I have always said anyone can screw up. It’s how it’s handled that is a mark of a true professional.
@razormazor69473 жыл бұрын
Always such a rush, the rush of internal work being done so you can grow.
@lostgrunt78333 жыл бұрын
That goes from ordering a burger at a drive through to buying a car or house, or building spec specific parts. That's exactly it.... mistakes happen but it's how the mistakes are taken care of when confronted!
@ricktalbott96113 жыл бұрын
Very , very true !!!
@Turbochapman3 жыл бұрын
Well said. Its easy to be the great guy when everything is working right. Its a lot tougher when they aren't.
@Gunny19713 жыл бұрын
Words to live by.
@reformcongress2 жыл бұрын
This is great. You turned an angry customer into someone that will probably never use anyone else but your company if he has his choice. This is a great story and you are a great business owner.
@xiym41253 жыл бұрын
"I have employees that are dependent on the work that this company is giving us." My God you have such an amazing mindset I wish more owners thought like you. Keep up your awesome work!!
@silasmarner75863 жыл бұрын
It's the winning way, from my point of view.
@TomahawksNShotShells3 жыл бұрын
Take care of the people who make you money and they'll take care of you
@waynethomas17263 жыл бұрын
Yea, I too wish more owners thought like him. Most owners care enough about the employees to milk enough dollars out of the company till it's pretty much drained but still saleable. Then the next poor sap comes along it'll be years before he can even turn a profit. Again, caring enough about the employees to get things up to speed so they can milk the machine but do you think they're going to be well taken care of for their trouble? Do you thing they were fairly compensated while the previous owner sucked every dime out of the company? No. I'm 55 now. I was loyal to a company that promised me, "when get over this hump you'll get a big raise!" But even though we had tons of work we never seemed to get over the hump. But I was loyal. They got rich, sold the company, the new guy didn't see the dedication I put forth. He didn't see that I put my life into the company so it would succeed, so I could succeed. He didn't see why I deserved a raise, I was brand new, just like everyone else that worked there. But I ran shit. I was the chief engineer. When I tried to make it clear that I was valuable to the company if he were interested in keeping me. I was told, "you're not valuable, I can hire another 'draftsman' for way less than you make now...and you think you deserve a raise? Hahahaha" So I left, I took EVERYTHING with me. I did the purchasing, the artistic renderings of our products, the engineering, the planning. EVERYONE in the place relied on me to get them the information they needed to do their jobs and the materials to do it with. I tried to the guy, I wasn't just a "lowly draftsman". I was the company. When I left the guy would run around screaming at everyone to get to work but there was no materials. He'd scream at them to call who they got their materials from. They handed the guy my name and number LOL. The first call, he DEMANDED I bring all the names, addresses and phone numbers of the businesses we got our material from. Hell it was in the documentation! By the time he found what he needed most of the rest quit. The venders didn't want to deal with him because he treated his people and them like shit. When he hired new people, it was a niche company, nobody knew how to do what we did so he treated those people like shit. The next calls were more like begging...I just hung up on him. And you know what? The next company I worked for didn't care any more about my loyalty than the previous one. I'm self employed now. A small one many organization. I've never been happier!
@waynethomas17263 жыл бұрын
@@bluewater3783 It was already a long post so some details got dropped. I explained to the new owner what I did in the process of letting them know how we did what we did. Like any new owner he wanted to change things around some which is fine...it's his right? I let him find out what wouldn't work by letting it catch on fire. I'd go put it out, and explain to him, again, how we did what we did. After only a couple of those he could see I ran everything and gathered everything we needed to run the company. He would come to me to see what we should do when there was a new customer which was my area anyway and I'd make suggestions and without being a jerk I "let him know I was valuable to the company". I let him know by showing him what I did, how I had to pretty much remember everything or there'd be a separate building for all the filing cabinets. When it was time for him to take a week off I was in charge and of course things ran well. Then while I was off I lined everything up so that he really didn't have to do anything while I was gone. I had my designs done in advance, materials ordered, my people were all lined up on the jobs. Then, while I was off, he got greedy and talked the customer into more than he initially agreed to. There were two problems with that. There wasn't enough materials for the extra and the extra wasn't approve by the township. I'd had already pulled the permit for the project and we were already at the limit of what we could sell him because the rules only allowed so much of our product. Things went to crap quick, this was before cell phones were common. Care phones or "bag phones" existed but the point being, I wasn't reachable until I got back into town and found a bunch of "oh crap...I really need you to come in and put this fire out" messages on my machine. At first the attitude was like it was my fault. It wasn't hard to point out that it was not because the township sent a cop to stop work on the project while at the same time the shop was a mess because there wasn't enough material for the "additional". I told him he'd have to tell the customer we couldn't do that and go back to what we were allowed by law to do there. He exploded and that's when I was called a "glorified draftsman" that he could replace for a lot less money. I simply looked at him and said "ok". So I was actually fired and asked to immediately leave. I did, assuming it was just a temper tantrum and he'd call and try to iron it out but his ego just wouldn't let him do it so the vender receipts were there, he just had to call and ask who I'd been dealing with but somehow he screwed that up too. When I was fired things spun out fast. He blamed everything on me which my people knew wasn't true or fair. He started taking stuff out of them and a couple more key people quit so now it was well past being able to smooth out. I had a new job in a week making much more money, money I deserved but wasn't getting due to my loyalty. Sorry about leaving all this detail out, as you can see...it was a much longer story than I should have dropped in the comment section.
