Productivity in Ontario's manufacturing sector is the subject of Part 2 of our chat with NGen CEO Jason Myers. The conversation revolves around a new joint report by NGen and the Trillium Network for Advanced Manufacturing addressing Canada's “productivity problem”. The episode highlights the importance of understanding productivity to solve it, different ways to measure productivity, and the role of strategic management and leadership skills in driving future growth in manufacturing. Missed Part 1? Catch up here: Season 10, Episode 2.
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About the Making it in Ontario Podcast
Making it in Ontario is your window into what's next in manufacturing. Ontario’s economy depends on manufacturing, but the latest research reveals concerning trends that could undermine the sector’s strength—if we don’t address them. Join us as we talk to CEOs and other leaders at the forefront of the sector about productivity, strategy, talent markets and career opportunities, and the role of manufacturing in a prosperous and sustainable future.
This podcast is an initiative of the Trillium Network for Advanced Manufacturing. It’s hosted by Michelle Samson and produced by Storied Places Media.
Welcome to Making it in Ontario, your window into what's next in
2
:Ontario's manufacturing sector from the
data driven researchers at the Trillium
3
:Network for Advanced Manufacturing.
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:I'm Michelle Samson.
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:Brendan Sweeney: And I'm Brendan Sweeney
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:Hey everyone, we are back with the
second part of our two part episode
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:with Jason Myers, the CEO of NGen.
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:Michelle Samson: Yeah, so part one, if
you missed it, was season 10, episode
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:2, and that was a big picture discussion
about manufacturing in Ontario and Canada.
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:We do highly recommend listening if you
haven't already, but Brendan, what are
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:we discussing with Jay this time around?
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:Brendan Sweeney: This time we are
focusing on productivity specifically.
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:Productivity, this is a subject of
a recent NGen-Trillium Network joint
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:report that was just published.
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:Lots of talk about productivity
recently and about Canada's quote
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:unquote productivity problem.
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:The report that we released focuses
specifically on manufacturing and
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:it does identify that, you know,
there are some challenges with
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:productivity and manufacturing.
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:Productivity should be considered
a bit of a problem, but it's not
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:just a manufacturing problem.
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:This is a Canada problem.
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:This is a problem across our economy.
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:Manufacturing actually is more
productive than the average
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:for all Canadian industries.
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:Therefore, there's, you know,
more prosperity, more wealth
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:associated with manufacturing.
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:That's why it's important.
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:That's why we want manufacturing, or one
of the reasons why we want manufacturing.
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:As the report shows that when we dive
in to manufacturing and we kind of
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:slice and dice some of the numbers
regionally, uh, with Atlantic Canada,
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:Quebec, Ontario, Western Canada, we slice
and dice it by industry, some really,
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:uh, interesting insights in there.
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:And the report shows that there are
some success stories out there, whether
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:it's on a Canada wide basis, on an
industry basis, or on a regional basis.
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:Pharmaceuticals is kind
of the big winner here.
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:Um, and so while there are success
stories, these are, uh, fewer and
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:further between than we'd hope.
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:And in this episode, and I think
Jay does a really good job, really
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:breaks down why simply understanding
productivity is important if
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:we're going to solve the problem.
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:And then we venture a few ideas of
what we can actually do about it.
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:Michelle Samson: Yeah, I thought it
was really interesting how there are
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:different ways of measuring productivity,
but a lot of them miss that beating
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:heart of why productivity is actually
important, and can even lead decision
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:makers towards bad decisions if you're
measuring productivity in the wrong way.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Yeah, and if we
just kind of look at, hey, you
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:know, this is a productive industry,
why don't we have more of that?
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:You know, as the report shows, we'd
end up with a nation of cigarette
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:factories, which are highly productive,
but that doesn't mean they're desirable.
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:Addressing this challenge, fixing
this problem, that it's not an easy
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:thing to do, but it may emerge as,
you know, the priority for industry
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:stakeholders moving forward, especially
because, you know, productivity
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:is the foundation for prosperity.
