• Everyone who
    reads this and views this video,
    put this on your blog and/or e-mail it to your
    friends.

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    Someone’s got to know something about this missing 15 year-old teenager.
  • It’s truly amazing what you can find on the Internet.

    For those of
    you who are curious about the process that Service Point Solutions will be
    going through – if SP continues to fail to reach a debt-payment or
    debt-restructuring agreement with its lending group – please take a look at the
    information in the document I’ve linked to this blog-post.
    The document
    I’ve linked to is very easy to read and understand – and it is in English!
    Link:

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  • In the past two days, I put up two different posts about recent developments with Service Point Solutions.  So, this post is the third in this recent series of posts.

    Text from document filed with Bolsa Stock
    Exchange, document filing date: 31 de Octubre de 2013
    In Spanish:
    Por la presente, SERVICE POINT SOLUTIONS,
    S.A. pone en su conocimiento, a los efectos de dar cumplimiento a lo
    establecido en el artículo 82 de la Ley 24/1988, del Mercado de Valores y
    disposiciones concordantes el siguiente
    HECHO RELEVANTE
    Que la sociedad Inmouno, S.L., representada
    por D. José Antonio Moratiel, tras la venta de la totalidad de sus acciones de
    la compañía con fecha 25 de octubre de 2013, ha presentado su renuncia al cargo
    de Consejero de SERVICE POINT SOLUTIONS, S.A. en fecha 28 de octubre de 2013.
    Asimismo, les informamos de que D. Jimmie
    Holmberg presentó renuncia a su cargo de Consejero de
    SERVICE POINT SOLUTIONS, S.A en fecha 24 de
    octubre de 2013.
    Sin otro particular, aprovechamos la ocasión
    para enviarles un cordial saludo.
    Google-Translate translation into
    English:
    Hereby,
    SERVICE POINT SOLUTIONS, SA brought to its attention, in order to give compliance
    with the provisions of Article 82 of Law 24/1988, the Securities and provisions
    Matching the
    following
    FACT
    That Inmouno society, SL, represented by D.
    José Antonio Moratiel, after the sale of the entire Company shares dated
    October 25, 2013, has resigned the post of Counselor SERVICE POINT SOLUTIONS,
    SA as of October 28, 2013.
    We also inform that D. Jimmie Holmberg
    presented resigns as Director of
    SERVICE POINT SOLUTIONS, SA on October 24,
    2013.
    Without
    further ado, take this opportunity to send a cordial greeting.
     – – –
    – – – – – – –
    Text from document filed with Bolsa Stock
    Exchange, document filing date: 25 de Octubre de 2013
    In Spanish:
    Por la presente, SERVICE POINT SOLUTIONS,
    S.A. pone en su conocimiento, a los efectos de dar cumplimiento a lo
    establecido en el artículo 82 de la Ley 24/1988, del Mercado de Valores y
    disposiciones concordantes el siguiente:
    HECHO RELEVANTE
    Como complemento del Hecho relevante remitido
    en el día de ayer en el que anunciamos que las entidades financieras (Lloyds
    Bank, GE Capital, IKB, Calyon, KBC, Deutsche Bank y Banco Sabadell) titulares
    del préstamo sindicado de Service Point Solutions han rechazado las ofertas
    aportadas hasta la fecha, queremos aclarar que, tal y como se acordó con las
    propias entidades financieras, las soluciones aportadas para recapitalizar la
    compañía iban encaminadas a la recompra del 100% de la deuda en condiciones
    favorables para la compañía, facilitando a las entidades su completa y
    definitiva desvinculación del proyecto, dejando a SPS sin deuda estructural.
    Teniendo en cuenta la mejora en su situación
    operativa, el plan de negocio claro y factible presentado en la última Junta
    General de Accionistas y las favorables condiciones del mercado bursátil, la
    compañía finalmente optó por presentar dos ofertas basadas en sendas
    ampliaciones de capital. La primera de ellas contaba con el apoyo de un grupo
    industrial que garantizaría la suscripción del 60% de la ampliación,
    convirtiéndose en un accionista relevante para el grupo debiendo la compañía
    acudir al mercado para la suscripción del 40% restante, implicando la compra de
    la totalidad de la deuda con dichas entidades por importe de 15 millones de
    euros. La segunda proponía que la ampliación fuera totalmente suscrita por el
    mercado, contemplando lógicamente, un mayor precio para los bancos por la
    recompra de su deuda, ya que incluía el mencionado pago de 15 millones de euros
    más un importe variable mínimo de 5 millones de euros.
    Con el objeto de defender los intereses de
    sus accionistas, acreedores y empleados la compañía está trabajando en la
    presentación de una nueva oferta que permita acercarse a las posiciones de los
    bancos y que mejore claramente su alternativa actual de vender activos.
    La compañía tiene previsto informar el
    mercado en cuanto se tengan noticias acerca de este proceso.
    Atentamente,
    Service Point Solutions, S.A.
    Google-Translate translation into
    English:
    Hereby,
    SERVICE POINT SOLUTIONS , SA brought to its attention , for the purposes of
    complying with the provisions of Article 82 of Law 24/1988 , Stock Market and
    related provisions as follows:
    FACT
    Complementing
    the Significant referred to yesterday in which we announced that financial
    institutions ( Lloyds Bank, GE Capital , IKB , Calyon , KBC , Deutsche Bank and
    Banco Sabadell ) syndicated loan holders have rejected Service Point Solutions
    offers provided to date, we want to clarify that , as agreed with financial
    institutions themselves , the solutions to recapitalize the company were
    directed to repurchase 100 % of the debt on favorable terms for the company,
    entities facilitating their complete and final separation from the project ,
    leaving no structural debt SPS .
    Given the
    improvement in its operating status , the business plan clear and feasible
    presented at the last Annual General Meeting and favorable stock market
    conditions , the company finally decided to submit two bids based on two
    capital . The first one had the support of an industrial group that would
    guarantee the subscription of 60 % of the expansion , becoming a shareholder in
    the group relevant to the company must go to the market for the acquisition of
    40% , involving the purchase of the entire debt with these entities in the
    amount of 15 million euros. The second proposed that the extension was fully
    subscribed by the market , looking logically , a higher price for banks to
    repurchase its debt , as mentioned included the payment of 15 million euros
    plus a variable amount at least 5 million euros .
    In order to defend the interests of its
    shareholders , creditors and employees the company is working on the
    presentation of a new offer that allows positions to approach banks and improve
    current alternative clearly sell assets.
    The company plans to inform the market as
    soon as you have news about
    this
    process .
    Sincerely,

