Northwest Aerospace News June | July 2019 Issue No. 9 | Page 35

Customer Advocates Color Craft has five program managers on staff, each of whom have daily contact with the customers that they serve. “They are fifty-fifty advocates for the customer and the company, meaning that they advocate for the customers as much as Color Craft itself,” said Stewart. “Every morning at 9 am, the whole company comes to a meeting to talk about the critical issues confronting our customers. A typical meeting may result in one of our program managers saying something like, ‘A customer called us late yesterday, and they forgot to order 100 widgets, and they need them by Friday.’ “At that point, the only question we ask ourselves is, ‘How do we solve this problem?’ and not, ‘How do we solve this problem and make money?’ I hear people say that you need to make money on every job, but I think that you need to make money on every relationship. At Color Craft, we are profitable on each of our relationships — and if we serve each customer really well every day, the whole company will ultimately be profitable.” It’s an approach that not only keeps his customers happy, but it also serves to motivate his workforce. “We have a bunch of millennials in our workforce. I’ve got folks with tattoos and green hair and total diversity in terms of race and sex.” he said. While millennials are often characterized as lazy, entitled and already looking for their next job on the day they are hired, Stewart reports extremely high employee retention. “Over the past eight years, I can only think of one employee who left Color Craft to pursue another opportunity.” Doug Stewart, President of Color Craft Inc. The key, he said, is emotional engagement with the work that they are doing. “They don’t want to just sit there and process orders. They really want to be engaged mentally and emotionally with their work. Emotion is an important part of life, and it’s an important part of the work we do here at Color Craft. We’re right there with our customers — living their highs and their lows right along with them. It’s a lot of fun.” When he’s looking to recruit new employees, Stewart takes a page from the Washington State Huskies’ football program. “They’re looking for OKG — Our Kind of Guys,” he said. “We do run an ad every once in a while, but our number one source for new people is referrals from our current employees. The challenge is to find someone who has the right character, and that’s hard to figure out through a standard interview process. If a job candidate has the right mentality, we can teach them the technical skills — but it doesn’t work the other way around.” JUNE | JULY 2019 ISSUE NO. 9 35