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:It's something that Trillium and
NGen are committed to working
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:together on moving forward.
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:And, there's lots of work to do, but as
I always say, uh, having lots of work
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:to do is better than having none at all.
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:Michelle Samson: Yeah.
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:Cheers to that.
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:And, um, and there's work for all
of the stakeholders in this too.
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:Like there is really a role for everyone,
business leaders, economic developers who
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:come up in the episode, universities and
colleges, everyone has their role to play.
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:So where can people find the full report?
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:Brendan Sweeney: Uh, they can
find it on the NGEN website.
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:They can find it on the Trillium Network
website, and I think they can find
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:it in the, uh, notes associated with
this podcast, and, uh, like Michelle
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:mentioned, economic developers, there's
something in here for you, so listen
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:up, university deans, uh, provosts,
president, department heads, there's
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:something in here for you, so listen up.
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:We get into a really sophisticated
conversation in this one, and uh, I really
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:enjoyed having this conversation with Jay.
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:Michelle Samson: Yeah.
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:So go find the report, but before
you go find the report, stick around
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:and listen to this conversation.
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:It is a really great
companion to that report.
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:Brendan Sweeney: So, productivity.
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:There was, especially earlier
in the year, there was a lot
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:of public discourse related to
Canada's record of productivity.
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:What is productivity and why is it
so important to be talking about it?
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:Jayson Myers: Trillium and
NGen have been working on joint
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:report on exactly this issue.
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:As you say, a lot of reports out
there looking at productivity
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:performance in Canada, writ large.
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:A lot of hand wringing, all of the
conclusions are we're not doing very well,
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:very few ideas about how to do better.
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:But I think we need to take a step
back and really think about what
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:productivity is, not even from an
economic point of view, but what
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:we're really trying to get at here.
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:And it's all about, whether it's
a country, whether it's a company,
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:whether it's an industry sector like
manufacturing, it's all about how
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:do you increase the value of what
you're producing, how do you make
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:more money, basically, uh, and how
to do that with the least resources.
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:And there are various ways
of measuring productivity.
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:You can measure the
productivity of your equipment.
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:You can measure the productivity of
other inputs like, uh, like IP or
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:software, or you can measure productivity
in terms of output per worker hour.
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:So labor productivity is probably the best
because, you know, what's the point of
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:measuring equipment or IP productivity?
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:Because at the end of the day, it's
people that's running this anyway.
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:So this whole idea of productivity
improvement is how do you
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:maximize the value of what you're
producing as a business or as a
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:industry sector per worker hour.
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:And you can figure that out by looking
at sales revenue and the value of
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:the inventory you're creating, and
then subtracting all the inputs
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:that are necessary to do that.
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:What's left over is the amount you
pay your employees, and the amount
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:of money that is left over in terms
of gross profit or gross margin.
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:That's GDP, and you want to create
as much GDP, as much value add as
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:possible with the least hours worked.
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:And that's where I think we really
need to focus maybe a little less
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:on cutting just the worker hour and
much, much more on creating the value.
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:At the end of the day, the last
remaining manufacturer, when they turn
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:off the lights, and they sell their
last product , where the bank sells
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:the assets and nobody's working in the
company, that's infinite productivity.
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:But that's not where we want to go.
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:We want to create much more wealth,
much more value for customers,
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:much more revenue for the economy.
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:That's what it's all about.
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:And to do that with the least
amount of effort, with the
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:least amount of resources.
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:The history of productivity
and manufacturing is, when you
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:look back 30 years ago during
the:
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:I mean, that's when
manufacturing was growing.
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:A large part of that was because of the
North American Free Trade Agreement.
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:The next decade, the 2000s, well, we were
really struggling, but we lost a lot of
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:manufacturing over that period of time.
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:We were losing the highest value
sectors of manufacturing as a result
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:of competition from China, both for
our product, but also for investment.
