
FEATUREARTICLE
Advance Tool, Inc. (ATi): Thinking Lean Gets the Green
Boasting clients like Microsoft, Procter & Gamble and Nokia, ATi's customer-driven attitude takes them around the world - and earns them MoldMaking Technology magazine's Leadtime Leader Award.
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For more information contact Steve Johanns of ATi (Blaine, MN) at (763) 780-1213, via e-mail at sjohanns@advancetool.com or via its website at www.advancetool.com.
Calling themselves a "full mold build solution provider" with design, engineering and build services, ATi's capabilities include single- and multi-cavity, multi-shot and stack molds in the consumer products, electronics, medical, industrial and semiconductor industries. During a time when the industry has experienced mostly negative growth, ATi has had annualized sales growth of 13 percent since 1999 - 15 to 20 percent last year, with 15 percent of that total coming from brand new customers. Satisfied customers include Microsoft, Dell, Tyco Healthcare, Nokia, Procter & Gamble, TRW and Asyst Technologies.
"ATi's people and customer-driven attitude are what make us unique," emphasizes President Don Larson. "We have a long history of exceeding the demands of our customers. Much of our success is driven by our engineering capabilities. With more than 15 tooling engineers on staff in the U.S., our engineering department is as large as smaller tool shops. "Everyone within the company looks at the cost of the product we build for our customers - not in terms of the dollar on a purchase order, but as the cost to the customer if the tool doesn't perform and parts aren't being produced," Larson continues. "Many of our customers produce hundreds of millions of dollars of plastic parts from our molds. That's the value that ATi cares about." Those hundreds of millions of dollars of plastic parts often make their way back to the company in photograph form. "We are on the leading edge of all of these amazing new products," Larson says. "The Microsoft Xbox, new cell phone technology - it stirs a lot of interest and excitement in the plant. We bring in ads from newspapers that feature our stuff and put it up on the bulletin board. It's really a big deal."
Humble Beginnings The duo - with the help of a part-time toolmaker - was doing little jobs here and there when Dunn just happened to be at the right place at the right time. "I was having dinner out with my wife and family, and at the table behind us was a former coworker who had gone to work at Tonka Toys as an engineer," Dunn says. "When he asked me how big my shop was, I let him know that we could handle whatever he had. I sort of embellished. The next day, he called and offered us a six-mold prototype package that his internal shop couldn't handle. Back in the 70s, that was huge job. So we did it, working seven days a week for close to 20 hours a day."
That job put Advance Tool on the map. In 1981, the company moved into a 4,000-square-foot building. By 1982, the size of the facility was doubled and the company became a member of the American Mold Builders Association (AMBA). In 1991, it acquired CAD/CAM Contours - a mold design house - which doubled its engineering capabilities.
Growth Spurt Advance Tool also saw significant improvements in process and efficiency when it became an ISO 9001 facility in 1997. Two years later, ATi Precision in Malaysia was opened so relationships could begin with Chinese counterparts. That same year, a mold development center - Advanced Molding Technologies - was established. Then, in 2001 a product design division - ATi Product Design - was added to the company's repertoire. Its focus was to assist customers earlier in their product development cycle with part design that improves prototype success rate and accelerates the production tooling design process. The year 2001 also was important in terms of the company's most lucrative job - the multi-million-dollar Microsoft Xbox tooling program. "We were awarded this project after successfully supporting earlier phases of the project," notes Managing Director, Business Development Steve Johanns. "The Microsoft relationship and the whole culmination into the Xbox is an interesting story for us. The relationship started about nine years ago when they kind of threw us a ball and we did a revision for them. We first built them a $50,000 tool for a simple piece that turned into a mouse. Once we excelled on that job, they kept giving us more and more opportunities to showcase our abilities. During the years, we kept on getting more involved with them - doing more mice, keyboards, gaming controls - all of which led into the introduction of the Xbox program. At the time, we didn't know how big of a deal it would become, but it ended up being this enormous program for us as a company. "So, we went from a single cavity mold nine years ago to a 64-mold package that we completed for them," Johanns continues. "Most of our relationships start out in a similar fashion to our work with Microsoft. We rarely lose a customer because once we get the opportunity, we give them the best in quality, craftsmanship, performance and service."
Leading in Leadtimes
Capital Reinvestment
Early Involvement
Concurrent Engineering
Project Management
2003 and Beyond Adds Johanns, "The net effect of ATi's model as a value-added moldmaker is to offer the highest level of quality and support, while impacting and reducing total time to market and associated costs. "This - combined with our ability to grow while the rest of the industry has seen slow to negative growth - puts ATi in an increasingly good position that's more difficult to duplicate." Difficult to duplicate indeed! ATi has come a long way from that single-car garage. Twenty-five years later it has 140 employees, customers in 20 countries and business dealings with some of the leading companies in the world - proof positive that working harder and smarter can yield decades of success.
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