. At one point, over 40 I&E clubs existed in Wisconsin and an unknown number had cropped up in the Midwest. There was never a central “I&E Club command” or any formal organizational structure; as a result, many I&E clubs formed and transformed on their own. Many I&E clubs became successful. However, as their founders or champions moved on, many I&E programs ceased to exist except in name only, as a light network of like-minded individuals. Still, about a dozen Wisconsin I&E clubs have flourished. The Juneau County I&E Club is one of these clubs and continues to go strong in its 11th year, hosting 25-75 attendees each month. I became associated with Evansville via Judy Whalen, who was hired by Evansville to lead the community through its Economic Development Plan. Judy had been to a number of Juneau County I&E Club meetings and really understood the need for grassroots level entrepreneurial support. Judy also introduced me to another person that really got it- that person was Mayor Sandy Decker. Mayor Decker invited me to speak at the Economic Development Summit and to facilitate the first Evansville Area I&E Club meeting later on. The first Evansville I&E Club meeting was a fantastic and energetic event. Our meeting room was filled with a diverse array of individuals, which is great because diversity propagates the development of ideas. In fact, it is only when you have inventors, businesspeople, artists, investors, manufacturers and entrepreneurial resources that you attain an entrepreneurial culture. I commend Evansville for not only understanding the forces of economic change but for moving aggressively to energize its citizens to step out and innovate, create, take risks and fail, and finally, to succeed. The future does not belong to those who are the strongest or the smartest but to those who are best able to adapt. Finally, being successful as an entrepreneur is a lot like the lottery: You can’t win if you don’t play. The residents of Evansville are out there playing- and that’s a great thing! |
AuthorHi, I'm Terry Whipple, JCEDC Executive Director, I facilitate the Juneau County Inventors & Entrepreneurs Club meetings and also serve on their board of directors. I would like to hear from you! Archives
October 2014
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