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Last month, in December 2011, I presented my annual Tailwind Systems Manager of the Year 2012 award. This is usually the time that I put together an announcement for this publication. I usually say what I have to say and augment it with excerpts from the owner of the plant. They have always put in their 2 cents, so to speak.
Well, today is evidently my day off. The letter that I got from the owner of Quest Cleaners in Waltham, Massachusetts is so thorough, well written and professional that I submit it to all of you, unedited. It sounds like a cliché, but I truly could not have said it better myself. Ladies and gentlemen of the industry, I proudly present to you this year’s Tailwind Systems Manager of the Year, Ed Laffey.
Brian Meckel writes:
Don,
I am really excited to learn that you have chosen Ed Laffey
as the Tailwind Systems manager of the year. While I do not have the contact with the hundreds of operators each year
that you do, I can really say that I could not think of a better candidate for
this honor.
You asked me to write a story of why I feel that Ed is
deserving of this honor. In order to do
so, I must first start with a bit of history. Ed has had a history of at least four decades of running successful
small businesses. His family business
when growing up was the dry cleaning business. Although part of his career was spent starting, running, and selling
successful restaurants, I believe that he would consider his business passion
to be dry cleaning. Ed’s career in the
dry cleaning business involved taking over his family business, he also opened,
purchased, and sold many retail establishments over his four plus decade
career. I know what you are
thinking…four decades, shouldn’t this guy be living in Florida? That’s what I thought when I agreed to meet
him to discuss an open plant manager position at Quest Cleaners in
Waltham. In 2008, Ed sold his retail dry
cleaning business and planned to retire. Fortunately, for Quest, Ed became bored with retirement very quickly and
decided to look for opportunities within the industry he knew best.
Quest Cleaners is a business that I acquired in September of
2009 with my partner Mark Birchem. Mark
was operating two successful drop stores in greater Boston and we became
acquainted because of the desire of the former owners of Quest Cleaners looking
to sell, while I was seeking growth opportunities. Quest was Mark’s wholesale dry cleaning
provider. As anybody who has operated a
dry cleaning business in the greater Boston market without owning their own
plant knows, finding a good wholesaler can be a huge challenge. During this process, Mark and I identified a
need for a stable, quality dry cleaner to enter the hotel dry cleaning
business, so that is what we did.
As we began operating the Quest plant, we quickly realized
that the business needed a manager with the ability to drive quality and
profitability, and to lead the great people that worked in the business to
achieve success. In November of 2009, we
presented an offer to Ed Laffey to join our team in that capacity. Ed came on board and made continuous
improvements in quality, yet we were still lacking in the profitability
department. We understood that the sector
of the business that we were operating in had much thinner margins than the
typical dry cleaning business and that we had to do something to save on our
largest expense, labor. We investigated
all of the automated assembly systems that were on the market, but the
investment would have been considerable in order to attain the savings. I have always read the industry magazines,
and remembered the many stories that I read by Don Desrosiers over the years,
so I decided to contact him to see what his system could do prior to making a
large capital investment. The day that I
met with him I decided immediately to bring him in to implement the Tailwind
System. In hindsight, I definitely
should have included Ed in this discussion and decision as our plant manager.
Ed knew that we were going to make a major change to the
operation that he was in charge of about a week before the change was meant to
take effect. To say that he was worried
is an understatement. As any manager
would be, I’m sure he thinking, “why do they need a consultant when they have
me”.
Day one of our transition came, and Ed was cautiously
optimistic. While Ed has always had a
positive, can-do attitude, by the end of the first day he saw the benefits the
system would bring us and he was 100% on board with the implementation. The comment that Ed made that day, that I will
never forget, and the Don will want all of you to remember was, “wow, I wish I
knew about this system when I ran my business”. Since our transition, Ed has continued manage the plant to perform above
expectations, which has enabled us to raise our expectations and work towards
our overall business goal of continuous improvement.
The reason that Ed deserves this award is his ability to put
his many years of experience and knowledge aside and to recognize that just
because something worked in the past does not mean that there is not a better
way to do things today. Anybody that
says that you cannot teach an old dog new tricks has not had the pleasure to
meet Ed Laffey. Ed continued to exceed
both my and Don’s expectations after implementing the system and according to
Don, Ed’s results are in the top 1% of all plants that he has seen.
This all started back in 2009, today it is late 2011, and I,
as well as our partner Mark are proud to say that Ed Laffey is now our business
partner. Through his open mind to new
systems and his dedication to excellence, Ed has taken an ownership stake in
our firm.
Sincerely,
Brian Meckel, Quest Cleaners
I have said many times that the hardest people to sell on
the idea of the Tailwind System are the older folks. Those that have been around a long time and
have seen it all. When they finally see
and interact with the Tailwind System, they realize how special, how unique it
really is. They become the most devoted
diehard fans of the Tailwind System. Ed
Laffey personifies this. He struggled
daily running a busy plant that was hard pressed to make a profit. Enter Tailwind and he soon invested
considerable personal resources because he knew that it was the key to a
profitable company. Ed routinely
operates the drycleaning department at a stunning 20 pieces per labor hour and
the shirt department at an equally outstanding 30 PPLH. Very impressive. And since the point of the Tailwind System is
to run a smooth plant with the best possible quality and the lowest possible
labor cost, It is only logical that Ed Laffey, the manager of Quest Cleaners in
Waltham MA be the Tailwind Systems Manager of the Year for 2012.
Please join me in congratulating Ed Laffey and the Tailwind
Systems 2012 Manager of the Year.
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