    ALEX
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    Service
    Point Solutions, SA
  • Reuter’s corrected an earlier article; here’s the article
    Reuter’s corrected:
    Thu Oct 31,
    2013 3:25am EDT
    (In
    Oct 24 story, corrects net loss for H1 in 7th paragraph to 834,000 euros, not
    834 million euros)
    Oct
    24 (Reuters) – Indebted Spanish printing company Service Point Solutions SA has
    applied for creditor protection, it said on Thursday, after talks with its
    lenders failed.
    The
    company said earlier on Thursday it was talking to creditors after banks
    rejected its proposals to buy back debt and that it had not ruled out applying
    for protection from creditors.
    Service
    Point, which operates in several countries including Britain, the United States
    and the Netherlands, is the latest company in Spain to find itself on
    the edge of insolvency since banks
    tightened credit in the wake of a housing bust five years ago.
    “The
    company will continue working to reach an agreement that will allow the
    restructuring of its balance sheet to protect shareholders, creditors and
    employees,” Service Point said in a statement.
    Spain’s
    stock market regulator, the CNMV, earlier suspended trading in the group’s
    shares, which had fallen 7.4 percent on Thursday to 0.37 euros, valuing the
    company at around 65 million euros ($90 million), according to Thomson Reuters
    data.
    Shares
    in Service Point, which has 111 million euros ($153 million) of debt, have
    fallen close to 90 percent since 2007 highs of 3.2 euros.
    The
    company reported a net loss of 834,000 euros for the first half of 2013.
    Service Point took several steps to support the business, including changing
    the management team in Britain, which brings in a quarter of sales and exiting France, and said the
    second half of the year would look brighter.
    Last
    week Spanish white goods company Fagor filed for protection from creditors,
    while also trying to refinance debt.
    The
    number of insolvencies to end-September in Spain rose 27 percent to 6,582
    compared with 2012, according to ratings agency Axesor.