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:And then over the last 14 years,
since:
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:productivity is growing twice as fast
as US manufacturing productivity is, and
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:that's largely because we're creating new
businesses, but it's also because we're
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:using new technology to improve processes
and the efficiency of process as well.
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:But it's leading to new ways of
doing things, new opportunities
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:for business growth and, frankly,
new opportunities for new products,
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:smart products, and services.
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:So that's really, in my view,
where some of our challenges are.
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:The opportunity going forward is how to
create more value, how do we generate
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:more money, how do we grow companies.
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:And that's really the key in
my mind about productivity.
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:Michelle Samson: So Jay, not to
put you on the spot, but how do
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:we tap into that opportunity?
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:Like how do we create more value?
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:How do we generate more money?
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:Jayson Myers: I think, frankly,
the future of manufacturing is
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:not getting product out the door.
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:Product today is the platform
for data, it's a platform for
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:service, and it's the services
that are really generating revenue.
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:And much more revenue
today than product is.
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:You know, that's clear on any cell phone
that we're using, but, you know, it could
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:be jet engines where we've got great
jet engine manufacturers in Canada, but
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:the revenue that they're generating is
through leasing the engine to the aircraft
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:companies and reading all the data coming
in and maintaining the engine in flight.
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:That's a very, very
different business model.
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:But that's where, where the future
revenue generation will come
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:from in advanced manufacturing.
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:If you look at overall revenue
being generated across the
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:manufacturing sector, 25 percent
of that is coming from services.
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:It's not coming from product at all.
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:And yet we're measuring productivity,
and this gets back to another issue,
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:are we measuring productivity correctly?
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:We're measuring productivity on the basis
of volume of product going out the door.
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:Um, it has nothing to do with the
quality or changes of quality of
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:the product, and it has nothing
to do with the services that are
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:being generated around the product.
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:So, I think we have real problems in
measuring productivity because we're
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:not taking into account all of the value
that is being generated, and we're not
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:taking into account the higher wages
that reflect the higher skills levels
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:of manufacturing employees either.
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:That all seems to be written
off as inflation today.
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:Brendan Sweeney: So we've got this
jointly produced report, NGen and
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:Trillium, about productivity, and we've
had some good debate on how to interpret
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:the data, on how to frame the data.
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:In the process of pulling that data and
pulling that report together, Jay, what
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:were some of the biggest takeaways?
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:What were some of the biggest surprises
and what were some of the biggest,
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:the most important conclusions,
along the lines of, maybe we need
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:to be measuring productivity in a
:
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:Jayson Myers: There were a few
things that really stood out.
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:Number one, how much common sense it made.
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:It confirmed a lot of things like
manufacturing is one of the highest
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:value adding sectors of the country.
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:How much greater manufacturing
productivity is compared
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:to the economy as a whole.
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:That certainly, I don't think, was
any surprise, but that certainly
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:has stood out, has confirmed
the importance of manufacturing.
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:One of the other maybe surprising things
at the beginning is where are the biggest,
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:most productive sectors of manufacturing?
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:Well, you know, tobacco products,
chemicals, pharmaceuticals, all stand
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:out there, and the reason why is that
these are standard products, where you
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:can easily measure the volume of output.
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:They could be complex products, but
the product lines are not complex.
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:You're producing a particular product
en masse and if you can do that, and use
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:equipment to get as much product out the
door as you possibly can, you tend to
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:have, uh, higher rates of productivity.
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:But even there, it confirms that
economic theory that, you know, you've
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:got a product and as competition
enters the market and as demand
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:changes that your profit is driven
down as a result of competition.
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:And as a result of that, your
productivity falls as well.
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:And in all of these areas, productivity
is high, but it's fallen fairly
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:sharply over a period of time.
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:I think the other thing that it helped
confirm to me is that there are real
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:structural issues that we need to take
into consideration, uh, when we're
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:talking about manufacturing productivity.
