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September’s Employee of the Month at Namifiers

September 19th, 2008 by admin

Namifiers September employee of the month is Dallin Anderson!

Dallin has been working at Namifiers since June 11, 2008 as the laser line leader. He is from Gunnison Utah and  came up here for school at UVU studying History. He graduates some time in the future! He is taking classes this semester  at night and in the morning, so he is sure busy!  Dallin is married and has a 20-month old daughter named Zoey. His wife is going is school and taking care of their child. He has two sisters and one brother and is the second oldest. Once Dallin accidently engraved an order with the wrong color. He was embarrassed and sure learned his lesson! Dallin’s favorite things to do are hunting and playing video games.

He enjoys cutting things with the laser. He loves working here.

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2006 Namifiers Employee of the Year - Interview with Elise Reynolds

September 6th, 2007 by admin

This is Kelly Forbis and I am interviewing Elise Reynolds, Namifiers’ Employee of the Year.

What does the Employee of the Year award mean to you personally? Read the rest of this entry »

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Interview with Bryan L. Welton Jr., CEO - Namifiers, LLC

September 5th, 2007 by admin

Bryan WeltonInterview with Bryan L. Welton Jr., CEO Namifiers, LLC August 15, 2007

Why did you decide to switch from pursuing a Law Degree to owning your own business at Namifiers?
I interviewed attorneys at a few different law firms.  The purpose of my interview was to find out what the life of a junior executive was like while working up to partner or junior partner.  It was almost universal that everyone I interviewed said, “It will take about 60-65 hours of billable time to survive in the law world as an attorney.” They explained that you also had to add in commute time and lunch time.  They said, “Plan on about 70 hours a week for your first seven years.”  Read the rest of this entry »

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Namifiers Operations In Action

September 5th, 2007 by admin

Our objectives are to fulfill the orders with the quality and efficiency we have guaranteed our customers.  This develops recurring value in the business.  We start projects with machines or products that provide a high and perpetual return over time. 

Another part of operations at Namifiers is to improve the systems, functions, and processes that we use to supply our products to the customers.  I ensure that we are always maintaining and growing so that we don’t slide backwards and we don’t have any new losses. 

Essentially, there are more legs than that, but each leg on the stool is crucial and my part is just as crucial as marketing and sales.  They can market it, they can sell it, but if the product doesn’t go out on time or if it doesn’t go out with a high level of quality, the whole thing comes crashing down. 

We start with a concept for a product.  We find out what is necessary to make that product in a broad strokes planning meeting.  We try to anticipate potential problems or errors.  We start building our system around those potential errors and problems. 

As the product is launched, the volume of orders is small and we can focus our effort on these few orders.  As the production volume picks up, we find more errors and more problems and we then have to go back and restructure the system. 

We design our process so that products can be processed in the same day.  If an order doesn’t ship on the same day, we see that as an error; a problem with the system.  We find out what training and tools are necessary to correct the error and improve the process. 

Over the course of a few months, we have developed a system and a process that needs very little maintenance.  This process is something that we repeat dozens and dozens of times for every product that we sell. 

There are a variety of manufacturing techniques.  Namifiers uses a lean manufacturing technique in order to service the client in the appropriate amount of time that we have advertised.  This means we keep the orders in a constant flow.  We try not to have any back orders.  We like to stock enough inventory in the building so that when an order comes in we have all the pieces ready to go.  We don’t have to tell a client that we’re waiting for materials to arrive. We have the labor we need. 

We live, breathe, eat, sleep, and drink the idea that every order can be done today.  Many tasks that take a half a day or a day for our competitors to complete only take us an hour or two.    

The more we look at an order and say, “Is this big or small, is this important or unimportant?” the less we fulfill our mission statement.  Here at Namifiers, we set aside the notion of prioritizing.  Every client that has an order in the system is as important as the next.  Our objective is the same, which is to produce and ship that order today.  This is something that Bryan founded the company on, which is the idea that nobody is more important.  No order is too big or too small.   

Over the years, we have developed high-quality accessories which add value to our products.  We have machines and materials that essentially turn a normal nametag into what I like to call the BMW or Mercedes Benz nametag.  Our magnets are stronger.  Our adhesives are stronger, more permanent.  Our inks are thicker and more durable over time.  We are also distinguished from competitors because we process orders faster.  So, most of our customers are impressed by the extremely high quality of our products and that we provide them in a small amount of time.  

On a month to month basis, we will have orders for companies such as Coca-Cola and Intel.  We processed an order for the president and vice president of the United States just a couple of weeks ago.  These big-name orders excite the team and the executives.  New employees are pretty floored when they see who our clients are.  Some people come in and look at our client roster and don’t believe us.  They think we’re hamming it up but quite literally, we do business with some of the biggest names out there.  And that’s exciting. 

More than that, I think people get really excited and have a lot of fun with their individual areas.  Chris has spent quite a bit of time developing the idea that each person owns their particular part of the system.  They have a high level of ownership, feelings, and behavior.  They feel an extremely high sense of responsibility and pride in the products they create, almost as if their name is on it.  And they get to tell the other processing departments, “We just made Coca-cola’s lanyards, so take that!” and then engraving can come back and say, “Well, we just engraved the president’s nametag, so take that!”  So it’s kind of a fun atmosphere and that creates a great sense of pride and ownership.

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Interview with Brad Gasaway - Vice President of Marketing

August 14th, 2007 by admin

Interview with Brad Gasaway, VP of Marketing at Namifiers, LLC August 13. Brad begins answering a few personal questions leading up to working at Namifiers. The interview then gets down to business & switches gears to talk about the mission statement, reaching 60,000 customers, entering new markets with pad printing and finally their listing in the Inc 5,000 list. Read the rest of this entry »

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