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    Service
    Point said it would inform the market when it had news on the process.
    ($1=0.7245 euros) (Reporting by Clare Kane; Editing by David Cowell and Greg
    Mahlich)
  • Article(s) found on http://www.reuters.com
    “Updated” article:
    Thu Oct 24,
    2013 1:49pm EDT
    Spain’s Service Point
    applies for creditor protection
    Oct
    24 (Reuters) – Indebted Spanish printing company Service Point Solutions SA has
    applied for creditor protection, it said on Thursday, after talks with its
    lenders failed.
    The
    company said earlier on Thursday it was talking to creditors after
    banks rejected its proposals to buy back debt and that it had not ruled out
    applying for protection from creditors.
    Service
    Point, which operates in several countries including Britain, the United States
    and the Netherlands, is the latest company in
    Spain to find itself on the edge of
    insolvency since
    banks tightened credit in the wake of a housing bust five years ago.
    “The
    company will continue working to reach an agreement that will allow the
    restructuring of its balance sheet to protect shareholders, creditors and
    employees,” Service Point said in a statement.
    Spain’s
    stock market regulator, the CNMV, earlier suspended trading in the group’s
    shares, which had fallen 7.4 percent on Thursday to 0.37 euros, valuing the
    company at around 65 million euros ($90 million), according to Thomson Reuters
    data.
    Shares
    in Service Point, which has 111 million euros ($153 million) of debt, have
    fallen close to 90 percent since 2007 highs of 3.2 euros.
    The
    company reported a net loss of 834 million euros for the first half of 2013.
    Service Point took several steps to support the
    business,
    including changing the management team in Britain, which brings in a quarter of
    sales and exiting
    France, and said the second half of the year would look brighter.
    Last
    week Spanish white goods company Fagor filed for protection from creditors,
    while also trying to refinance debt.
    The
    number of insolvencies to end-September in Spain rose 27 percent to 6,582
    compared with 2012, according to ratings agency Axesor.
    Service
    Point said it would inform the market when it had news on the process.
    ($1=0.7245 euros) (Reporting by Clare Kane; Editing by David Cowell and Greg
    Mahlich)
    ??– – – – – – – – – – –
    Below is the first article that
    Reuters published about SP
    MADRID | Thu Oct 24, 2013 11:21am EDT
    Spain’s Service Point in
    last-ditch creditor talks
    Oct 24 (Reuters) – Spanish print company Service
    Point Solutions S.A. said on Thursday it was still talking to creditors after banks
    rejected its proposals to buy back debt and that it had not ruled out applying
    for protection from creditors.
    Service
    Point, which operates in several countries including Britain, the United States
    and the Netherlands, is the latest company in Spain to find itself on
    the edge of insolvency since banks
    tightened credit in the wake of a housing bust five years ago.
    “The
    company is continuing conversations today to find a refinancing solution with
    the banks and at the same time is analysing the possibility of starting
    pre-insolvency proceedings for Service Point Solutions S.A.’s holding
    company,” the firm said in a stock market notice.
    Spain’s
    stock market regulator, the CNMV, earlier suspended trading in the group’s
    shares, which had fallen 7.4 percent on Thursday to 0.37 euros.
    Shares
    in Service Point, which has 111 million euros ($153 million) of debt, have
    fallen close to 90 percent since 2007 highs of 3.2 euros.
    The
    company reported a net loss of 834 million euros for the first half of 2013.
    Service Point took several steps to support the business, including
    changing the management team in Britain, which brings in a quarter of sales and
    exiting France, and said the
    second half of the year would look brighter.
    Last
    week Spanish white goods company Fagor filed for protection from creditors,
    while also trying to refinance debt.

