A Label That Has Regained Its Luster

Benjamin Rasmussen for The New York Times: John Kieselhorst, Dave Schiff and Scott Prindle, founders of Made.

 

By ALEX WILLIAMS

September 14, 2012

A Label That Has Regained Its Luster

REMEMBER the Chrysler K-car? Dave Schiff, a founder of Made Collection, a new flash-sale site that sells only American-made goods, hopes not.

When he was coming of age in the early ’80s, the phrase “Buy American” was epitomized by Chrysler’s boxy, style-challenged sedan, marketed as a star-spangled rebuke to the sleek imports of the day. In Mr. Schiff’s view, you bought one to satisfy a patriotic duty, not a sense of style. “ ‘Made in the U.S.A.’ came with baggage,” he said.

Times have changed. Even as the “Made in the U.S.A.” label has grown scarce, thanks to the offshore manufacturing in apparel and other industries, it has acquired cachet as a signifier of old-school craftsmanship, even luxury.

The movement has come far enough that Mr. Schiff, a former advertising executive from Miami, believed the time was right to start a Gilt-like shopping site for the Americana set, selling items like shuttle-loom jeans, lace baby dolls and a 19th-century-style baseball made of leather sourced from a Chicago tannery.

“The old ‘Buy American’ is get something lousy and pay more,” said Mr. Schiff, 45. Now “it’s a premium product.”

Style bloggers were among the early adopters. “ ‘Made in U.S.A.’ has gone through a rebranding of sorts,” said Michael Williams, whose popular men’s style blog, A Continuous Lean, has become an online clubhouse for devotees of American-made heritage labels like Red Wing Shoes and Filson.

But the embrace of domestic goods has also moved beyond scruffy D.J. types in Brooklyn who plunk down $275 for a pair of hand-sewn dungarees sewn from Cone denim from the company’s White Oak plant in North Carolina. The adherents now include “urban creatives, high-net-worth individuals, locavores, liberals, conservatives,” said Mr. Williams, who also represents some of these heritage brands as a marketing consultant.

In other words, Americana chic has gone mainstream. Just visit the nearest mall. Club Monaco unveiled a Made in the USA collection last year, in collaboration with Mr. Williams. J. Crew cashes in on Americana chic by selling domestically manufactured Alden shoes, Levi’s Vintage Clothing jeans and Billykirk leather goods. Joseph Abboud’s home page trumpets its collections as “Made in the New America.”

The newfound pride also extends to American cities and smaller communities. Made in Brooklyn is a phenomenon so self-aware, there are stores like By Brooklyn that specialize in products made in the borough. Similarly, an old shoe-polish brand called Shinola has recently been revived to make upscale watches, bicycles and other crafted goods in Detroit and is being promoted as “Made in Detroit.”

And in a survey last year of 1,300 affluent shoppers by Unity Marketing, a Pennsylvania-based consulting and marketing group, respondents ranked the United States first (higher than Italy or France) in perceived manufacturing quality of luxury goods.

Indeed, the “Made in the U.S.A.” label has become chic in the eyes of well-heeled consumers not just in the United States, but also in Asia, said Paulette Garafalo, the president for international, wholesale and manufacturing at Brooks Brothers, which has increased production of shirts, suits and neckwear at its three American factories to meet growing demand. “People want the credibility of an American brand,” she said.

The flight of American factory jobs has even become a heated issue in the presidential race, with President Obama and Mitt Romney trading jabs over being the “Outsourcer in Chief,” to use Mr. Romney’s phrase.

But while American-made goods are now fashionable, few have been willing to stake their professional future on it quite like Mr. Schiff. A former advertising executive at Crispin Porter + Bogusky in Miami, who oversaw the introduction of Coke Zero, he left the firm in April to start Made with two other veterans from the agency, Scott Prindle and John Kieselhorst.

In a sense, they started two companies, which are based in Boulder, Colo.: Made Collection, the flash-sale site, and Made Movement, an advertising agency that represents companies that manufacture only in America. (“If Apple came to us, we’d have to turn them down,” Mr. Schiff said.)