@JonnyMainframe3 жыл бұрын
@@bluewater3783 Matthew 7:1 Do not judge, or you too will be judged. For in the same way you judge others, you will be judged, and with the measure you use, it will be measured to you. "Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother's eye and pay no attention to the plank in your own eye?
@moosecat3 жыл бұрын
In a day and age when too many people are willing to "blame the other guy" for their own shortcomings, it was refreshing to hear your story. Thank you!
@SIXSTRING633 жыл бұрын
I was CNC programmer/certified toolmaker for 25 years. I wished I worked for somebody like you. Our GM never ran a machine in his life and would never listen to all of his experienced team leaders and supervisors such as myself. I always took pride in making things work and parts were within tolerance. I would personally design and make tools we didn’t have to get the job done right only to get bitched at by a guy who couldn’t change a tire about taking a few hours over the allotted time of the job quote. A good leader trusts their top employees, not question everything they do and give attitude about a skill he/she doesn’t have. Great speech and great example of how a company should run. Kudos!
@Rick-tb4so2 жыл бұрын
Most managers are that way......employees are beneath them and taking their info hurts their ego....
@SIXSTRING632 жыл бұрын
@@Rick-tb4so What’s the old saying? Managers rise from their level of mediocrity. Funny, people who can’t do or suck at a job usually get managers jobs. This guy was a 2nd cousin to the owner so a little nepotism helped him out. He retired this past December and did actually invite me to his retirement party. I was flat on my back with the one hung low plague and couldn’t attend. Just an arrogant, condescending attitude person. I probably had more college credits than him. He was a draftsman before he got the job. How does that qualify anybody for a GM of a job shop. The guy in charge now was a former used car salesman, how fitting. They should be out of business in the next year or two. He was worthless at his job while was there too. In charge of HR and took care of the health insurance. He screwed me up so bad on a comp case with my doctor that the doctor never got paid and ate the money. What a joke. Place would have thrived with a real toolmaker/programmer at the helm but the Richie Rich owner who had the business given to him never saw it that way.
@darrellepickering84332 жыл бұрын
Owners/managers are like that, believe me & you call 'em on it, you're down the road. If it becomes toxic to the point where it's affecting your life, go be free of it.
@bebekids20243 жыл бұрын
If I wasn't a business owner myself, I'd want to work for you. I hold the same values, standards and ethics as you do. I love this story!
@incogspectator3042 Жыл бұрын
Hey I need a career 😆
@jeffder7143 Жыл бұрын
Ahaha.
@bboydrummer13 жыл бұрын
This is my favourite story of yours. There are so many lessons to learn from this. It’s so easy to get defensive and angry but it’s best to relax and be calm.
@rjmara67813 жыл бұрын
This is professionalism on the highest level,I wish other manufacturers would adopt this concept.
@1gerard473 жыл бұрын
Yes car manufacturers😆
@Whoisddepew3 жыл бұрын
Having the mindset and work ethic that you have as an owner is exactly why you are as successful as you are. Your company is a direct reflection of the people or person who owns /runs it. Keep up the good work. You should be very proud of all involved. !!!
@BusterHWJones3 жыл бұрын
So basically you both were willing to listen to each other. Instead of pissing on each other's shoes, you collaborated and solved a problem that you both had. The implementation of that concept is rare. There's a lot to be said for that level of professionalism. A lesson that can be used for a multitude of situations. Well done. 👍
@Beachnative423 жыл бұрын
There is an old saying "If you're not making mistakes you're not learning anything " Nobody knows everything! Bravo for listening to your customer and growing the business relationship from this experience.
@garyclarke23853 жыл бұрын
Basically wrote same comment...good boss for an apprentice...
@generalralph62913 жыл бұрын
Between honest professionals, a dispute is a pleasure.
@Tre31413 жыл бұрын
If you are not making mistakes you are not making anything
@ph11p35403 жыл бұрын
Just make damn sure you can learn from those mistakes. You get only one chance if you are lucky
@moonpiespotlight47593 жыл бұрын
Some of our vendors then must be learning a shit ton.
