This year's Value-Added Award could be renamed the Survivor's Award for this Shreveport material handling equipment distributor.
Each year Material Handling
Management selects a member
of the Material Handling
Equipment Distributors Association (MHEDA, Vernon
Hills, Ill., www.mheda.org) to receive its
Value-Added Award. This year's honoree
is Nelson Equipment Company (NECI,
www.nelsonequipment.com) of Shreveport, La. Here's why.
NECI was founded in 1968 as a distributor for Clark Equipment by Jack Nelson.
In 1981, after the sale of the Clark line,
Mark Nelson restructured the company
to focus on other aspects of material handling systems and equipment. Today, the
company's focus is on conveying systems,
storage and retrieval systems, and dock
and door systems.
Recovering from the hurricane season of 2005 took vision, dedication, perseverance and skill. At a time when other
companies were going under, NECI
managed to stay afloat, keep
ADVERTISEMENT
|
its employees on the payroll and provide valuable services to its community.
"We're not a big company," says
Mark Nelson, president and son of the
founder, "so we all wear a lot of hats
and manage to have some fun along
the way." Nelson's enthusiasm for what
he does, along with his voice inflections
that reveal his Southern heritage, belie
much of the disaster created by hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
"The double whammy [Katrina on
August 29 and Rita September 24] displaced about 60% of the state's population," says Nelson. "So, of course our
whole market disappeared overnight."
Following hurricane Katrina, Nelson
was out of communication with all of his
employees for at least three days. As he
and his brother, Kurt Nelson, vice president, began to reestablish contact with
folks, the first thing they did was assure
all employees that they would not miss
a paycheck. He told them, after they got
themselves settled they'd all figure out
what Plan B should be.
"People had lost everything they had,"
he says, "so we wanted them to know
they'd have some money coming in, and
we'd work to relocate them to temporary
housing if need be."
He also knew there would be no new
equipment sales in the immediate future
for southern Louisiana. Nelson looked
around to see what the market needed
most. The only option was to re-invent
the company along the lines of service
and support. That became Plan B.
"We took on a lot of repair and maintenance work we might not otherwise
do," he says. "If we wanted to get back
to business as usual, we had to get our customers back into operation. We did
all the material handling kinds of things
we could find, and took on work outside
of the normal maintenance support."
This included work in the construction
field, he says.
The big picture
For people not hit by a major disaster
such as this, it's hard to imagine an entire
geographic area suddenly having no resources, technicians or support services.
People living in the hurricane-devastated
area were worried about their families
and personal property, first.
"Being north of the major disaster,
here in Shreveport, we were able to send
resources down [to New Orleans] to assist our customers, no matter what their
needs were," he says. Even those whose
physical property wasn't damaged, he
adds, didn't have enough people available to operate equipment.
"Ironically," says Nelson, "many of
our customers' buildings came through
okay, but their employees had moved out
ahead of the storm or had been wiped
out. That hurt them for months until the
first wave of people could return."
As it turned out, another part of Plan
B actually generated some more work for
the company. "We had some business just
starting in the northern part of the state
before the storms—some installs and things that needed doing," says Nelson.
"When we got organized, we moved everybody upstate and got to work. We also
told all of our employees, if they knew anyone with mechanical skills, we'd put them to work, too." In the end he provided
temporary jobs for 14 more people. Because these workers had lost their homes,
Nelson put them into motels during the
jobs he hired them for. This was at a time when many companies were just cutting
people loose.
Meanwhile, down south in New Orleans, it took about six weeks before Nelson
could get into his branch office to assess the damage. Much to his amazement,
when he got to the office, he discovered it
was bone dry while companies only two
blocks away were still under eight feet
of water. Nelson says he had better luck than a real disaster plan.
"We didn't have a disaster plan,"
he admits, "however we had been in
the process of relocating the New Orleans office at about that time and had
removed all the inventory, spare parts
and major assets to Shreveport while
we set up the new office. Luckily we
had a minimal amount of stuff in the
new office."
Show time!
While the opportunity may not arise
for every material handling distributors, the silver screen has become a new revenue stream for Nelson. No, he's not
waiting for an Emmy or an Oscar. Now,
however, when he goes to the movies
he hopes to see some thrilling conveyor
action or maybe a romantic scene featuring a lift table he recognizes. Okay,
such glimpses of equipment might not
be all that exciting to people outside
the material handling business. Focus
on this market has, however, generated
some much-needed cash at a time when
other revenue streams have been running dry.
Nelson explains. "The state [of Louisiana] has offered a lot of incentives to
movie and television companies to make
their movies down here. So when they
did, since we're basically nosey salesmen,
we began snooping around to see what
we might be able to learn and do."
What he learned was that the property
departments of the movie companies use
a lot of material handling equipment.
While the Hollywood folks might not be
very savvy about the technical aspects of
material handling equipment, Nelson
says they are able to explain what they
want the equipment to do.
"We started out loaning them equipment," Nelson says with a laugh, "but
quickly learned they'd rather buy the
equipment. When they're done shooting,
they sell the equipment at a premium
price as ‘movie memorabilia.' "
Who wouldn't want a few sticks of
Hytrol conveyor that Meg Ryan and Antonio Banderas leaned on in Homeland
Security? Or maybe a nice lift table that
Katie Holmes sat on in Mad Money. How
about anything Kevin Costner touched
while shooting the Coast Guard thriller,
The Guardian?
Nelson says the movie business has
also helped him generate a bit of cash
at home as well. His son applied to be an
extra in a movie, and when his wife went
to sign the permission papers, she got a
job as an extra, too.
Working with movie people is almost
like a salesman's dream, says Nelson.
"They walk around the community with
a giant shopping cart looking for specific
things to do a job, and they need it now.
Price is not even a consideration."
He tells the story of how the folks
from the Katie Holmes flick came in
looking for a lift table. After using it
for a while they decided that it did not
have enough "presence" in the picture
so they wanted something bigger. "We
provided them another size and they
said, as they walked out the door, ‘if this
looks good we'll be back for nine or 10
more,' " Nelson says, not trying to disguise the amazement in his voice.
While the movie business has been fun,
Nelson knows that there are a lot of serious
things that have happened in Louisiana in
the past couple of years. "When all's said and done," he says, "I think the signature of our success—say a decade from
now—will be that a lot of bigger and better companies did not survive the hurricanes, and we did."
|