Unlike the typical Buy American sites, which feature crude graphics and a low-budget hodgepodge of pliers and rain boots, Made Collection has the slick yet earthy look of a Madewell campaign. Edie Ure, a former designer for Ralph Lauren and Anthropologie, serves as the site’s curator, and she gives special consideration to design-forward wares that would not be out of place in a Monocle magazine gift guide.

Recent flash-sale items included a knot-back black swimsuit from Cala Ossidiana, a swimwear company based in New York. It sells for $295 and, according to a graphic accompanying each item, supports six American workers. For those with humbler tastes, there was an O.C.E. Hickory work shirt, produced by inmates in the Oregon correctional system as part of its job-training program, for $26.99.

The company grew out of Mr. Schiff’s conviction that a manufacturing revival was crucial to a lasting economic recovery.

Made now counts 26 employees, and with a minimum of publicity, its site has 10,000 members. The ad agency has signed seven clients, including Emeco chairs, a Pennsylvania-based design company whose product sells at Design Within Reach, and New Belgium Brewing, based in Fort Collins, Colo., which brews Fat Tire ale.

Mr. Schiff practices what he preaches. For a recent lunch at the Ace Hotel in Manhattan, he wore Levi’s premium shuttle-loom 501s made in Los Angeles. His tattooed arms poked out of a blue checked shirt by the boutique design house 8.15 August Fifteenth, made in New York City, which he spruced up with a seersucker bow tie by Gitman Bros., made in North Carolina. The only smudge on the stars-and-stripes tableau was his pair of Vans sneakers made in China.

“I would say most days, I’m at about 75 percent,” he said, referring to how much of his outfit is American made. He never wants to become a fanatic, however. “If you become obsessive about it,” he added, “it’s an imposition versus a choice.”

 

Don Rongione, Founder of American Made Matters, responds to writer of article

“Don Rongione, Founder of American Made Matters, responds to writer of article titled ‘Medals, not uniforms, are what matters’”

Dear Ana,

Your article entitled “Medals, not uniforms, are what matters” that was published in a local newspaper, The Reading Eagle, on August 4, 2012 hits home and deserves a response.

Your conclusion that the medal count is the “measure that matters” displays an ignorance of the process of winning these medals.

Training athletes takes development of physical and mental talent. That training requires commitment, hard work, determination, coaching and financial support from families and/or sponsors and governments. When the family pays the way, these financial sacrifices are substantial. It takes jobs and wealth to handle the financial requirements.

Our country’s financial wealth has come largely from industry where jobs provide for the pursuit of life opportunities sometimes called “the American Dream.”

Every manufacturing job creates 4 to 5 residual jobs which is more than three times as powerful as other sectors of our economy, like the service industry.

Some Americans and elected officials have favored “free trade” and bought the lowest cost items without considering the impact on manufacturing jobs, wealth, communities, our economy and (less important things like) winning medals.

Your theory that not many jobs would have been impacted if the U.S. uniforms had been made by American manufacturers misses the point. Like it or not, we need a strong manufacturing sector to be a world leader and some of our citizens are thankfully now realizing this.

It is too late for some industries.  The making of clothing is on the brink.  Some of us are hanging on.  Suggesting that it does not matter is sad and short sighted.

A recent Goldman Sachs study concluded that economic factors do play a role in predicting Olympic success.

Still not convinced? You write that medals are what matters and you acknowledged that most of your clothes are made in China. The U.S. trade deficit with China in 1985 was only $6 million. In the 1984 Summer Olympic Games, China won 32 medals to 174 for the U.S., so we had nearly 5.5 times more medals. Last year our trade deficit with China was $295 billion. Check the medal count at the end of these games. American Made Matters!

Sincerely,

Don Rongione
President & CEO, Bollman Hat Company
Founder, American Made Matters

‘American Made Matters’ Grows To Fifty Members & Sponsors The American Made Chic Bus Tour To Help Strengthen The American Dream.

‘AMERICAN MADE MATTERS’ GROWS TO FIFTY MEMBERS & SPONSORS THE AMERICAN MADE CHIC BUS TOUR TO HELP STRENGTHEN THE AMERICAN DREAM.