@bobbyvff2 жыл бұрын
I have to say, without there being any doubt. Knowing exactly what you are expressing to me, the viewer of the video, a video you made to be seen by me, and not just me but others, like me and not like me, I should just say, as I have a important viewpoint, not just my own viewpoint, but one perhaps shared by others. YOU ARE THE MOST LONGWINDED, REDUNDANT, FRUSTRATINGLY PERCISE SPEAKER I HAVE EVER HEARD. DAMN
@georgeglass17483 жыл бұрын
This would be the best graduation speech ever. How to behave and interact. How inspiring and motivating.
@bvclem19603 жыл бұрын
You are exactly right. Applies to many fields of customer service !!
@cnccarving3 жыл бұрын
no matter how customer acting you have to act that customer feel he gets the best from you running a biz, not only knowing how to make something but how to sell
@douglasjones37993 жыл бұрын
Absolutely!
@luketutka89213 жыл бұрын
Great story from both sides. Emotions subsided, business heads aside and logical heads prevailed between science/tech guys. Cool
@johnjennings80853 жыл бұрын
Nice to see nobody had to sick the lawyers on each other. Refreshing to see problems settled like real men. Also save a ton of money not paying the sheister lawyers.
@terjeoseberg9903 жыл бұрын
Lawyers can’t fix the parts.
@smooth_ops29423 жыл бұрын
Well if they settled it like men... They would have stayed out in the parking lot instead of the conference room. But fighting only leads to negative results and conversation leads to positive results.
@davideshoo82692 жыл бұрын
@@terjeoseberg990 neither can the wrong attitude...
@terjeoseberg9902 жыл бұрын
@@davideshoo8269, Absolutely.
@Stettafire2 жыл бұрын
@@smooth_ops2942 Thats not solving it like men, thats caysing more problems like a pansy thats scared of a real conversation
@janfalcon20203 жыл бұрын
I have no idea how this made it into my feed but I'm grateful that it did. Thank you for sharing this lesson.
@MrScienceMaths3 жыл бұрын
Titan the lessons learned here is priceless, all manufacturers should learn from this life lesson, love you Titan!
@TITANSofCNC3 жыл бұрын
Love you too🤙 Thanks
@dmeemd77873 жыл бұрын
absolutely!!!
@walshy15153 жыл бұрын
No he got lucky
@walshy15153 жыл бұрын
The only thing that saved you was the fact that it was cheaper at that point to stick with you if it wasn't , you be talking to lawyers right now
@walshy15153 жыл бұрын
If he had told him that there where going to move there work to a different shop over time you probably would have not been willing to lose extra money on the parts you f up on
@dvdoliver862 жыл бұрын
You are a great business owner. Just the part of you taking responsibility does it for me. Much respect.
@kfiscal013 жыл бұрын
This is how things used to be done on a wide scale. My grandfather was a ceo of Sears back in the 50s. What he had implemented was that Sears people would help manufacturers solve distribution issues, manufacturing problems, and streamline their whole process. This approach was beneficial for all involved, Sears got a better product at a lower cost, and the manufacture made more money by higher output and less cost per item.
@pureilluzions3 жыл бұрын
i used to work for Sears. Great company. they focused on customer satisfaction extensively. Much of my training was about empathy and how to talk to the customer. i was shocked at how other companies do not train their employees how to talk to customers.
@Brothersfamilyfarm3 жыл бұрын
this is how things are still done. how do you think walmart lowers costs of products? lolol
@darkstatehk3 жыл бұрын
I also worked with Sears and I remember having a meeting with them and they explained not to be afraid of highlighting a non-compliance if one happened as they would work through the problem with you to resolve it. It was very different to how other retailers worked with their suppliers.
@kfiscal013 жыл бұрын
@@Brothersfamilyfarm I believe that's true to some extent, but I watched a documentary on Walmart and their practices with suppliers and it was not pretty. They were very aggressive in their approach and not helpful for suppliers on helping them, just do as a say kinda thing. They dictated the price that they wanted if you want to sell in our stores.
@Brothersfamilyfarm3 жыл бұрын
@@kfiscal01 as they should. their the store front. if these businesses want to use them, they must do what they want. this is great.
@jennylame42603 жыл бұрын
I appreciate your attitude and you have gained my respect. Your customer service is real customer service. Mistakes happen. The handling of the situation separate the Great from the low standards that are being forced upon other companies customers is terrible. I am a licensed professional craftsman and have seen the fall of quality service in my 42 working years both by the newer generations and company greed and /or apathy. Thanks to you for caring and properly addressing the customers concerns. The way it should be and used to be.
@JF323042 жыл бұрын
Titan shits on the little guy and kisses the big guys a55. I gave him a part many years ago to get a bid on. Gave me the bird and told me to f*çk off. I just emailed him the part into and asked for a quote. Didn't get anything, told me we don't do this. Found another guy to do it and he did a fantastic job.
@bocan31893 жыл бұрын
Humility, listening, learning and working toward a mutual goal of excellence in machining. Titan, you are amazing and you are a wealth of wisdom rarely found these days. If there were anybody I would leave my career for, it would be you. You inspire me to become a machinist, "exactness" is literally in my blood. Keep up the great work!