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:Um, you know, the size of companies.
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:We have probably more smaller
companies in comparison with those
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:of the United States, for example.
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:And as a result of that, you
don't get the big economies of
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:scale through mass production.
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:But what you do get are smaller
companies that are making money on
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:the basis of higher value services,
of higher value customization.
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:And I think that's where Canadian
companies have always stood out.
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:And so we have lower levels of
volume, lower levels of output, but
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:maybe higher value of those products.
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:Uh, but you need more people, and
smaller companies tend to hold on to
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:the workforce much longer than larger
companies do, where they can not only
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:attract more people, but they have
much greater flexibility in terms of
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:their ability to shed workers or lower
worker hours, if volume turns down.
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:So, I mean, all of these trends were
kind of confirmed, I think, Brendan,
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:in the report that you did for us.
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:Trillium really did a lot of the basic
number crunching and data analytics, but
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:again, it really underlies how complex
this issue of productivity actually is.
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:And if anything else kind of raises a
lot of questions and let's us dive more
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:deeply into issues like, how is revenue
being generated today and where are the
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:limitations in terms of being able to
improve process and reduce worker hours?
226
:But let's not get caught up.
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:It's not a race to the bottom,
this is a race to the top.
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:It's not about how do we just simply
reduce workers and worker hours because
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:as I said before, you can be the most
productive company in the world on
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:the day that you go out of business.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Hmm.
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:And just to kind of back up
a bit, Canadian manufacturing
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:productivity is growing.
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:It's growing faster than productivity
in the United States' manufacturing
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:industry, and it's growing faster
than the overall Canadian economy.
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:But is it growing fast enough?
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:Jayson Myers: It can always grow faster.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Yeah.
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:Jayson Myers: Manufacturing has
one of the highest productivity
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:rates of any sector in the country.
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:A lot depends on the ability of
our manufacturers to continue
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:to grow their business here.
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:This often leads into a discussion
about, you know, what does the policy
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:environment need to be like in Canada in
order to enable companies to grow more?
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:I think that's an important issue.
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:But I think much more of a pressing
issue is do companies themselves
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:have the strategic and management
capabilities to grow their business
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:here and to use technology successfully
to improve their processes, but
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:also enable them make more money.
250
:So I think there are real challenges
here, and the challenges are not
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:necessarily all at the policy level.
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:The challenges in many cases are
challenges around management and strategy
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:and leadership at the company level too.
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:We've got, frankly, a lot of small
manufacturers that are doing very, very
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:well with their current lines of business.
256
:And many companies are asking, "well, why
should I do anything different than that?"
257
:And I think if you don't have your
eye on the future and on future
258
:opportunities, but also on the
competitive challenges that are going
259
:to be there in the future, you may not
be doing all that well for very long.
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:So the issue of productivity and
where we're going and how to improve
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:productivity is a, very, very complex one.
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:And it's not something that's
easily understood, I think,
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:simply looking at the data.
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:And what I see in a lot of the
productivity debates, you can use
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:productivity to justify almost anything
that you want to do in terms of policy.
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:Michelle Samson: Jay, if I may interject,
my background is in economic development
267
:and we have a lot of economic developers
who will be listening to this.
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:So I'd love to spend a little bit of time
looking at it from their point of view.
269
:Whether it's at the municipal level or
all the way up to really the national
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:level, as economic developers we tend
to look at which industries should
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:we be prioritizing and supporting.
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:Obviously there's that balance of what
does your jurisdiction currently have?
273
:What does it have assets for?
274
:But also what is growing, what is
looking promising rather than declining?
275
:So how does productivity work into that
choice of which industries to support?
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:Jayson Myers: If productivity is
all about business growth, it's
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:all about advanced manufacturing.
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:And that includes the adoption
of new technologies to improve
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:product, to improve process.
280
:But it also takes a look at the
development of new technologies and how
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:to grow new companies here in Ontario.
