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IndustryWeek December 16, 2009 Jonathan Katz |
When Plants Restart Manufacturers struggle to find the skilled labor and funding necessary to reopen idled facilities. |
Food Engineering June 4, 2006 Peter Cleaveland |
Set your sites on incentives Once you've decided to build a new plant, determining which site is appropriate can involve numerous factors from both logistical and economic/political viewpoints. |
IndustryWeek September 16, 2009 Jill Jusko |
In Search Of America's Best Manufacturing Locations Forget about 'one site fits all.' Look for 'one site fits me.' |
IndustryWeek February 17, 2010 |
Expand At Your Own Risk Plan carefully or you may discover your new plant is on the wrong side of the track. |
IndustryWeek January 1, 2003 John Teresko |
Locations -- United Plastics Picks China's 'Silicon Valley' Illinois manufacturer is producing parts in the Suzhou high-tech area. |
IndustryWeek February 15, 2012 Adrienne Selko |
Ohio's Secret -- Business-Friendly Tax Code Has tax reform helped attract manufacturers to state? |
IndustryWeek February 16, 2011 |
Fighting the War for Talent Manufacturers faced with engineering and skilled-labor shortages are taking matters into their own hands. |
Food Engineering July 30, 2009 Carolyn Chapin |
The Changing Face of Site Selection Food and beverage manufacturers must plan for change when selecting processing facility sites in today's volatile economy. |
IndustryWeek October 20, 2010 |
Getting Back to Capacity Options for manufacturers when slow demand cuts into capacity utilization. |
Food Processing July 2010 |
MRO Q&A: What's a Large, Older Plant to Do? Every facility has just two basic elements to offer: location and people. |
Food Processing October 2010 |
MRO Q&A: Why Do Good Plants Go Down? From a macro perspective the top three major shutdown threats for a food plant could be summarized as: a catastrophic event, a facility's internal operational failure or a facility's external operational failure. |
IndustryWeek January 1, 2006 John S. McClenahen |
Hot! Hot! Hot! Global Siting's Hottest Locations U.S. manufacturers continue to invest heavily in China and India. But their siting strategies also include Eastern Europe, South America and even the United States. |
IndustryWeek February 1, 2003 John S. McClenahen |
Y'all Come Car and truck makers -- as well as suppliers -- are driving deeper into the U.S. South. |
IndustryWeek February 1, 2002 Jill Jusko |
Nissan in Canton, Miss. Nissan's decision to locate in Mississippi was fueled by an initiative to build close to the customer... |
Food Engineering November 1, 2008 Wayne Labs |
Feature Article: Rising Energy Costs Modify the Site Selection Landscape Energy costs, logistics, sustainability and workforce issues cause processors to rethink location, location, location. |
IndustryWeek July 22, 2009 Steve Minter |
First Up -- What is Advanced Manufacturing? A tour of Virginia manufacturers offers insights into this diverse category. |
IndustryWeek June 1, 2002 John S. McClenahen |
Locations -- Montgomery, Ala. Hyundai Motor Co.'s first assembly and manufacturing plant in the U.S. will produce 300,000 vehicles per year when it reaches full capacity... |
Food Processing January 2006 David Feder |
Annual Manufacturing Survey: Safe and Secure Once again, food safety is manufacturers' No. 1 concern -- but security continues to be an important factor in plant operations. |
IndustryWeek July 22, 2009 Jonathan Katz |
Leveraging Lean Designs Think flow and flexibility when designing or relocating to a new facility. |
Food Engineering September 3, 2007 Jim Getchell |
Globalization: Where in the World is Your Supply Chain? Globalization and outsourcing offer opportunities and risks for US food manufacturers striving to optimize their supply chains. |
Food Processing May 2005 Mike Pehanich |
How to retrofit an aging plant Food processors looking to retrofit aging facilities to get more out of their capital budgets should heed these "rules of retro" before they bring their plants into the 21st century. |
Commercial Investment Real Estate Nov/Dec 2008 Trey Hollingsworth |
Assembling Success in the U.S. The waning dollar and active industrial market attract international investors to the U.S. industrial real estate market. |
IndustryWeek March 1, 2008 Jonathan Katz |
Toyota's Eco-Friendly Plan for New Plant Lean manufacturing pioneer Toyota Motor Corp. will use its model of efficiency to create an environmentally friendly plant in Blue Springs, Mississippi. |
Food Processing April 2010 Dave Fusaro |
2010 Capital Spending Outlook: Pent-Up Demand Causes an Explosion in Projects After last year's drop in capital expenditures, budgets for the Food Processing Top 100 survey group are up 19 percent for 2010. |
IndustryWeek April 20, 2011 |
Rust Belt Rising? World trends point to rich opportunities for niche manufacturing. |
IndustryWeek March 1, 2008 David Blanchard |
Manufacturing Is Not For the Faint at Heart -- IndustryWeek's 2008 Salary Survey Comments When asked to comment on the state of the industry, manufacturing managers throughout the United States share a common concern that the odds seem to be stacked against them. |
IndustryWeek October 1, 2003 Traci Purdum |
Survival Of The Fittest Going global is no longer a choice; it's a necessity. How you evolve and how you treat your customers will be keys to your success. |
IndustryWeek June 1, 2004 Traci Purdum |