@75069993 жыл бұрын
I've been in it for 23 years, and your channel has rekindled a fire that went out a long time ago. Thank You Titan. Keep em coming.
@ronjlwhite80583 жыл бұрын
You took accountability and integrity and made it happen...BOOOMM!!! Love the channel 100%!!!
@briankendalll20933 жыл бұрын
This is quite possibly the best KZbin video I’ve seen in years. Here’s a video about accountability and understanding. Never quit. Man, nice!
@CrimFerret3 жыл бұрын
That's a great story. Not only did you own the mistake, you listened. You didn't only fix the parts, you made a device to make sure that that mistake wouldn't happen again. You learned that if a part was complex and needed processes you hadn't done before to work with the customer to come up with ways to make them so they'd get the parts they needed.
@btbd27853 жыл бұрын
First time watching a video on your channel. I am impressed by the fact that both of you at the end put all emotions aside and worked together to solves the problem and at the end of the day developed a great partnership and friendship! I wish more people had this type of mentality! Just think if many people did just how many problems would be solved and how many relationships would be built. Definitely look forward in watching more of your videos Titan!!
@JCWest-pr2mx3 жыл бұрын
Having had oversight of aerospace companies for years, and having had qualified companies to manufacture aerospace parts, I can tell you your absolute humility and willingness to see the problem thoroughly corrected is what saved you. Kudos to you and your team for a rework well done!
@TheDadofsix3 жыл бұрын
I don’t a thing about you or your company. Just found this but I was a customer service rep (claims adjuster) for years. This sums up beautifully a principle that crosses over to any industry. You listened and stayed humble. I’ve had to do that countless times. I was good at my service with people because of some of these same things you’ve said. I didn’t know what to expect from this but it was a good video. Well done.
@MrBangarangjoe0103 жыл бұрын
More manufacturing facilities need to have this mindset and ownership when problems come up. That’s how you keep your customers and employees happy. Thanks for the video.
@ardascholar52893 жыл бұрын
too bad none of them do
@markrebehn55683 жыл бұрын
This wasn't a problem that "came up" though. He knew full well he didn't have the machinery to manufacturer this part properly before he even started the job. Not only that, but he also doesn't have the proper machine to test the part that he ended up making. Knowing that this part will be used to build Rockets, with tolerances in the thousands of an inch, he shipped it out without testing to know if it meets spec because "it looked shiny" and "felt smooth". That's the opposite of having integrity. Integrity would have been to say to the customer that he didn't have the proper Machinery to do the job. This guy lucked out big-time with that customer. At least I hope he had to eat the extra cost for this job
@ardascholar52893 жыл бұрын
@@markrebehn5568 agreed
@Explodington2 жыл бұрын
@@markrebehn5568 Yeah. My company was on the customer side of this kind of thing not too long ago. Thankfully, we just built drones, but it's still not a good feel when $250K birds start plopping out of the sky because of a faulty part.
@Zappy12103 жыл бұрын
Taking responsibility for a mistake and not making excuses by a company is one of the rarest things ever. This video should be viewed by EVERY CEO of every company, no matter the product. Great video sir.
@tdg9113 жыл бұрын
This is like a thing of the past. People do NOT own up to their mistakes. My father taught me this great lesson many years ago and its what I live by. I own the mistake, I'll correct it and it will never happen again is how I work. Love the channel, love the videos. Keep up the fantastic work! Much love and gratitude.
@iwontreplybacklol74813 жыл бұрын
You know plenty of times people have owned their mistake and lost it all and never got it back right? Self entitlement says that if you own mistakes then you deserve to be rewarded. Its easy to look back on a business that is working and say all the good decisions, but what about the same business that made all the same decisions but failed. LUCK plays a HUGE part in success, a lot more than rich want to let on. .
@surikatga3 жыл бұрын
I don't think anybody taught me that, but I was able to figure it out myself. This gives me hope, that more people like this will come anyway. Even despite that the weak having so loud voice now.
@johndenton55553 жыл бұрын
Same here, Dad & later I were both Naval officers, he, as a civilian was a design engineer, I was a Radiological/Biomedical Engineer/National Service Manager, designing, building, installing, reparing and doing the field engineering to improve our products, if we (the company) or I, made an error, I owned it, and if the customer only BELIEVED we made an error, WE owned it, and took the steps needed to settle the issue for that customer. THAT is what my vision of 'customer service' has always been. I have seen from working for other companies that did NOT follow these rules, find this 'truism' of mine: '1- unhappy customer will tell a thousand people about his bad experience, while 10,000 happy customers will just do their business with us and others and not say ANYTHING, so that 1- bad experience costs you more business than the next 10 new happy customers will generate for you.'
@tdg9113 жыл бұрын
@@johndenton5555 Thank you and your dad for your service! It's much appreciated!