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    The number
    of insolvencies to end-September in Spain rose 27 percent to 6,582 compared
    with 2012, according to ratings agency Axesor. ($1 = 0.7256 euros) (Reporting
    by Clare Kane; Editing by David Cowell)
  • August 29, 2013

    Barton Malow Wins the Paperless Award at 2013 Bluebeam eXtreme Conference

    Bluebeam Paperless AwardSouthfield, MI –– August 27, 2013— Barton Malow Company was recently awarded the Paperless Award for the Cox Hall Kitchen Renovation project at Emory University at the 2013 Bluebeam eXtreme Conference in Los Angeles, California on August 2, 2013.
    The Barton Malow project team used Bluebeam Revu on all aspects of the project, including: RFIs, Submittals, Commissioning, Closeout and Punchlist. Bluebeam Revu helped the project team to complete the project on time while under the University’s strict summer renovation schedule. By mandating that everyone use Revu and providing access to digital documents via Studio Projects, Barton Malow was able to achieve a completely paperless jobsite.
    “Bluebeam made the entire team more successful by proving the ability to collaborate effectively with each other in real-time and it empowered the team to have the knowledge they needed to make immediate decisions the field,” said Jason McFadden, Project Manager.
    You can hear more about our use of Bluebeam on the Emory University Cox Hall Kitchen project by watching our YouTube video.
    Pictured: Barton Malow team members accepting the Paperless Award, Jason McFadden, Project Manager and Dana Burzo, Barton Malow LEAPs Intern.
    About Barton Malow Company
    Barton Malow Company provides construction services for a variety of delivery methods as well as capabilities to increase safety, quality and productivity through the ability to self-perform trades and technology. Leading the North American region as one of the top performing contractors in market specialties such as education, energy, federal, healthcare, industrial and manufacturing and special event facilities, our vision is to build People, Projects and Communities.
    We build innovative solutions through engaging in technology like Building Information Modeling (BIM) and unique contracting methods like integrated project delivery (IPD) applied to our work everyday. Our team includes over 1,200 people throughout 13 offices and is headquartered in Southfield, Michigan. Annual revenues exceed $1 billion.
    Barton Malow is an equal opportunity employer. For more information, please visit us atwww.bartonmalow.com and follow us on Twitter @bartonmalow.
  • NRI
    is teaming up with ArchitectureBoston Expo 2013 to present its first ever 3D
    Model Contest, the winners of which will be showcased at the event’s 3D
    Printing Pavilion, November 19-21.
    Architects are invited
    to enter the contest.
    HERE’S HOW THE CONTEST WORKS:  Design a Boston Waterfront
    Performance Venue according to the specifications below, and submit a 3D
    detailed or massing model (.stl file).
    Our esteemed co-judges — Sasaki Associates’ Chris Coscia, BIM Coordinator,
    Senior Associate and Arrowstreet’s
    Matthew Rice, AIA, LEED AP BD+C, MCPPO, Senior
    Associate — will select four finalists, whose models will be 3D printed and
    displayed at the ABX 3D Printing Pavilion, where attendees will cast their
    votes for the winning design.
    THEME:  Boston Waterfront Performance Venue
    CONTEST:  Design an original, innovative music venue on the
    Boston waterfront
    JUDGING CRITERIA:  Originality, creativity and vision
    DEADLINE:  October 27th by 10PM
    PRIZE:  Four
    finalists will have their models on display at the ABX 3D Printing Pavilion.
    Finalists will be awarded their models after the event. The winner of the
    contest will also a receive a $1,500 credit prize toward a 3D printed model of
    their choice.
    CONTEST RULES:
      
    Each entrant can submit multiple designs. There is no limit.
      
