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Made
to Order - Austin Business Journal
article on Cypress Industries - 8/15/2005 |
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Click here to view the actual story |
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Made to Order
Cypress focuses on meeting rising
customer demands in competitive
manufacturing industry |
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Contributing writer Tommy Perkins
Published: August 15, 2005 —Tom
Lonsdale is holding a piece of rubber
with six magnets embedded in it. |
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| It's a new kind of oil filter and,
in Lonsdale's eyes, it could be the
next big production run for Cypress
Industries Ltd. |
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| That's from a manufacturing CEO whose
company counts as customers blue-chip
giants such as Solectron Corp., Dell
Inc., Cisco Systems Inc. and Sun Microsystems
Inc. |
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| Being an entrepreneur himself, Lonsdale
has a soft spot in his heart for inventors. |
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| "If you don't take care of them
on the front end, they won't take
care of you on the back end,"
says Lonsdale, alluding to the soaring
success of some inventors' products. |
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| New products from inventors account
for 20 percent of Cypress' business,
Lonsdale says. Inventors call on the
company for any combination of design,
packaging and shipping, licensing
and distribution. |
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| Meanwhile, the demands of Cypress'
larger customers can be every bit
as complex. |
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| Batch sizes number in the thousands,
the proprietary components often must
be built in Austin and the non-proprietary
pieces must be built in Asia. |
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| Cypress also may have to hold its
customers' inventory for as long as
four months. |
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| "Before 2000, you could get
orders for six months' worth of products,"
Lonsdale says. "Since the downturn,
people want one to two months' orders.
They'd rather pay the additional freight
than risk the inventory costs." |
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| Lonsdale founded Cypress in 2001
with partners Bill Benker, now director
of sales, and Brandon Freeman, Cypress'
chairman. |
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| The trio bootstrapped the venture
until last spring, when the company
accepted its first round of outside
funding in the form of a line of credit
from Silicon Valley Bank. Revenue
has leapt 400 percent since 2003,
and Cypress needed the funding to
accommodate its rapid growth and,
in particular, to plug holes in accounts
receivables. |
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| "It was tough initially,"
Lonsdale says of going a year without
pay. "It was good having a supportive
wife who works. [Bootstrapping] may
cause you some more pain financially,
but I'd rather spend my time answering
to customers than to investors." |
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| Nationwide, both large and small
firms expect their sales will rise
by close to 4.9 percent over the next
year, according to the National Association
of Manufacturers. That's a decline
from an expectation of 6 percent growth
last quarter and the mildest forecast
since the third quarter of 2003. |
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| For smaller firms, sales also are
expected to increase by 4.9 percent
over the coming 12 months. This is
an improvement from the 4.4 percent
anticipated in the third quarter but
a little lower than the 5.1 percent
expectation for the fourth quarter. |
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| Still, NAM projects the manufacturing
recovery to remain largely on track
for 2005. |
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| Cypress' growth came from several
areas, most notably from its electronics
business, the launch of its industrial
division and its new plastics and
tooling manufacturing capabilities.
Along the way, the company signed
up hundreds of new customers. |
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| The company responded to the higher
demand by buying space adjacent to
its original Pond Springs Road headquarters,
giving it a total of 14,500 square
feet of offices. About a quarter of
that space is dedicated to sales and
administration, with the bulk going
toward manufacturing space. |
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| Cypress devotes its Austin manufacturing
operations to low- to moderate-volume
prototype and production runs before
transitioning products to its higher-volume
operations in China. The company employs
18 full-time people in Austin and
plans to hire an additional 10 people
-- five in Austin, and five in its
China sales office. |
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| With such a wide array of runs, materials
and customer sectors, there's still
more complexity when it comes to dividing
up the company's sales and marketing
efforts. |
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| "Each product line has its own
sales team," Lonsdale says. "But
we want customers to have one consistent
point of contact, which allows us
to cross-train our sales force." |
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| It's axiomatic that happy employees
yield happy customers and, cross-training
and advancement opportunities aside,
the walls of Cypress' Austin office
display numerous photos of employee
events. |
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| For example, "Ranch Day"
at an employee's ranch included roping,
skeet shooting and other activities.
In China and Taiwan, basketball tournaments
are the norm among Cypress' employees. |
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| CONTACT: |
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Deb Gabor
Sol Marketing Concepts
512.554.1538
deb@solmarketingconcepts.com |
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Cypress Industries
512.637.2540
info@cypressindustries.com |
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