@bluewater37833 жыл бұрын
@@johndenton5555 Nice post, John--thanks for sharing your experience with us!
@SujithKumarReddyM2 жыл бұрын
Your words in those 14 minutes speaks volumes of your wisdom, appreciation, customer care and approach.
@bbmotorsports19763 жыл бұрын
You are definitely a inspiration. After 28 years in the trade it's hard sometimes to stay excited about our jobs. I get burned out sometimes running multiple machines. I will use your instructions to stay humble, focused and driven.
@richart21433 жыл бұрын
Absolutely the best advice to give anyone. Be humble, be attentive, be gracious, and be flexible. You're one of the greats Titan
@-xgnsparta73773 жыл бұрын
As a young machinist, I look up to you man, 19 years old and am going on to my 2nd year of CNC work Including programming, setups, fixtures and operating. Couldn't be happier with my job title
@brandons91383 жыл бұрын
People in general don't seem to understand exactly what it is we as machinists do for a living. Many years ago a friend of my wife's asked me what I did for a living. My response was "I make the life you live possible". That is not even one bit of an understatement. Machining is the foundation of modern society. You should be damn proud of what you choose to do with your life. In my time in the trade I've helped save lives with medical device manufacturing and prototyping. I've helped defend this country with parts for military communication and radar systems. I've even helped entertain people with parts that I've made that are in Disney animatronics.
@-xgnsparta73773 жыл бұрын
@@brandons9138 I love my job, now the company I'm right now isn't the best paying ,but I just got another offer for more than 25 an hour! I totally agree that people don't seem to understand what we really do and what goes into everyday machines. The one thing I've heard in my shop that's stuck with me is this: "take pride in your work" and that's exactly what I plan on doing
@brandons91383 жыл бұрын
@@-xgnsparta7377 More money is nice, but make sure the move can provide more than just cash. Make sure that they want to invest in YOU. Training and skills growth helps you be better for them. Be the guy that is there to lift others around you.
@-xgnsparta73773 жыл бұрын
@@brandons9138 they have a pention, pretty much all the insurance/benefits I'll ever need, match 6% 401k and will pay 80% for college tuition
@brandons91383 жыл бұрын
@@-xgnsparta7377 It sounds like they want to take care of their people. That is definitely a good sign. Definitely take advantage of the money they put up for education. That is a rare benefit these days. I don't want to sound like an old fart, but we need younger guys like you in this trade. It keeps us older guys on our toes.
@KrustyKlown3 жыл бұрын
When you can NOT meet a spec or verify you meet it ... ALWAYS CALL THE CUSTOMER before running ALL the parts and shipping them. Negotiate the needed specs and agree on the verification process. I have been on the customer side of this MANY times, companies quote, make promises, and even confidentially claim to understand the tough specs .. then deliver JUNK that derails multi-million dollar project timelines. I would MUCH rather a supplier STOP, TALK and Strive to do it Right the first time, even if it takes an extra day or two .. vs. no communication, weeks wasted, piles of junk parts produced, and days of on site mfg & quality control auditing.
@agentbey3 жыл бұрын
This is real world wisdom in action. Thanks for sharing the behind the scene experience of vendor / customer relationships. When things don't go well, it's how we managed them. Titan and crew you guys are awesome at demonstrating leadership.
@firebird65222 жыл бұрын
I don't know much about machine shops other than my first-ever job was sweeping the floors in one. But even if you don't know a single thing about machining, this video has excellent customer service and interpersonal interaction lessons that anyone in any business can use. Not sure why this came up on my recommended list, but I'm glad I watched it.
@samtanka1 Жыл бұрын
I don’t know how this showed up on my feed but I’m glad it did. I couldn’t stop watching and empathizing what it felt to go through a setback like that and humbly trying to move forward to fix the problem. Great work
@creativebobbo3 жыл бұрын
Nobody ever won an argument with a customer without losing the war. What is the value of an existing customer? It's huge, yet so few understand that. Glad to see you do Titan.
@roberthartzell71042 жыл бұрын
The true definition of a leader is you sir, take responsibility for the screw ups and do what has to be done to make it right, I would have loved to work with you in my younger days. I really enjoy watching your videos, the advancement y’all do in machining is fantastic! Keep up the great work.🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
@alexmiller91984 ай бұрын
Responsibility and openness to solve problems is key. Well done, my deepest respect. 👍
@joseruiz65613 жыл бұрын
Titan, you are an inspiration to us all. Your teaching, communication and life lessons that you are sharing are amazing. Thank you. You are a blessing.
@golffit30662 жыл бұрын
Very well handled. Being humble and accepting guidance is everything. You'll have a customer for life
@villenummela25403 жыл бұрын
Sitting down together and really speaking and planning through and around problems is underrated.
