Celebrating our 20th Birthday
Schippers & Crew is proud to announce that
2010 marks our 20th year in business!
Our nation has survived a lot of things in the last two decades: Y2K, two Wars
in Iraq, three Star Wars movies, and reality TV. The economy has morphed on
multiple levels and still can’t be predicted. American manufacturing has been
underbid by overseas competitors. But Schippers & Crew has survived for
twenty years and we are bigger and stronger than before.
What’s our secret? We were fortunate to start our manufacturing business at a
time when most assembly was done by hand and a huge up front investment in
equipment wasn’t required. We were able to build step-by-step and over the
years we’ve added machines to keep up with advancing technology. Although we
always had dreams of “making it big” and landing huge contracts that would
guarantee long-term business we could see the writing on the wall. After 9/11 in
2001, the face of US manufacturing changed permanently as outsourcing became the
new trend. The ensuing layoffs could be blamed on the hurting economy. Our
larger competitors closed their doors or moved overseas. We settled down in our
niche of small- to medium-size work with a high standard of quality. We picked
up business from our closed competitors and have kept busy ever since.
The Crew
A huge factor in our success has been our incredible Crew. We can’t begin to
thank them for the hard work and dedication they’ve contributed over the past
twenty years. We have fourteen crew members who are near or past the ten-year
mark and four of them have been with us for fifteen years or more. We’ve had
crew members graduate college and move up or move on. We’ve been through a lot
of babies. The first one graduates high school this year. An original Crew
member, Lynne’s son, Danar Hoverson, moved back to Seattle in October and is
back on the team. His wife, Ximena, joins us in the office.
Although electronics assembly has become more automated over the last twenty
years, it still takes immense expertise to ensure a quality product. The level
of talent required for manual assembly has increased exponentially as components
shrink to virtual invisibility. We are very fortunate to have our talented crew.