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Reinvent or die
How one family business
changed its focus to respond to market forces
by
Rich Vurva
What does a local,
family-owned distributor do when its only customer base leaves the
area?
Reinvent itself or die.
D&D Tool & Supply
evolved from a $3 million distributor serving the San Diego wood
industry, to a $38 million distributor that serves a broad base of
manufacturers in Southern California and Baja California, Mexico.
The company started
doing business in 1947 as a sharpening facility for construction
companies during the post-war boom. Dollie Dutro, ex-wing walker and
stunt pilot, founded the business when she recognized that
construction companies required a reliable grind shop.
In the 1950s, D&D
expanded into selling power tools to cabinet and furniture
manufacturers around San Diego. During the 1960s, the second
generation of Dutro family members took over management
responsibilities, and by the 1970s, the third generation started
joining the company.
Throughout those early
decades, D&D earned a reputation for expertise in woodworking
applications. By the time the third generation of family members
assumed leadership in the late 1980s and early 1990s, D&D was caught
in the midst of a national recession. The company had weathered many
recessions in the past by cutting expenses, reducing workweeks and
waiting out each economic downturn. At the time, three Dutro
brothers who had grown up in the business managed the company. They
were excellent engineers and purchasing agents, but had no formal
business training. When they saw the decline in sales, but no
decline in expenses, they knew they had a problem but didn’t know
how to fix it.
So they turned to their
sister for advice.
Georgia Dutro, a
certified public accountant with a master’s in business
administration, had worked in commercial real estate development for
many years, and was adept at market research.
She agreed to conduct a
research project for the family business. After completing the
study, she believed this recession would be different for
California. Wood-related businesses were not just downsizing, many
were leaving the state forever. High labor and electrical costs,
coupled with EPA and OSHA regulations, forced the wood industry to
move from California into Mexico and the southern U.S. This was not
just another recession; it represented a major change in focus for
manufacturing in Southern California. The change might take years to
play out totally, but Dutro felt D&D couldn’t wait years to respond.
The company needed to reinvent itself.
A plan develops
At the time, D&D’s sales were just under $3 million annually.
Georgia Dutro felt the first step in reinventing the company was to
analyze other markets, get creative, and make a plan.
The entire manufacturing
market in the U.S. was shrinking, but what would be left in Southern
California? Likely survivors included aerospace, ship manufacturing
and other metal fabrication companies, along with the military,
which required a variety of MRO supplies. Wood manufacturing
continued moving into northern Baja California, Mexico.
Dutro advised her
brothers to expand in two ways: geographically into all of Southern
California and Mexico, and then to diversify into other types of
manufacturing markets. This required D&D to open operations in the
border areas of Mexico to serve the wood industries, and to
diversify into the machine shop and metal fabrication markets, which
meant learning new markets, vendors and applications.
She believed the best
way to accomplish both goals was to begin acquiring competitors in
order to gain market share and experienced employees. In 1990, the
Dutro brothers asked their sister to become company president and
implement the plan.
“Changing a company that
had been doing business the same way for over 40 years is much like
changing the direction of a stampeding elephant herd. While getting
their attention, you have to be sure you are not trampled,” she
says.
Avoiding the herd
The newly appointed president avoided getting trampled by
encouraging employee participation and involvement. D&D assembled a
team of experienced employees and asked them to write down the names
of their competitors. The group ranked each company with a point
system that considered 1) length of time in business, 2) high
ethical standards, 3) trained employees, 4) manufacturer’s lines,
and similar attributes. Competitors that ranked the highest became
merger targets. Over the next few years, many competitors in the
wood industry joined the D&D family through mergers or acquisitions,
enabling D&D to build market share in Mexico and in areas north of
San Diego.
“Melding company
cultures, and making sure old and new employees see the benefits of
growth is the hardest part of any merger,” Dutro says. “By
specifically targeting merger candidates, we felt we already shared
many of the same cultural values, making a merger much easier.”
The company followed the
same tactic in the aerospace and metal fabrication markets. D&D
instituted aggressive training schedules so old and new employees
could share their knowledge. As the company grew from one branch to
six, employees learned to follow written procedures so all branches
conducted business processes the same way. Centralized accounting
and purchasing helped to make sure the company benefited from the
knowledge of all employees, and that the company ran smoothly.
“One of the interesting
things is that people who joined the company through mergers or
acquisitions have stayed on, which isn’t the typical scenario in an
acquisition,” says sales manager Pat Dennis, who joined D&D when her
company was acquired.
D&D is now a leader in
aerospace manufacturing tools, abrasives, adhesives, MRO and safety
products. It operates a complete vendor managed inventory program
and runs tool cribs for customers. The company strives to develop
customer-centric solutions.
“A lot of companies talk
about being able to provide value-added to customers. At D&D, we’re
truly striving to bring value-added to customers. We’re not trying
to sell products, we’re trying to sell process changes to customers.
If that customer grows its profits, then we can expand and grow with
them,” says Neil Tyner, vice president of sales and marketing.
Hanita Cutting Tools,
part of the Kennametal family, is a key vendor for customers in the
aerospace and machining industries. Jonathan Saada, Western regional
manager for Hanita, works closely with D&D Tool to train employees
and customers.
“D&D has done a great
job in hiring and training the best people for their inside and
outside sales team. D&D’s motto is ‘Call the Experts’ – and they
back that up with training. In five years, they have become one of
the top Hanita distributors in the nation,” he says.
Experts in several
product categories — including air tools, safety, abrasives,
woodworking, metal cutting, plastic cutting and more — are available
to help salespeople develop application-specific customer solutions.
“We try to help
customers come up with new solutions to improve their processes,”
says Dennis. “We do a thorough analysis of their real needs and give
them a solution, helping make them more competitive in their
markets.”
Looking forward
The D&D management team schedules an annual weekend-long meeting
(which it calls an “advance” rather than a retreat) to review
markets, competitors and customers, and to refine plans and targets.
Since the reinvention that began in 1990, the company has
experienced dramatic change. The wood business, which once
represented 100 percent of D&D’s sales, is now less than 20 percent.
The company has grown from less than $3 million in annual sales to
more than $38 million and now employs more than 150 people. The
management team includes a group of diverse individuals from many
backgrounds.
“We have a corporate
culture that goes all the way down from Georgia to the person taking
the orders in the warehouse. Our goal every day is striving to
service that customer to the best of our ability,” says Bob Brooks,
vice president of operations.
Gary Moon was the owner
of one of the companies that merged with D&D in 2004. So-Cal Tools
was a niche cutting tools distributor being squeezed by national
competition with broader product lines. He says the merger with D&D
offered So-Cal Tools more lines, technology and a well-trained staff
to perform back-office tasks.
“A complete supply chain
management system, aided by the latest technologies, combined with
our staff of engineering experts and a full line of the best
products gives us a unique position in the marketplace,” says Moon,
now vice president of D&D. “Our mission is to make our customers
more profitable by helping them engineer their processes, providing
the right tools and equipment for the job, and then making sure
items are in the customer’s hands at the right time. I could not
have done this on my own. I did not have the money or the knowledge.
D&D has allowed me to expand my offerings to my customers, and I am
valued for my expertise in the aerospace cutting tool industry. It’s
a great partnership.”
For other distributors
facing major marketplace changes, the lesson D&D learned is simple.
Don’t be afraid to take a hard look at the problems you face. Do
your research, make a creative plan and then implement the plan.
This article originally appeared in
the May/June 2007 issue of Progressive Distributor. Copyright
2007.
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