@bobcaygeon67993 жыл бұрын
Yes. Notice he kept repeating the word "listened". With humility, he sidelined his ego in order to repair not just a 'part' but his company's reputation. Both sides had a lot riding on getting this right and most importantly were genuinely motivated to do what it took to make it right. Hugh respect for all involved :-)
@tomfoolery3333 жыл бұрын
I don't know how I ended up here. This video should be watched by every business owner in the world. SOOOO many lessons and wisdom. Brilliant video.
@josephmurolo56563 жыл бұрын
Hey man, I’m a LSS Manager and I’ve got to say, you hit the nail right on the head! Great job! I’m sure your employees are proud to work with you!
@peterparsons7141 Жыл бұрын
A man who understand’s customers! Very logical thinker with excellent personal skills. This Company has unlimited potential , with someone like this putting a team together. Fantastic example of proper business relationship.
@ryanu3708 Жыл бұрын
Anyone working with Customers in any industry needs to hear this. If I wasn’t retired I’d ask your permission to add this video to my training protocol.
@leekresser8384 Жыл бұрын
I was involved in heavy industry my whole career, and this man KNOWS what he's talking about. Well done!
@John-oz1do3 жыл бұрын
We all make mistakes, how we handle them and learn not to repeat them shows the kind of people we are . Good on you.
@editman145 Жыл бұрын
You are a true man in the way you handled it. Humble but strong by excellence! Win win is the game is the way of working! Respect !
@lawdawg02actual3 жыл бұрын
One of the biggest problems in society today is that too many people are unwilling to accept responsibility for their actions and the consequences attached to those actions, whether it is in business, someone’s personal life, etc. The way you and your guys handled this was the absolute correct way the situation should’ve been handled. Good job!
@mikesenesouk5313 жыл бұрын
I don't know why this video came in as a suggested video by KZbin but I was opened to watching it. You told the story very well which kept me interested to listen til the end. This is a very good advice. Thanks for telling it, sir.
@davidgraham95773 жыл бұрын
Thank you. Loved your video. What a great lesson. Loved your humility, hearing the customer out, commitment to customer, willingness to do whatever is required to fix the problem, seeking input and creating a partnership
@carl55363 жыл бұрын
Your story should wake alot of people up cause you man'd up and took responsibility for the work that your shop done and that's a plus because I've seen so many people pass it off on others like a paint job that ended up falling off and the painter blamed it on a snow plow. The truck was around 200 feet from the street and it was not a plow, it's was a bad paint job that costed alot and it was never made right. God bless you and your business cause that really touched me listening to your story. God's got your back and I hope the best for you and your family and team
@bilbo_gamers64173 жыл бұрын
Beautiful. Not enough stories like this nowadays. It hearkens back to an earlier time where more people had integrity.
@Lwimmermastermetalart3 жыл бұрын
Titan your stories are amazing and I have so much respect for you. The best thing is your academy and the efforts you put into educating people in this career . I’ve tried so hard to promote machining ever since I graduated from the Vo Tech school I graduated from in 1968. Their shop has grown and become so much better than when I was there but it’s still a problem to get students to attend. The 3 sending schools are more concerned about how many students they can send to college. Weather or not this is the best choice for them. Any ideas to help promote this would certainly be appreciated . Not only from an educational point but to the point that my 3 sons who took over my shop of 40 years can simply not find employees . COVID has made this even worse because people get more for not working anymore. Again my heartfelt thanks for all you do.
@MrDoomedtofail2 жыл бұрын
Maybe your sons should offer higher wages?
@bigjimar772 жыл бұрын
Mistakes will always be made. It’s how you handle the situation and learn from it. You handled the problem perfectly.
@andybratt60222 жыл бұрын
What a fantastic story. They should teach this stuff in high schools. Nothing but respect for how you handled this. You know what's up man.
@wrighty3383 жыл бұрын
owning your failures is as important as owning your success'
@robinfleet70943 жыл бұрын
In some instances owing failure is more important. I have always felt that success' take care of themselves.
@FB-tq5ln3 жыл бұрын
ask anyone who says they never made a mistake is a liar.
@jimmcewen37273 жыл бұрын
Big respect here. Need more company owners like you because of your customer service, attitude about your employees and willingness to admit to the entire internet you screwed up. Thanks
@sea_turtle_adventures3 жыл бұрын
Titan, so great to see this tonight. I mean really inspiring. This is leadership at its ultimate realization. Awesome brother!
@jcnorris50832 жыл бұрын
You and your organization are the exception. No one wants to take ownership when there is a problem. They want to blame someone else. Good Luck, Great Job.
@y2k13073 жыл бұрын
I needed to watch this tonight. Lifes pressures have been weighing heavily lately. Thank you for sharing this. Accountability goes a long way with people. Great work my friend.
@andrewwatkins1561 Жыл бұрын
Your behavior is the definition of integrity ❤ Very few people have this quality.
@imgoodaswell95583 жыл бұрын
One of the greatest stories ever told. Every entrepreneur can learn from this.