    NRI will accept designs from massing models to detailed models.
    No renderings or elevations will be accepted.
      
    Designs must be original and the property of the entrant.
      
    Submit a 3D conceptual or detailed design as an .stl file. No
    renderings or drawings will be accepted. The files must be print ready, and
    scaled to print size for consideration. For more information on file
    preparation, click here.
      
    Maximum model size is 10″ x 14″ x 8″.
      
    All files must be submitted by 10PM on October 27th.
      
    There will be a blind judging by two Boston architects to get to
    the final four.
      
    There will be four finalists whose printed model will be
    displayed in the 3D Printing Pavilion at ABX.

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    ABX attendees will vote on their favorite design displayed at
    the 3D Printing Pavilion and a winner along with the three honorable mentions
    will be announced on November 21st.
  • This article appeared in “Greater Charlotte Biz” in June 2012, but I’m just now coming across this article and thought I’d share it with those who visit the Repro 101 Blog.


    I’ve known of TPM since the mid 1970’s.  TPM has long had an outstanding reputation in the reprographics industry.  TPM is a leading example of how a successful business stays successful by continuously reinventing itself …. staying ahead of the curve, so to speak.

     TPM is the acronym for The Print Machine, but the company has grown far beyond its original scope and footprint.


         Jerry Cooper founded TPM in Greenville, S.C., in 1973. For almost 40 years now, the company has been providing printing solutions as well as software service and support for architects, engineers, contractors (AEC) and manufacturers, and has grown to four offices, first expanding toColumbia, S.C., thenCharlotte and, most recently, Raleigh.
         Today, TPM provides digital solutions through four strategic divisions. The AEC division provides architects, engineers and contractors the full line of Autodesk software solutions including training, support, and implementation. The Manufacturing division focuses on SolidWorks software solutions and technical support, training, and implementation.
         The Printing Solutions division brings the latest in print technologies and document management solutions to businesses including copiers, scanners, plotters, and 3D printers, as well as service. The TPM Color Lab is the Carolina’s largest provider of large format graphics specializing in fabric applications, trade show displays and hardware, vehicle graphics, flatbed printing, and indoor/outdoor signage.
    Reproducing With Success
         Jerry Cooper had always been an entrepreneur and people-person at heart. Daughter Kasey Cooper Fay, now in charge of TPM’s business development, describes him by saying, “My dad can meet you one time and you’ll feel like you’ve known him for 20 years.”
         In his early days as a draftsman at Fluor Daniel, Cooper felt he could do bigger things. As a matter of fact, he often thought about starting his own business.
         “I was basically sitting in a cubicle drawing everyday, but I knew I needed something more,” says Cooper. “Being in the engineering environment, I was familiar with the reprographic industry and knew that there weren’t a lot of people in the market doing reprographics.”
         Cooper saw it as a huge opportunity, so it wasn’t surprising, in 1973, when he struck out on his own as The Print Machine (later in the ’90s shortening it to TPM).
         He smiles as he remembers how he started out in a small building “with only $700, his mother’s bread cabinet as a desk, and one blueprint machine.” In the beginning, Cooper focused on providing drafting supplies and blueprints to architects and engineers. As the industry began changing, he made a point of looking for the new and innovative solutions to bring to his customers.
         By the late ’80s, TPM was undergoing a shift in business, as computers revolutionized the drafting and design industry. Cooper could see that tasks done by hand were being automated. He had to decide whether or not to take a risk on a CAD (computer-aided design) package and basically put a warehouse full of supplies by the wayside. And so he did, and TPM became an Autodesk Authorized Reseller to the AEC industry.
         “Anything that needs a design, pretty much uses CAD software. Software is the core of our business. We sell it, and we have certified engineers on staff that train all of our customers and assist with proper implementation,” Cooper notes.
         In the 1990s, TPM branched out further, becoming a SolidWorks Authorized Reseller which brought 3D CAD solutions to the manufacturing and industrial markets. As the manufacturing space continues to automate, TPM is helping companies optimize their designs and workflow by combining the SolidWorks suite of products with 3D printing technologies.
