Restaurant menu printer’s pivot to face shields: ‘How do you create a supply chain overnight?’

April 18, 2020  |  Elyssa Bezner

Trabon Group, USA Shields

Editor’s note: The following is part of Startland News’ ongoing coverage of the impact of Coronavirus (COVID-19) on Kansas City’s entrepreneur community, as well as how innovation is helping to drive a new normal in the ecosystem. Click here to follow related stories as they develop.

When COVID-19 quickly cut into the Trabon Group’s business, the Kansas City printing company — a mass producer of restaurant menus — was forced to pivot, literally overnight.

The team’s realization: Trabon’s paper-cutting processes could work for manufacturing highly sought-after face shields, said Tony Trabon.

Tony Trabon, Trabon Group, USA Shields

“We just kind of stumbled into it and day-to-day just tried to throw it all at this problem that we were hearing about in the news, which was the lack of medical supplies around the country,” said Trabon, vice president at the printing and menu management company primarily working in the restaurant industry, as well as USA Shields. “We didn’t really know how to get it done, but we threw our team at solving the problem of ‘How do you create a supply chain overnight for something that we don’t do?’” 

“All of the [tools] we didn’t have on Monday, we were able to get by that Wednesday,” he added. “Then it turned to: ‘How do we actually sell some of these and get some cash flow coming in?’ Because we knew if we could generate some cash flow, we would be able to keep associates employed for a longer period of time as we produced these face shields.” 

Click here to learn more about the Trabon Group. 

By the end of the initial week, the firm was manufacturing as USA Shields — and able to locate a number of local medical centers interested in “taking a chance on them,” he said, noting with each iteration since, the team has only increased efficiency and the quality of outcomes. 

“We can now produce about 7,000 to 8,000 units per day and we’re working six days a week,” Trabon said. “With our shifts, we’re able to employ about 50 to 60 people each day and if they’re producing 8,000 a day, that’s 45,000-plus shields each week that we’re able to produce.” 

Trabon Group, USA Shields

Planning past 24 hours has proved dangerous in the ever-shifting landscape in the new COVID-19 reality — the firm instead is sticking to a list of priorities, he said.

“The first is to help keep our associates employed for as long as possible and the reason I say that is that at some point we will return to printing and we will return to producing millions of restaurant menus across the country as we were before this crisis,” he added. “We want to have the same team in place and we want to give that team the opportunity to earn wages throughout this crisis. I know a lot of employers are not able to do that and we’ve found ourselves very lucky that we had the team and the resources to pivot.”

The operation is expected to continue for as long is possible in the current competitive climate and outsourcing of labor, Trabon said. 

“We’re not as competitive with prices that are coming from overseas because we just don’t have the large supply chain, and we don’t have the equipment and really cheap labor that we’re seeing is passed from overseas production,” he said. “The goal is to continue face shields for as long as necessary until we see more stabilization in the restaurant industry. So we’re here waiting for restaurants to pick up the phone and call us.”

“Most of our clients now have been phenomenally helpful through this, and I really think we’re in it together with them,” he added. “Obviously we want to prioritize the health of the country, so the shutdown is probably going to last longer than we’d like it to economically. But if it’s the right thing to do, then we’ll just continue to contribute our part with the face shields until we’re ready to help everybody get back into restaurants and ordering food again.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2020 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Dr. Marion Pierson, MO Hives KC

        For the good of the hive: KC pediatrician builds buzz with award-winning urban bee farm effort

        By Tommy Felts | December 7, 2021

        No one is more surprised by pediatrician Marion Pierson’s newfound career success as a beekeeper and advocate for urban apiaries, the Prairie Village doctor said. “I didn’t know this would happen,” Pierson said. “In fact, I’m scared of bugs. My husband asked me how I was going to start a bee farm. When I’m in…

        Hometown startups want their due; sister-led QuickHire’s $1.4M round could be just the start

        By Tommy Felts | December 6, 2021

        QuickHire’s potential for success is enhanced — not limited — by the young tech startup’s south-central Kansas geography, said Deborah Gladney, one half of a sister-led Wichita venture that recently announced its $1.4 million round boosted by a leading Kansas City fund. “Being from Wichita, we’ve come to know and appreciate everything this city has to…

        Toilet Bombs by Bear Soap Co., Soap Bar in Westport

        Toilet bombs dropped less than two weeks ago; retailers can’t seem to keep them on the shelves

        By Tommy Felts | December 4, 2021

        Bear Soap Co.’s latest bestseller might have begun as an accident, but the bath bombs for toilet bowls are making a splash as shoppers discover a cheeky new stocking stuffer that fizzes beyond the holiday season, said Matt Bramlette. “The toilet bombs can be a fun novelty gift; or they can be something that people…

        Kiffany Bosserman, Cottontale, Cookies and Creamery

        Cotton candy calling: Why a South KC sweets shop’s signature treat is still hand-spun with an air of nostalgia

        By Tommy Felts | December 4, 2021

        Each ding of the oven generates more buzz for this whimsy-frosted bake shop and creamery in South Kansas City. But it’s the soft, sticky sweet treat that fills small tubs and lines the store’s shelves — (hand) spinning the entrepreneurial dreams of its owner into a sugar-rush of a reality.  “I really hit the jackpot,”…