@subarumanrp2333 жыл бұрын
Awesome! The world needs more people who keep their word and have humility enough to solve tough problems without destroying relationships! A man's word is his bond! BRAVO! Keep up the awesome work!
@Draggynsmate3 жыл бұрын
Titan, I wish there were more folks that took this approach, absolutely amazing story!
@BobSmith-ym9ls2 жыл бұрын
So many businessmen can learn from your video.. I commend you for standing up and doing the right thing and taking ownership..👍👍👍👍👍
@jasonb4170 Жыл бұрын
If you ever are in need of a senior sales exec, I would literally drop anything to work for you. I teach my children every day, you work for a man you look up to. This story gave me chills.
@gregoryrapier30213 жыл бұрын
I worked for a company from 1972 to 1985. We made parts for the medical industry and the air craft industry. It was the early days of NC and CNC machines. I was the lead welder and designed welding fixtures to weld precision parts. I welded all metals. On many parts I had to hold tolerances of 0.003. I had to know how the metal would move from welding and how to counter that to bring it into tolerance. One of the things I made was a part that went into the Voyager satellites. Didn't know what it was at the time. Many of the parts we made we didn't know what they were for only some liked of air craft. Our machinist made things using Hastelloy, Inconel, Titanium and other more common metals. I am now 73 and that was one of my favorite places to work. Your video reminded me of those times. The CNC machines are so much more cool now. I did use a lathe and mill and made sheetmetal parts to build my fixtures but mostly I welded parts. At one time in my career I was a welding instructor and that was a job I enjoyed too. Kenlab was the company they had the same attitude and that made me proud to be employed with them.
@Technaas3 жыл бұрын
This was an excellent video! Thank you for sharing. The start of beautiful relationship! Awesome work on taking ownership of the whole situation. Honesty wins every time.
@johnostler5458 Жыл бұрын
I love your stories Titan. You just don't hear people talking about let alone teaching humility these days. You are an example to all. Thank you!
@craigspicer42963 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing this event that would have been stressful. Some important take away lessons and great channel Titan. Mass manufacturing to high tolerance in an interesting ball game.
@aprilkurtz15892 жыл бұрын
I am fascinated watching your machines cut through, and form metal parts like it's butter. My neighbor is a machinist with 20+ years in the field, and it's cool to see what he does every day. Thanks!
@williamschmiedlin19003 жыл бұрын
Titan, that was a great story! We have done similar process development to get some of our parts as perfect as possible too! Keep the inspiration coming.
@SilentKnight43 Жыл бұрын
Although this goes back in time - it is a timeless lesson in how to run a company and maintain business relationships and quality standards. Enjoyed every moment of this - and this should be required listening for a LOT of companies no matter what industry they're involved in. Judging by the title I thought this was gonna go in another direction - and was pleasantly surprised and glad I was wrong. Well done - very uplifting and inspirational.
@sk8inrj13 жыл бұрын
Amazing to hear this one again, Titan. Gives me the chills. Hope to meet you in person in the near future. Take care.
@mathiasjapri3 жыл бұрын
A... is this dude who said WTF? ✌🏻
@sk8inrj13 жыл бұрын
@@mathiasjapri No, that was my dad.
@mrdnglbry3 жыл бұрын
Very impressive! I worked aerospace machining for 35+ years. You sir, have got it figured out.
@randyrcook Жыл бұрын
"I run a company, so I'm not used to people talking to me like that." Why? Does filing for a business license make you royalty? Owning a business doesn't make you a king, it makes you a servant if you're lucky enough to develop and keep customers to serve.
@JeffreyBenzodiazepines Жыл бұрын
typical ego driven amerilard
@GentiluomoStraniero2 жыл бұрын
Titan, when you speak of humility and being willing to listen to your customers, people will want to work with you.
@worstthinker273 жыл бұрын
Just graduated with a Mechanical Engineering degree been looking for jobs no luck. Man watching these videos really makes me want to work for you. Keep up the amazing work Titan!
@socercrze3 жыл бұрын
Seriously! Where from? Where do you live?
@OwnerOfOwn3 жыл бұрын
go work in the battery metals industry, they need machine engineers right now.
@Space-Cowboy883 жыл бұрын
AST spacemobile hires fresh out of school Mechanical Engineering Graduates all the time. Check in to them.
@losrussets89453 жыл бұрын
That is kind of scary. Im going to school for Mechanical Engineering...
@OwnerOfOwn3 жыл бұрын
@@losrussets8945 stick to it man, you will find a shop to get your foot in. We need more like you, always.
@guywysinger7417 Жыл бұрын
You’re ownership of this situation speaks volumes about you! Obviously you know and understand your business! Thank you for being a great example of not allowing your ego to learn something new. Plus your honesty is amazing…says a lot about your integrity! Not many people left like this, especially young people. Thank you for the video!
@howiepol16553 жыл бұрын
Ive only heard 5 minutes here, but i already respect the care that this author expresses in phrasing his diction and being calmly precise - with complete candor, no misplaced judgement, just description. If he applies this same methodical patience to this business, thats probably good.