         In 2000, TPM opened their color graphics division, known as the Color Lab. “A lot of reprographics shops saw color as the next wave of revenue for them, and we wanted to stay on top of it—trade shows, vehicle wraps, building wraps, or almost anything you can think of—we can print in-house,” Cooper says.
         “TPM’s Color Lab is the Carolina’s largest provider of large-format graphics specializing in fabric applications, trade show displays and hardware, vehicle graphics, flatbed printing, and indoor/outdoor signage,” adds Fay.
         Some TPM Color Lab examples include the silos off South Boulevard, two large building wraps for Charlotte Area Transit System, as well as multiple fabric and tractor trailer wrap projects in the NASCAR industry.
    Enlarging the Original
         TPM has always been a family-owned and family-run operation for the Coopers and they believe that has been an important element to its success. So, when they decided to extend their footprint into Charlotte, embracing another family-run business made sense.
        Forrest Kenley Sr. had founded A&E Printing and Graphics (originally A&E Reprographics) on South Boulevard in Charlotte in 1982. A&E specialized in reprographics, printer sales and service, color/graphic solutions, and AEC products including OCE, Canon and HP wide format plotters, service and supplies.
         Forrest Kenley Jr. had helped out in the family business as a youngster and formally joined ranks with his father in 1989 after graduating college.
         “We’d talked with a number of different companies, but before TPM came along, nothing ever seemed to click,” Kenley Sr. remarks.
         A healthy regard and professional friendship between Cooper and Kenley Sr. helped speed the process along and in August of 2007, Cooper and Kenley Sr. consummated TPM’s acquisition of A&E, allowing TPM to bring its broad array of solutions to an already strong foothold in the Charlotte marketplace.
         Just recently TPM extended its reach even further with the establishment of a new office in Raleigh. TPM is leading with their manufacturing division in this new marketplace.
         As Fay describes it, “Our strategy is to identify opportunities in fast-growing new markets with significant growth potential that can benefit from the full array of TPM solutions.”
         Cooper adds, “We see Charlotte and Raleigh as hotbeds for technology with significant growth opportunities. That fits right in with TPM’s mission. There are some competitors of course, but none that offer the full array of solutions that we do.”
         At present, TPM has approximately 90-plus employees in total; 50 at the main office in Greenville, and 20 at each of their Columbia and Charlotte offices, with it being too early to tally the Raleigh headcount.
         As Cooper touts, “We’re small enough that no one’s face is going to be lost in a crowd, but we’re big enough to handle ambitious jobs for clients throughout the region.”
    All in the Family
         Carrying on the legacies that their parents built, Cooper’s daughter Fay and Kenley Sr.’s son Kenley Jr. work together to keep the ink flowing at TPM of Charlotte.
         Fay actively handles business development primarily from the headquarters office and Kenley Jr. manages in the Charlotte office.
         “I was raised that God was first, family was second, and TPM was third,” Fay recalls of her early days. “I don’t have any brothers and sisters, but I’ve always joked that TPM is my big brother.”
         “I remember my dad giving me my first time card when I was four years old,” she boasts, making a light-hearted joke about child labor laws. “I’ve never wanted to do anything else: I’ve always loved working for my dad since day one.”
         Fay never strayed too far from home, attending college at Clemson Universitywhere she majored in management and entrepreneurship.
         Kenley Jr. has similar fond memories of his father’s legacy at A&E: “I learned a lot every night at the dinner table. My mom worked in the business, so we talked about it all the time. I very much respected how my dad ran the business; I try to follow in his example in managing and working with customers.”
         Kenley Jr., a Charlotte native, attended Wingate University, and echoes Fay’s sentiments about working in the family business.
         “I always knew I wanted to work with my father; I was very proud of what he accomplished. I miss having him around the office. Like Mr. Cooper, he just ran a great business—he cared about his employees and his customers above all else, and I think that’s why they were both so successful over the years,” says Kenley Jr.
    Developing Charlotte