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:Often, people look at advanced
manufacturing and they say, okay, well,
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:there are certain sectors here that are
advanced and others that are not advanced.
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:Automotive is advanced.
285
:Aerospace is advanced.
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:Pharmaceuticals is advanced.
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:Textiles, not so much.
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:Wood products, not so much.
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:And yet, if that were the case, then
I can identify a number of automotive
290
:and aerospace and biomanufacturing
and pharmaceutical companies that
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:I don't think are very advanced.
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:They're trying to, you know, put
the same old product out the door,
293
:diminishing returns, greater competition.
294
:That's not advanced manufacturing.
295
:But I know, for instance,
a company called Shimco.
296
:They make shims.
297
:You know, how simple is a shim, a piece
of metal, a piece of material that you can
298
:put in between boards to stop vibration.
299
:But these are smart shims, they've
got a sensor in it that can tell
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:vibration, that can read back.
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:And the sales revenue is not
generated as a result of the product.
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:The sales revenue is generated as a
result of the service that's being
303
:provided by all of this data that's
being collected by these shims.
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:To me, that says a lot about where
the industry is going and, not to
305
:dismiss some areas of manufacturing,
as long as they're using technology
306
:to be able to develop new products,
new services, that nobody else can do.
307
:So it becomes very difficult to say,
oh yeah, you know, let's look at a
308
:particular sector of manufacturing.
309
:If economic developers, municipalities,
or governments are looking at real
310
:business development opportunities, I
think the key thing here is connectivity.
311
:How do you connect with the technology
companies, with the services?
312
:And the manufacturing that are not
necessarily in your jurisdiction, but
313
:are out there across the province and
leverage that as much as possible.
314
:The growth will come from those
companies that can use these
315
:technologies really effectively.
316
:So I think today in many ways,
you know, thinking about economic
317
:development, it's changing.
318
:It has to, it has to change.
319
:It's all about how to facilitate the use
of these technologies and services to
320
:maximize revenue and to present those
opportunities for local companies.
321
:The other major challenge, of
course, that we're all facing in
322
:advanced manufacturing, not only in
that sector, is an aging workforce.
323
:And so automation is going to be
much more important going forward.
324
:It's the only way that companies
can actually offset the
325
:impact of an aging workforce.
326
:The labor shortages are already here,
and they're only going to get worse.
327
:And of course, if we're talking about
automation as a solution for that, then
328
:we need to talk about skills development
at the same time, and where can companies
329
:find people with the skills they're going
to require to grow their business, and how
330
:do companies support skills development
within their own operations, which I think
331
:is not addressed as much as it should be.
332
:So, in many respects, economic development
may become much more of a focus on
333
:people and on high quality personnel
development and skills development
334
:than attracting various companies.
335
:If you have that skilled workforce
or if, even better, if you have the
336
:colleges, the universities that can
partner with companies in a particular
337
:field, where you're leveraging
existing expertise to become a sector
338
:of excellence in a particular product
line, or technology, then I think
339
:that's a real winning combination.
340
:I mean, you take a look at some of
these cities in Europe which have
341
:really developed high tech clusters,
robotics clusters, for instance.
342
:They've done it because there
are joint interests on the part
343
:of technology companies to work
together and develop a really, really
344
:strong skills base, educational
base behind what they're doing.
345
:And then, looking at joint
opportunities to connect those
346
:companies, uh, with global customers.
347
:And that's the type of thinking
that economic development
348
:offices have to go through.
349
:It's "How can we leverage
the strengths that we have?
350
:How can we make sure that we're
integrating the types of technology
351
:and supporting the technology
development, supporting the skills
352
:development required really to support
our local industries and attract the
353
:knowledge supply chain, the technology
supply chain that can actually help
354
:our existing manufacturers grow.
355
:And I think that's the way that
economic development organizations
356
:have to think in the future.
357
:Does that make any sense?
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:Michelle Samson: Yeah, I think it does.