@RolandLowhorn3 жыл бұрын
Full story,beautiful willingness be team player with your customers and developing quality in motion is truly building future growth together
@peteryeung1113 жыл бұрын
This is the best lesson I've learned so far. The story's riveting and the message is powerful. Thank you Titan.
@strategicintelligenceanaly97783 жыл бұрын
This may be a heartwarming story but this is why Communist China is number one in the space race. Capitalism is dependant on getting by the seat of your pants and making it work out in the end with everyone making a tidy profit. But when it comes to the pinnacle of technology trial and error is not good enough. Success is more powerful than profit. That's why the USA is no longer number one. RIP Capitalist USA long live Communist China!
@peteryeung1113 жыл бұрын
You'll be jailed making comments like this against the ccp in China. If you're an American, you should be ashamed of yourself for not knowing what freedom you have left. But Hey, it's still a free country right? Say what you, China has very little innovation, free thinkers, but they are experts at copying and stealing from other countries. Not saying there's no talented or smart people there, just that individuals can't think for themselves or get too creative, or can't be wealthy without the support from the communist party. My only advise to you, If you love communism, you're better off living in China. Or perhaps you're there, one of those fifty cent guys?
@strategicintelligenceanaly97783 жыл бұрын
@@peteryeung111 The only difference between China and America is China is openly is a dictatorship. The USA is a dictatorship as well but plays the role of being a democracy. Only the victims of American thought control/Propaganda can not see the truth.
@jameswright89484 ай бұрын
I am a business owner in an industry as far away from yours as can be, but this story was the greatest inspiration I've heard. Thank you.
@jasonbutler4193 жыл бұрын
I LOVE this story. Seriously; I love it. NOBODY is perfect, but it says everything about someone's character when they have the humility to see it and work with others to find solutions.
@roxxerface3 жыл бұрын
You said it, the exact problem when you took a job to make a part but lacked the precise machines to complete the job within .002, You did the right thing and stayed calm and listened.
@knowledge15king2 жыл бұрын
As an executive and coach I am constantly looking for individuals like yourself that talk about their obstacles and they overcome them. This is fantastic example of turning a potentially disastrous situation into a lifelong partnership opportunity. Well done! I will be sharing this with my team if you don't mind ?
@thmoorer3 жыл бұрын
Fantastic. Taking responsibility is what our country needs more of. From the top down.
@royeriksen1033 жыл бұрын
"The relationship really started when we srewed up badly..." Wow, man, taking ownership of a srewup requires humbleness, wisdom and balls ;) To be honest and showing transparancy is wonderful buildingblocks in almost anything
@atravelerintime3930 Жыл бұрын
Titan Leader, thank you for this video. I am a retired Organizational Leadership Professor, Internationally Certified Executive Coach, and my last job I was the CEO of an International Precision Engineering Valve Automation firm working out of Singapore and all of SE Asia and the Middle East. I wish I had your video to show my students, and Executives I coached. I'm forwarding your video to some Leadership Professors that are still in the trenches. Well done. You truly optimized the true meaning of a Great Leader. I'm impressed. Cheers
@BaltimoreActual3 жыл бұрын
He finally gets to the point at 4:04 Also a great lesson on how to turn a 5min video into a 14mins video.
@SPARKYTX2 жыл бұрын
And with the clips of the screaming matches in the beginning... suspense! Lol
@dividingbyzerofpv67482 жыл бұрын
The youtube formula... 30 seconds intro minimum, ask for subscriptions, stretch the "content"...
@MOAB-UT Жыл бұрын
Agreed- lots of humble bragging about how great he is for stepping up. Pats himself on the back about 20 times for not throwing his crew under the bus. Earlier on, he even bashes the client- something like "We all know who this guy is" or something implying an issue with the guy. Epic fail of a video.
@ElimGarakSpoonHead Жыл бұрын
Exactly f thus humblebrag bs
@SteveCarrDrivesAPrius Жыл бұрын
His guys stayed quiet His team stayed quiet
@tommynguyen89423 жыл бұрын
The saying is very true, Titan. Learn from your mistakes and honesty goes a long way! Stay humble.
@LearnSomethingHelpful3 жыл бұрын
Another admiring story about how we all should handle everything we do. My motto is: "To be a better version of myself tomorrow than I am today." These stories hit home, thank you for the honesty
@overklift3 жыл бұрын
That is not a life's motto, that is life, lived as it is intended.
@ralphperez7475 Жыл бұрын
Great story and lesson learned. You handled it professionally and with integrity; I hope others out there take heed.
@Ninjump3 жыл бұрын
A good lesson. Sometimes it's as much about how you handle yourself as it is what you can make.
@matteliano4543 жыл бұрын
100% class, 100% leadership, and 100% customer relations. I would be proud to call you my leader.