ADAMSTOWN, P.A. (April 18, 2012) – American Made Matters® recently welcomed WigWam Mills, Inc., Best Bath Systems, Bullhide Belts®, and Bullet Blues Custom Apparel, LLC as new members of its organization. With these companies joining the initiative, American Made Matters® has grown to fifty members and sponsors! The momentum continues to grow for American manufacturing as consumers are becoming more aware of the importance of choosing American made. American Made Matters® has a mission to educate consumers that buying US-made products strengthens the American dream and is helping consumers in finding US-made products.

American Made Matters® has also become a silver sponsor of the American Made Chic bus tour. This bus tour is being run by three American businesswomen who will travel across the country in a red, white and blue motorhome to create awareness for jobs, manufacturing and products Made in America. Stops will include the Kentucky Derby, the Country Music Festival in Nashville, Tennessee, a NASCAR event in Daytona, Florida and a final stop in Motor City in Detroit, Michigan. The tour will also include visits to manufacturing plants and promoting all things American.

American Made Matters® seeks to add member companies that manufacture in the U.S. The organization has created a common branding identity so that consumers will recognize the American Made Matters® logo and know that those products are made in the United States. Members are licensed to use the logo on products, packaging and marketing materials provided at least fifty percent of the product cost is incurred in the United States and the final transformation and assembly takes place in the States.
For more information about American Made Matters, please visit: www.AmericanMadeMatters.com.

Made in America makes sense again, K’nex Brands CEO says

Made in America makes sense again, K’nex Brands CEO says

Article from Philly.com

The maker of K’nex toys has long manufactured many of its products in America, and it pushed that as a key marketing message in 2007, after safety concerns arose about toys made in China.

But the family-owned company in Montgomery County decided it needed to do more as the U.S. economy slumped, and it chose to move one of its key operations from China to the United States.

“It started as a moral decision,” K’nex Brands L.P. chief executive Michael Araten told the 375 people who attended a “Made in America” program presented by the Greater Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce at the Hilton Philadelphia City Avenue on Wednesday morning.

Repatriating $100 million in foreign investment back into the United States was based on sound business reasons, Araten said in an interview after the program. Though he would not disclose the dollar value of K’nex’s annual sales, he said it was up 10 percent from 2010. Through April of this year, it is up 22 percent, he said.

“If you looked at our profit-and-loss charts for the last three years, you would say, ‘What recession?’?” Araten said.

Today, 95 percent of the parts that go into K’nex construction toys are made in the United States, with most emanating from the company’s Hatfield factory, where it employs about 200 people.

Moving the operations led to a 25 percent increase in K’nex’s local workforce, Araten said, and also required the company to hire a number of vendors in a 100-mile radius who could do “things we’re not great at.” He estimated the employment ripple effect of K’nex’s decision to be several thousand jobs.

Joining Araten in a panel discussion were the entrepreneurs behind Devon-based Independence LED Lighting L.L.C. and Center City-based S.V.A. Holdings Corp.

Independence LED brought the manufacture of its energy-efficient LED tubes, designed to replace fluorescent lighting, back from China to a highly automated factory in Boyertown in summer 2010. Charles Szoradi, CEO of Independence LED, said that put it closer to its commercial customers in the Washington-to-New York corridor.

Bangladesh’s loss was Philadelphia’s gain when designer Sarah Van Aken opened a garment factory here. She described how her eco-friendly firm is following a “dirt-to-shirt” strategy using cotton growers and textile makers in North Carolina to control how her apparel products are made.

Contact Mike Armstrong at 215-854-2980 or marmstrong@phillynews.com, or @PhillyInc on Twitter. Read his blog, “PhillyInc,” at www.phillyinc.biz.

K’NEX® Brands and The Rodon Group Celebrate Nation’s Birthday Through Commitment to American Made

K’NEX® Brands and The Rodon Group Celebrate Nation’s Birthday Through Commitment to American Made

Hatfield, Pa. (June, 2012) – K’NEX Brands, the only U.S. construction toy company focused on Building Worlds Kids Love TM, and its sister company, The Rodon Group, a custom plastic injection molder, recently ramped up their advocacy efforts on behalf of American made products.