359
:I know of a lot of communities who
are paying a lot of attention to
360
:things like workforce and bridging
those kinds of connections.
361
:So if they're already doing it,
you're saying, keep doing it!
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:Jayson Myers: Yeah, yeah.
363
:If economic development organizations have
that type of support, and it's not just
364
:the existing skills base, it's the ability
to work with particularly with colleges,
365
:but also universities here to help
companies develop their own workforce.
366
:I think that's an incredibly important
attractor for investment today, and
367
:also to help people transition from
one job to another, from one company
368
:to another, from one sector to another.
369
:When we talk about technology,
the technology requirements or
370
:the technology skills today, uh,
are frankly pretty common across
371
:technologies, and those are the skills
most in demand by manufacturers.
372
:In some cases, particularly with small
manufacturers, it's usually better to work
373
:with a tech partner, a service provider
from a technology company, rather than
374
:trying to develop these skills yourself.
375
:So you need technology and
innovation management skills,
376
:but you don't necessarily need
the tech skills themselves.
377
:Michelle Samson: So yeah, once upon
time, it was telling all the kids,
378
:"you gotta learn how to code".
379
:But we need a broader
range than just that?
380
:Jayson Myers: Absolutely.
381
:And this goes back to, do we
really understand what the
382
:manufacturing sector is today?
383
:There was a study, I'm reverting
to the economist here, there was a
384
:study that came out of MIT that looked
at the impact of technology on U.S.
385
:manufacturing, and it concluded that
over a period of 20 years, about 5
386
:percent of the manufacturing workforce
had been displaced by technology.
387
:But when you looked at the economics
behind this, uh, what you found was that
388
:companies weren't making any more money,
any more profit as a result of this.
389
:What was happening is that the amount
that manufacturers were paying in
390
:terms of labour compensation had been
reduced by about 5%, but instead of
391
:that, they were contracting out more
services, and particularly to the
392
:technology and engineering sectors.
393
:That totally compensated for the,
uh, reduction in labour costs.
394
:So what we're really seeing is a lot
of jobs that are no longer maybe in
395
:manufacturing, but are now in the
engineering and technology industries,
396
:providing services of some sort and
technology support for manufacturing.
397
:That's the same thing as
like 30, 40 years ago.
398
:A lot of companies had cafeterias
and paid for cafeteria workers
399
:as part of their business.
400
:Well, there aren't very many companies
today with in-house cafeterias.
401
:That's not to say that there aren't
still jobs in that sector in those
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:companies, but they're outsourced.
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:And, you know, I don't think we pay
enough attention, again, to that
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:overall value chain, here in Canada.
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:That you can be working in a manufacturing
job, but you don't have to be working
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:in manufacturing to have that job.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Last question.
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:You get a magic wand.
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:You get to wave it and you can make one
big change to really put manufacturing
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:in Ontario, manufacturing in Canada,
on a course to becoming not "a"
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:world leader, but "the" world leader.
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:What do you do?
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:Jayson Myers: I would make sure
that we have university programs
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:that actually taught strategy
and management for manufacturing.
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:We don't today, and we need to
develop a cohort of young managers,
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:of young business leaders that know
how to run a manufacturing facility.
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:That know how to manage
value chain relationships.
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:That know how to sell their product,
their service around the world.
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:That know how to develop those products
and services, and how to differentiate
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:them from their competitors.
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:That know how to invest in the
most important asset that we have
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:in manufacturing, which is people.
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:We simply don't have that education
here in Ontario or in Canada.
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:Leadership and management and project
management are the biggest skills
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:gaps that we have in this country
with respect to manufacturing.
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:So, that's my magic bullet.
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:Michelle Samson: New episodes of Making
it in Ontario are published weekly.
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:Follow us now on Apple Podcasts or
Spotify to make sure you don't miss any.
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:Making it in Ontario is an
initiative of the Trillium Network
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:for Advanced Manufacturing.
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:It is produced by Storied Places Media.