Re-made in America
25 Jul, 2017
Manufacturing is returning to the United States. In 2016, leading technology brands collectively announced billions of dollars in investments in U.S. manufacturing, creating hundreds of thousands of jobs and supporting the new concept of reshoring. But manufacturing today is not the same as when it left.
Gone are many of the large steel mills, auto plants and computer factories. In their place is a greater volume of small batch-manufacturing facilities from large enterprises, SMBs and start-ups providing specialization, customization and higher-end engineering.
What is starkly different from the previous linear economy epoch of smokestacks, landfills and post-industrial decay is that new manufacturing is lean, agile and supports a circular economy whereby waste is minimized and resources including components and materials are re-used, re-manufactured, refurbished and recycled.
“Globalization is no longer simply one-size-fits-all,” says Linda Li, Chief Strategy Officer at Re-Teck, the leading Reverse Supply Chain Management (RSCM) provider. “Effective globalization requires a global determination to cater to the needs, preferences and regulations affecting customers at a micro-level. This is entirely possible with data-supported insights and the array of customizable software and services and it’s leading to a new, exciting period of localized manufacturing in the United States by world-class brands.”
Li points out that many of these firms focus squarely on innovation as an existential differentiator and typically look to third parties to support their supply chain for innovation and manufacturing, and technical support for product lifetime and Reverse Supply Chain Management for when the product needs to be upgraded and replaced.
“The expertise and will to internally tackle such complex issues simply does not exist within the boardrooms of lean organizations,” Li says. “Re-Teck’s expertise, global network of RSCM facilities and global customer-base for components essentially liberates circular economy manufacturers from the pain, complexity and regulations of the old world. This means they can locate closer to their customers in the cities and towns of America”
Related Posts
-
GREATER YUMA ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION AWARDED EDA PHASE 1 PLANNING GRANT FOR SMART FARM AGTECH INCUBATOR FEASIBILITY STUDY
-
DANFOSS POWER SOLUTIONS TO ESTABLISH MANUFACTURING OPERATIONS IN MARCY, CREATING UP TO 300 JOBS
-
EMPIRE STATE DEVELOPMENT ANNOUNCES ROGO TO EXPAND NEW YORK CITY HEADQUARTERS, SUPPORTING MORE THAN 400 NEW JOBS
-
$85 MILLION INVESTMENT AND 435 NEW JOBS COMING TO ROANOKE, VIRGINIA
-
MCKESSON SELECTS MOORE, OKLAHOMA FOR A STATE-OF-THE-ART REGIONAL DISTRIBUTION CENTER POSITIONS CLEVELAND COUNTY AS A NATIONAL HEALTHCARE SUPPLY CHAIN HUB
-
BOSTON DYNAMICS EXPANDS MASSACHUSETTS FOOTPRINT WITH NEW 323,000 SQUARE FOOT FACILITY IN WALTHAM
-
KALMBACH FAMILY INVESTING $125 MILLION FOR EXPANSION IN NORTHWEST OHIO
-
U. S. STEEL ANNOUNCES FIRST-OF-ITS-KIND IN THE UNITED STATES DRI FACILITY AT BIG RIVER STEEL WORKS IN OSCEOLA, ARKANSAS
-
ROSS VIDEO TO INVEST $122.5 MILLION TO EXPAND MANUFACTURING AND R&D IN ONTARIO WITH SUPPORT FROM INVEST ONTARIO
-
AMAROK EXPANDS RICHLAND COUNTY, SC OPERATIONS WITH NEW HEADQUARTERS