Committed to manufacturing in the United States at a time when most toys are made overseas, K’NEX has become America’s Building Toy Company–over 90% of its parts are manufactured by The Rodon Group. In business since 1956, The Rodon Group makes billions of parts each year in its 125,000 square foot eco-friendly facility and is one of the largest family-owned and operated injection molders in the United States. In addition to manufacturing K’NEX parts, The Rodon Group serves a diverse group of industries including consumer products, medical, construction, and pharmaceutical.

“Independence means having the flexibility and ability to control your own destiny. Made in the USA products are a fundamental example of the Independence we celebrate each year. The more we make here at home, the more we shape our own future, and that’s what independence is all about”, said Michael Araten, President and CEO of K’NEX Brands and The Rodon Group.

Both K’NEX and The Rodon Group; third generation, family-owned businesses located in Hatfield, PA; are active members of American Made Matters, an organization whose mission is to educate consumers about buying US-made products to help strengthen the American Dream.

# # #

About The Rodon Group
The Rodon Group is an ISO 9001:2008 certified landfill-free, plastic injection molder. In business since 1956, The Rodon Group makes billions of parts each year in its 125,000 square foot facility. With over 105 injection molding presses, Rodon is one of the largest family-owned and operated plastic injection molders in the United States. Since 1992, Rodon has manufactured over 30 billion parts for the K’NEX building toy system, and is a subsidiary of K’NEX Brands, L.P. For more information, please visit www.rodongroup.com

About K’NEX Brands
Founded in 1992, K’NEX Brands, the world’s most innovative construction toy company, was established to make and sell what has become one of the world’s leading integrated construction systems for children. Winner of over 200 international awards and recognitions, K’NEX is America’s building toy company focused on Building Worlds Kids Love, and encourages youngsters to “imagine, build and play.” Since 1992, The Rodon Group, a subsidiary of K’NEX Brands, L.P., has manufactured over 30 billion parts for the K’NEX building toy system. For more information, please visit www.knex.com or www.rodongroup.com.

About American Made Matters
the mission of American Made Matters® is to educate consumers that buying US-made products strengthens the American dream. The American Made Matters® brand seeks to stop the rapid decline of manufacturing jobs in the United States of America and rebuild those jobs through a common branding identity and call to action. For more information on our organization, visit www.americanmadematters.com.

The Craze for all things “American-Made.”

The Craze for all things “American-Made.”

From the Rodon Group blog:  Original Post

American made matters

There has been a great deal of focus on American-made products and American Manufacturing over the past few years.  And, the recent presidential contest seems to have heated up the conversation.  A survey by the Alliance for American Manufacturing indicates that all political
affiliations – democrats, republicans and independents, believe we need to support a strong manufacturing sector in our country.

With this new interest in all things American, it is no wonder that many websites and blogs committed to this topic have been sprouting up all over the internet.  Some are focused on bringing awareness to the cause; others  are focused on ecommerce.

Our survey of sites uncovered about 30 websites and blogs specifically targeting the “American Made Craze.”  Here are 12 of the top sites:

Name:  American Made Matters
URL: http://www.americanmadematters.com 
Key Focus: Educating consumers on the impact of buying American made.  Affiliated with Americans Working.com

Name:  A Continuous Lean
URL: http://www.acontinuouslean.com/the-american-list
Key Focus: To promote American Made products to a younger generation

Name:  Made In USA Challenge
URL: http://madeinusachallenge.com
Key Focus: Made in USA challenge features goods made in America that are safe, ethically made, eco-friendly and awesome.

Name:  Americans Working.Com
URL:  http://www.americansworking.com/index.html
Key Focus: Americansworking.com was created to provide consumers with an easy to use and highly accessible means of finding products made in America.  Affiliated with American Made Matters.

Name: Made in USA Forever
URL: http://madeinusaforever.com
Key Focus: Sells All American Made Product

Name:  Still Made in the USA
URL: http://www.stillmadeinusa.com
Key Focus: The purpose of StillMadeinUSA.com is to share with other shoppers some of the great manufacturers, retailers, and craftspeople that I have found who still produce quality products in America.