         TPM had acquired the Charlotte operations right before the economic crash in the fall of 2008. “We had also started our Canon division around that time, so it was certainly an interesting year,” Fay comments.
         Even with the turbulence of the economy, the acquisition was more than beneficial for TPM. With the decline in the reprographics industry, A&E wanted to modernize and expand operations but needed resources to get there; TPM wanted to expand its presence in the marketplace and tap into the Charlottemarket.
         “We were in a complementary situation to A&E. We were seeking to expand our business footprint, and it seemed like the logical move to come together,” comments Todd Brown, TPM’s vice president. “It was a perfect fit for us to come toCharlotte, to tap into the customer base and bring in new technologies. We also had similar business philosophies.”
         “Knowing we had Forrest Jr. running our day-to-day operations gave us the confidence we could grow in a large market with someone we could trust and who always has the best interest of the company at heart,” says Fay.
         “The Charlotte operation had an established customer base with strong relationships that we could leverage for growth. There are probably more architects in Charlotte than all of South Carolina, so that was a very valuable customer base to plug into. It was exactly what we wanted to do,” Fay adds.
         For Kenley Jr., the transformation was also significant. “I’d never worked for anyone other than my dad. That was an adjustment, but now that we’ve been in this for a while, it’s really as comfortable as it was when it was just me and my dad,” he says.
         Being able to serve not only the Carolinas but also extend into some parts ofGeorgia as a united front has greatly benefited TPM.
         “We’re hoping to have a breakout year; we just had our best quarter in five years,” Brown says.
         TPM’s Canon division is a newer venture and reason for some of their enthusiasm.
         “Canon represents a different kind of marketplace for us. Every business needs a printer and a copier and now, even a scanner. We’ve always been very targeted, in very niche markets. Canon has opened up relationship-building on a much broader playing field offering products built to the same standards we strive for in our other operations. They are unsurpassed in their color reproduction and innovation,” comments Fay.
         TPM’s emphasis on family and personal relationships carries over in their customer approach. Significant to the TPM strategy is encouraging their clients to get to know them on a more personal basis.
         “Come in and take a tour of our operations, have lunch with us. I’m confident that once prospective clients get to know us face-to-face, they’ll want to do business with us,” Kenley Jr. says.
         “What we want people to know about our business is that we’re truly solution-based. We’re about establishing relationships and doing what’s right for the customer, which is pretty much how we’ve operated since day one,” Fay says.
         Going forward, TPM constantly reassesses which sectors of their operations to expand, and how best to keep up with an ever shifting technology industry. “Deciding where to develop and expand is tough. Fortunately, as it is right now, business is picking up all the way across the board,” says Brown.
         Fay is confident TPM can keep up with the pace and thinks it’s part of the company’s spirit from the beginning: “A lot of people would have been hesitant to jump into the design software when my dad did, but he was a visionary, always on top of the latest technologies.”
         TPM’s offerings are both diverse and dynamic. Still, the original proprietors keep a finger on the pulse of the business they’ve help create. Fay’s dad stays closely involved in the Greenville office and her husband Chris now handles general operations.
         Kenley Sr. hasn’t completely made his exit from the business either. His son jokes about his occasional cameo appearances in the Charlotte office: “He makes deliveries now and then and he drinks the coffee.”
  •  Blog Publisher’s comments:
    Mark Sirangelo, who heads Sierra Nevada’s Space unit, was the very first President of ReproCAD (way back before ReproCAD and MiniMAX merged to form ReproMAX). 
    After his stint with ReproCAD, Mark, in 1986, joined John Scher Zeller, Rich Heller and Joel Salus on Rowley-Scher Reprographics’ management team.  Mark’s final position with Rowley-Scher was President.  After leaving Rowley-Scher (around 1990), Mark went on to found PGI, a U.S.-based international meetings, convention and event planning company.  All of that was before Mark got involved in the “space industry.”
    While reprographics isn’t “rocket science”, it must have served as a good foundation for rocket science!

