[an error occurred while processing this directive]
Spacer
SEARCH
Spacer
NEWS CENTER
Spacer

August 2007

Home page
Current Issue
Past issues
Daily Headlines
Virginia Ideas
Editor's Blog
Spacer
TOP FEATURES
Spacer
Business Calendar
Virginia's Wealthiest
List of Leaders
Fantastic 50
Legal Elite
Super CPAs
Maritime Guide
Business Guide
Spacer
MARKET RESEARCH
Spacer
Business Libraries
Regional Guides
Spacer
CLASSIFIEDS
Spacer
Jobs
VACommercial
Executive Services
Spacer
CONTACT US
Spacer
Contact Us
Advertise With us
Planning Calendar
Subscribe
Spacer

Return to Virginia Business - January 2005

Regional report


Startup finds a profitable niche in consolidating industry

by Donna C. Gregory
Virginia Business

January 2005

Seventeen months without a paycheck is not a risk many people would take to start a business. But that time of uncertainty didn’t deter three former employees of Reynolds Metals Co. from finding a niche in the fast-consolidating aluminum extrusion industry. By focusing exclusively on selling to metal suppliers instead of end users, Service Center Metals has grown from a small startup in Prince George County to a company that expects to see more than $40 million in revenue next year.

READER RESOURCES
Related story: Gateway Region sticks to its roots

READER REACTION

Feedback: Comment on this story

The secret to SCM’s rapid growth is found in its name. SCM supplies metal service centers with extruded aluminum products, which are then sold to everyone from mom-and-pop machine shops to major corporations like Boeing and General Motors.

In an industry that has recently experienced mass consolidation, SCM has captured the attention of wholesale aluminum suppliers nationwide who are feeling a squeeze on profit margins. “There are less selections,” says Bruce Yarde, co-owner of Connecticut-based Yarde Metals, one of SCM’s major customers. “Service Center Metals brings an independent into the realm of competition, and usually competition will keep the pricing competitive.”

SCM’s primary competitors are large, integrated aluminum manufacturers that make a wide variety of products. “As a result, they have large corporate staffs and the related overhead expenses,” says Chip Dollins, SCM’s vice president of operations. “To compete in the soft alloy extrusion market, you don’t need that kind of overhead. In addition to high overhead costs, most, if not all, of our competitors operate older plants that are not designed for small batches and high production rates.”

All former employees of Reynolds Metals Co. — the Richmond-based aluminum company that was acquired by Alcoa Inc. in 2000 — Dollins, Randy Weis and Scott Kelley saw an opportunity in the consolidation trend to create a company with a focus on quality, cost and service. “We wanted to start a whole new culture without the baggage associated with an existing facility,” says Kelley, SCM’s president.
The strategy, which forced the three men into months of uncertainty, has paid off. SCM turned an operational profit within seven months of producing its first aluminum billet in July 2003.

The uses for aluminum extrusions are nearly limitless, says Kelley, who likens SCM’s plant to a large Play-Doh factory. Raw aluminum logs are fed into a furnace, which heats them to 900 degrees. Utilizing 3,100 tons of pressure, SCM’s press can then compress the softened aluminum into about 400 shapes. The aluminum is cooled, cut to size, straightened, and aged in an oven. After it cools, it’s ready to ship.

“We’ve been able to sell everything we’ve made since we’ve been here. Next year, we’ll ship about 30 million pounds,” says Kelley. The company’s extrusions are used primarily in the machinery, electrical and transportation markets.

But success did not come without some challenges; namely, finding investors in 2001 who would sink capital into a new manufacturing venture when the industry as a whole was declining. After several failed attempts to secure capital, the company founders scaled down their initial business proposal, and in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and the technology bust, investors finally saw the project’s validity.

Eager to recruit industry, Prince George County’s enterprise zone enticed the partners to locate Service Center Metals’ plant in the SouthPoint Business Park. “We were able to get state funding, which was critical,” Kelley says. SouthPoint’s developer signed on to become an equity partner in the company and offered a turnkey design for the new facility.

The business park’s location was a key selling point. “From a logistics standpoint, this is a great area,” says Kelley, referring to SouthPoint’s proximity to Interstates 85, 95 and 64.

The availability of a knowledgeable metals work force was another factor that helped Prince George beat out other competing localities in Tennessee and North Carolina. “There is a tremendous amount of aluminum talent in Richmond because of the presence of Reynolds Metals. This is a real asset to a startup company,” says Weis, Service Center Metals’ vice president of sales and marketing.

Return to Virginia Business - January 2005


Virginia Business Online | Contact Us | E-mail the editor

VirginiaBusiness.com is part of the GatewayVa network.

©2007, Media General Operations Inc., publisher of Virginia Business.
Use of this website is subject to certain terms and conditions.