Name:  Made in America, Buy American
URL: http://www.madeinamericabuyamerican.com
Key Focus: The Made in America Buy American Directory is your consumer resource to help you locate products made in USA

Name: The Alliance for American Manufacturing (AAM)
URL: http://americanmanufacturing.org
Key Focus: The Alliance for American Manufacturing is a non-profit, non-partisan partnership formed in 2007 by some of America’s leading manufacturers and the United Steelworkers to explore common solutions to challenging public policy topics such as job creation, infrastructure investment, international trade, and global competitiveness.

Name:  Made In America Store
URL:  http://www.madeinamericastore.com
Key Focus: The only general merchandise store in the country that sells 100% American Made Products, down to the packaging.

Name:  The Made In America Movement  
URL:  http://www.themadeinamericamovement.com
Key Focus: We are a nonpartisan organization sharing ideas on how to get involved within your community, providing you with resources on how to buy American made products, facilitating your purchasing experience

Name:  Buy American for America
URL:  www.BuyDirectUSA.com
Key Focus: BuyDirectUSA.com was started in 1998 as a way to promote companies that made their products in the USA. This was well before the scares about toys made in China that contained lead and toxic ingredients.

Name:  Made In USA Products Store
URL:  http://www.madeinusaproductsstore.com
Key Focus: Made in USA Products Store is dedicated to bringing you safe quality American made products.

Name:  Buy American.com
URL:  http://www.buyamerican.com
Key Focus: BuyAmerican.com seeks to promote American manufactured products and services through the use of social networking.

One statistic cited by American Made Matters notes that for every $1 that US manufacturers spend, another $1.40 of economic activity is created.  This multiplier is much greater than any other sector of our economy.   Consumers need to be educated about the provenance of the products they purchase and how their choices impact the American economy.

Tell us what you think. Do you have a favorite Made In America website that you use?

American Manufacturing Matters Learn how

 

American Made Matters & ChemArt featured in the Museums & More Fall 2011 issue

National Treasures

Buying American helps more than just the bottom line

By Abby Heugel
Managing Editor

Julie Reiser, president and co-founder of Made in USA Certified, Inc., has traveled back and forth to Washington D.C. for years, and said it has always disturbed her that so many shops in the D.C. area carried patriotic items -American flag products, coffee cups with a president’s face, etc. – with labels that read “Made in China.”

“If gift shops in places that are showcasing American history don’t honor U.S. sourcing and manufacturing, the message it sends is incongruent with our nation’s values and traditions,” Reiser said. “However, this past May I purposely went into all the gift shops in the Capital Building and was pleasantly surprised to see shirts, caps, mugs and many other items all Made in the U.S. and very competitively priced.”

The Capitol Visitor Center Gift Shops opened in December 2008 when the Visitor Center opened to the public, and as a key component of the overall visitor experience, the Gift Shops’ unique product assortment is focused on the rich history of the U.S. Capitol and the U.S. Congress. Many of the products are developed exclusively for the Gift Shops, and all of the products offered for sale are made in the United States.

Best-selling items that appeal to visitors are pencils, replicas of historical documents such as the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution and collectable coins, while during the holiday season they see a shift toward gift items like ornaments, books on the history of Congress and the building of the Capitol and home décor products.

“We continually work to develop and refine our product selection,” said Susan Sisk, general manager, U.S. Capitol Visitor Center Gift Shops. “To assist us in doing so, we have hosted two Small Business Industry Days to seek out small businesses that are making unique products that we could offer in our gift shops.”

Small Business Industry Days include information sessions hosted by the U.S. Small Business Administration about making the most of government certifications and another led by Architect of the Capitol (AOC) staff about the AOC’s procurement process.

There also are one-on-one “breakout sessions,” and small business owners are provided with a networking opportunity where they can speak with representatives of some of the prime contractors who are currently under contract with the AOC.

“The fact is that there are many companies that provide products at very competitive rates and some are even cheaper than sourcing from overseas,” Reiser said. “It may take a little more time and research to find these companies, but they are out there and they are ready to do business.”