    Best wishes to Mark on his company’s pursuit of the NASA contract.

      – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 
          Oct 30, 2013, The Washington Post, BY
    JOEL ACHENBACH, joel.achenbach@washpost.com
    “Space plane flies but has a rough
    landing in test run”
    (Space plane)…..that could one day carry astronauts had
    a rough landing in its other wise smooth first test run. For the would-be
    spaceship named the Dream Chaser, everything on the first flight of a prototype
    went-perfectly — until the craft touched down, toppled on its side, skidded off
    the runway and wound up in the sand of the Mojave Desert.
    The unmanned test flight, conducted in hushed conditions
    Saturday at Edwards Air Force Base in Southern California, came to an inelegant
    end after the left landing gear failed to deploy properly.
    But the creator of the space plane, Sierra Nevada Corp.,
    which is hoping to win a NASA contract to carry astronauts to the international
    space station, found much to celebrate despite the rough landing. The vehicle,
    dropped by a helicopter at 12,500 feet, flew autonomously in a steep dive,
    pulled up perfectly and glided to the center line of the runway, the whole
    flight precisely by the book until the very end,
    Mark Sirangelo, head of Sierra Nevada’s space
    unit, said in a teleconference Tuesday.
    “We had a very successful day with an unfortunate
    anomaly at the end of the day on one of the landing gears,” Sirangelo said.
    Putting an even more positive spin on the floppy landing, he said, “Even the
    final ending, which did not roll out perfectly, provided some very valuable
    data for us as well.”
    Sierra Nevada has put out a video showing the flight,
    but the video cuts off just as the Dream Chaser is landing. Sirangelo said the
    company is unlikely to produce additional footage while the “anomaly” is being
    investigated.
    Sierra Nevada is perhaps the underdog in the competition
    to win the NASA contract to haul astronauts to the international space station.
    The company spent the good part of a decade developing the Dream Chaser, which
    looks like a miniature space shuttle. It would be launched atop an Atlas 5
    rocket. Like the shuttle, it is designed to glide back to Earth and land on a
    runway. It has not yet flown in space; the first such mission, unmanned, will
    probably take place in 2016, Sirangelo said.
    NASA’s “commercial crew” program has offered subsidies
    to Sierra Nevada along the way. According to NASA, Sierra Nevada had received
    $229.1 million in payments from NASA through the end of September under a
    series of agreements and contracts.
    Among the companies that have also received commercial
    crew subsidies are SpaceX and Boeing. SpaceX, founded by tycoon Elon Musk, is
    taking cargo to the space station and hopes to add astronauts to its manifest
    in the near future, and Musk is vocal about his desire to send people to Mars.
    Boeing is an aerospace giant for which human spaceflight is essentially a side
    business.
    Sierra Nevada, however, is more narrowly focused.
    “We’re not trying to land on the moon or Mars,”
    Sirangelo said earlier this year. “That’s not our mission. Our mission is to
    take over low Earth orbit so that NASA can go on and do something else.”
    Next year, NASA is expected to do a “down-select” in its
    commercial crew program and will presumably pick two companies to move forward.
    Officials have said they do not want to rely on a single provider. Congress in
    recent years has not funded the commercial crew program at the level requested
    by the administration. The goal is to have commercial rides to space by 2017,
    although NASA officials have said that could slip without full funding of the
    program.
    The space shuttle was retired in 2011. Currently, the
    only way U.S. astronauts can reach the space station, or return to Earth, is
    via Russian rockets.
    SpaceX and Boeing are developing crew capsules that
    would reenter the atmosphere the way Apollo capsules did nearly half a century
    ago, with the final descent slowed by parachutes. SpaceX would launch its
    capsule atop the company’s own rocket, the Falcon 9, while Boeing’s capsule
    would, like the Dream Chaser, ride atop an Atlas 5, the rocket owned by United
    Launch Alliance, a 50-50 joint venture of Boeing and Lockheed Martin.
  • Check out this video!

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