The Mexican Connection Although China -- with its cheap labor -- may be a very attractive plant location for U.S. manufacturers, when all the costs of an extended pipeline are calculated, Mexico may still be the better option. |
IndustryWeek May 19, 2010 Peter Alpern |
Is Green the New Gold? Despite the recession, solar and wind energy markets continue to show compelling growth. Manufacturers have taken notice. |
IndustryWeek March 1, 2007 David Blanchard |
Managing Expectations -- IndustryWeek's 2007 Salary Survey Comments Given the chance to weigh in on the state of the industry, their companies and their employees, manufacturing managers reveal what you always suspected: Things are tough out there, and they're likely to only get tougher. |
IndustryWeek March 1, 2007 David Blanchard |
Manufacturing's Biggest Challenges -- IndustryWeek's 2007 Salary Survey Responses If you come to work everyday worrying about global competition, finding and keeping skilled labor, raw material shortages, and the quality of your product, you're not alone. |
IndustryWeek January 1, 2008 Jonathan Katz |
Plant Blueprints Turn Green Building a new plant? Might as well design it for energy efficiency now, while you still have a choice. |
IndustryWeek October 1, 2006 Doug Bartholomew |
Supply Chains at Risk Manufacturers need to guard against disruptions in the flow of materials. With so many things that can -- and do -- go wrong, contingency planning is no longer a luxury. It's a necessity. |
Reason May 2007 John F. Sugg |
The Folly of Southern Hospitality Dixie leads the way in lavish corporate subsidies. As other parts of the country follow suit, it's time to ask whether such incentives work. |
IndustryWeek November 1, 2006 John S. McClenahen |
Aging Assets: Rebuilding U.S. Manufacturing Manufacturers coping with aging plants and sagging performance have to decide whether to repair or relocate. |
Food Processing April 2007 Dave Fusaro |
Annual Capital Spending Outlook: Spend Now to Save Later Some of the biggest food companies are budgeting capital expenditures for multi-year programs meant to reduce costs in the long run. |
Pharmaceutical Executive September 1, 2008 |
How Do You Solve a Problem Like Manufacturing? Outsourcing saves pharmaceutical companies money -- except when it doesn't. Here's how to decide what to do. |
Food Engineering June 4, 2006 |
29th Annual Plant Construction Survey Measuring Up to a Higher Standard Today's food processors are focusing on the fundamentals -- clean, safe, economical -- but with a twist. The stakes -- and responsibilities -- are much higher. |
IndustryWeek February 1, 2007 John S. McClenahen |
Factory Of The Future Get a glimpse now of manufacturing tomorrow. |
Food Processing April 2012 David Phillips |
Top 100 Capital Spending Report: Greek Yogurt Plants are Stacking Up After two years of 20 percent increases, capital spending looks to be up only 4.1 percent this year. |
IndustryWeek July 1, 2002 John Teresko |
Factories Of The Future -- Plant-Floor Strategy The most crucial investment for the factory of the future will be made not in hardware or software, but in understanding how manufacturing technology provides new options to power business success. |
IndustryWeek November 1, 2003 John S. McClenahen |
Home Economics To compete in a globalized world, U.S. states, regions and communities are seeking to attract and retain advanced manufacturing. They're having some success. But former Labor Secretary Robert Reich argues they'd be better off focusing on skills rather than on selecting specific industries. |
IndustryWeek July 1, 2007 Jonathan Katz |
Raw Materials: Raw Deal Raw materials prices continue to cut into profits, and with little relief in sight, manufacturers are solidifying supplier relationships and turning toward substitute products as solutions. |
Food Engineering June 1, 2005 Fassl et al. |
28th Annual Plant Construction Survey: Extreme Makeovers Dominate Projects and budgets remain flat as food and beverage processors put their money into updating existing assets and improving food safety measures. |
IndustryWeek December 15, 2010 |
American Axle & Manufacturing - Three Rivers Manufacturing Facility: IW Best Plants Profile 2010 Driving Home the Benefits of Productivity: World-class manufacturing systems and employee involvement enable AAM's Three Rivers plant to win new business. |
BusinessWeek May 17, 2004 Jack Ewing |
Is Siemens Still German? Worker representatives at the electrical engineering company have concluded that Siemens is contemplating the elimination of 74,000 jobs from Germany in the next decade. |
IndustryWeek April 18, 2012 |
Deliver Higher Productivity with Smarter Workforce Practices With the effective cost of labor evening out between China and the U.S., manufacturers must find other ways to improve productivity and reduce costs. One way: leverage production personnel. |
IndustryWeek April 15, 2009 |
Laboring To Find Common Ground Launching a continuous-improvement initiative within a union shop involves a number of significant challenges, not the least of which is overcoming the adversarial nature of labor-management relationships. |
The Motley Fool August 16, 2010 |
Caterpillar's Moves South Squeeze Labor Will unions object as the equipment maker moves outside their turf? Clearly, overly demanding labor can hinder a variety of companies. |
IndustryWeek April 1, 2008 Jonathan Katz |
Table Scraps Manufacturers can use their leftovers to feed various industrial applications but should still try to avoid scrap before it's created. |