Reiser would know, as Made in USA Certified Inc. is a leader in third party, independent, non-partisan certification for the claims “Made in USA”, “Product of USA” and “Service in USA.” Consumers looking to buy American can identify products by the recognizable seal, and companies that have gone through the audit process and have successfully become certified then have the ability to use the seals as a powerful marketing and branding tool.

Domestic Demand
And according to a 2010 Harris Poll, researchers found that more than 60 percent of American consumers want to purchase products made in the United States.

“It’s important for tourists to take a true piece of America home with them when they visit an American landmark/destination,” said Allison Hamilton, marketing manager for ChemArt. “As ABC reported, if every one of us spent an extra $3.33 on U.S.-made goods every year, it would create nearly 10,000 new jobs in this country. We all need to unite as a country and focus on growing the U.S. economy, and this starts with supporting American made products.”

Since its inception in 1976, ChemArt has chosen to keep production in the United States to ensure that their products live up to the high-quality standards that customers know and expect. As the official manufacturer of the annual White House Christmas ornament, they take pride in the fact that all of their products are handmade in America.

All product packaging, print advertisements, trade show booth signage and any other means of promoting business have “Made in the USA” branded on them, and they offer several display units and small metal “Handmade in the USA” signs that retailers can display in front of the products. In addition, they’re also members of American Made Matters, a company with a mission to educate consumers that buying U.S.-made products strengthens the economy.

“A strong manufacturing base is vital to our economy, communities and society,” said Don Rongione, president and CEO of Bollman Hat Company and founder of American Made Matters. “Research tells us that for every one manufacturing job, there are four to five supporting jobs. This is more powerful than any segment of the economy.”

Rongione said it’s a common misconception that American-made products are always more expensive than their imported counterparts. While that may be true in some cases, in many cases it is not.

“Quality, durability, reliability and safety of American-made products in addition to the benefit to our people, our economy and our environment are important factors for consumers to consider,” Rongione said. “A satisfied customer will become loyal to a brand or a retailer. When a product does not last beyond a few uses, that loyalty is threatened.”

Quality Choices
Bob Harju of Pumpernickel Press agrees, as when he and his wife began the company in 1998, they made a commitment to produce and package their cards in the U.S. using materials that are made only in the U.S. Harju said this gave them the assurance and satisfaction that every phase of the manufacturing of their product is helping people in America with work.

“I don’t think it’s that great of a cost difference, especially since the labor costs have been raised offshore, and I hear more complaints about products made offshore than I hear of the cost being a factor,” Harju said. “My opinion is that U.S. consumers are beginning to be very particular about the products they buy and about supporting our economy. If we all start making and selling products that are made in the U.S., there will be more jobs, more retailers, more buyers and a healthier country.”

If customers complain about cost, Todd Lipscomb, founder of MadeinUSAForever.com, suggests reminding them that these are American institutions that are proud to sell what Americans make with their own hands.

“Not only is the quality better and will last years longer, but is not much more meaningful to know that this was made with pride by an American earning a living wage,” Lipscomb said. “Some may still complain, but many others will thank them for it. The alternative is just another chintzy big-box store, which is as much a part of the problem as the solution.”

Hamilton agreed, saying that price point will always be a heavy factor for some retailers, but that they’ve learned that many customers are willing to pay a premium for products made in the U.S.

“The products are of higher quality, turnaround times are much quicker, shipping is much easier/cheaper and any problems with orders are much easier to solve,” she said. “Buying American helps to ensure that jobs with fair wages continue to be available to us and for future generations.”

Lipscomb added that those that are the caretakers of our nation’s history and national treasures have a special place in our society. The gift shop can be a shining beacon that we do still make things and that “Made in USA” is still meaningful.

And in the end, you truly get what you pay for.

Looking Local

In addition to a limited directory on their site (http://www.usa-c.com) of Made in USA Certified companies that have gone through their proprietary supply chain audit, Made in USA Certified, Inc. has also partnered with several directories that have more extensive lists of companies:

www.digusout.com
www.made-in.us.com
www.madebyus.com
www.madeusafdn.org
www.howtobuyamerican.com
www.madeinusaforever.com