HP HOME   Magazine Link Conference Link Subscribe Link Media Kit Link Contact Link Industry link
News & Information
HPU Blog
Back Issues
Industry News
IHPA News
Product Watch
Industry Profile
Calendar
Classifieds

Subsribe Today

Save 25% on our special introductory offer.

Subscribe today for only $14.99 per year.

 

HPmag | Magazine | Show Issue 2005 | Industry Profile

industry profile

A LEAGUE OF ITS OWN
With diversified product lines, target markets and the resources to serve its customers, MetalTech aims to stay ahead of the game.


HP: Please give a detailed description of your company and its history.
Steve Buzzella: MetalTech, Inc. was founded by R.W. Buzzella Sr. in 1957 as Fold-down Awnings, a retail awning company. As years went by he added other hurricane shutter products. As the demand for shutters softened, he focused more on patio enclosure products, outdoor furniture, etc. By 1969, this new wide range of products called for a new name, hence MetalTech, Inc.

In 1976 we started focusing on building our wholesale operation. By 1980 we had closed our retail operation and focused solely on supplying products to other retailers throughout the state. Hurricane Andrew in 1992 shifted our focus more on hurricane shutters and less on the patio products. We really embarked on an effort to become more of a hurricane products company. We eliminated some products and started widening our variety of
hurricane shutter products.

In 1993 R.W. Buzzella retired and four of his 10 sons carried on the family business. Over the next six years the company outgrew its 50,000-square-foot building. In 1999 the company split. Richard and I kept the building products side of the business, MetalTech, and have since grown the business beyond expectations.

Today with more than 80,000 square feet of manufacturing space, we are the largest manufacturer of hurricane shutters in the country, and as far as we know, the world.

HP: What hurricane protection products do you handle today?
Buzzella: MetalTech currently has 36 hurricane shutter product approvals. And we’re working on more!

We manufacture four different accordion shutters, three different rollups, seven different removable panel products—aluminum, steel and polycarbonate—three different Bahama shutters and three different Colonial shutters. Our customers have a choice.

We’re getting ready to bring our awning back to market, and we’re in testing right now with a new Bahama and a Colonial shutter that’s phenomenal.

HP: What is your approximate sales volume?
Buzzella: We hope to hit $20 million this year, and we’re well on our way.

The year 1999 had been the strongest for us in sales volume. The first three quarters of 2000 were even better. The last quarter of 2000 everything slowed down. In 2001 it was very depressed. We spent that year going to auctions and buying equipment. The years 2002 and 2003 we grew more than 26 percent while others were going bankrupt. Last year was a record year.

HP: Who are your customers? What parts of the country do you service?
Buzella: Our main focus is supplying products to hurricane protection contractors in Florida, but we’re all over the world. We’ve done shopping centers in Guam; we do a couple of resorts a year in the Caribbean Islands.

We have a contracting subsidiary, Advance Hurricane Protection, that still installs shutters in Dade and Broward counties, but we don’t go after the retail so much. Last year we decided to quit selling to production home builders. As far as manufacturing panels for the builder market, we’re very strong in that segment, as strong as anybody out there.

HP: How many salespeople do you employ?
Buzzella: Our sales team consists of four outside sales reps. One inside sales rep and our vice president, director of business development Frank Storms.

HP: Is your business computerized? Do you have a Web site and how is it used?
Buzzella: We have been computerized since before the Windows operating system came out. Right now we’re undergoing a software upgrade. We’re budgeting $130,000 for it.

Our new software will bring in bar coding. Orders being loaded on trucks will be scanned ensuring nothing is left off. We’ll be bar coding as we receive bundles of materials so that we can keep better inventory control.

Our Web site has our product approvals. They can be viewed and downloaded from the site. You can watch a 50 foot per second and an 80 foot per second impact video done right here in our test facility.

You can download our order forms from our Web site. With our new software, our dealers will be able to use their dealer code numbers and do their own order entry right online. They’ll be able to track their orders as well. We are taking a very aggressive approach to our software upgrade to better serve our customers.

HP: What are some of the key factors involved in your growth and success?
Buzzella: I’ve got to say it’s the team of people that we have. We have a philosophy: Hire the best people, make the best products, give the best value and service to your customers.
We have 150 employees. We have had a full-time engineer on staff for years and have our own research and development test canon.

HP: What are your strengths in the marketplace?

Buzzella: Diversity of product and diversity of markets that we’re in. We’re not just in the Florida market. We’re not just in the new construction market. We’re in all the different markets—you’ve got your high-rise market, you’ve got your single-family home market, you’ve got your builder market, consumer market, commercial market, resort market and the government market.

Of course, size matters as well as reputation, resources—we’re well funded and debt-free. That gives us the ability to do things that are a little bit more aggressive.

Then you’ve got service. Service, service, service—we try to drum that into our people. The product has to be clean, it has to be blemish-free, we have to get it there on time, we have to keep a smile on our face even when a customer is frustrated. We strive to keep our communication right and our service right.

HP: What distinguishes you from the competition?
Buzzella: For one, our brand name Maximum Impact™. But also our hard earned reputation, knowledge of the industry and diversification.

Take our HurcuLine Shutter, that handles an 80 foot per second impact, protecting the FEMA headquarters in Miami. We did the National Hurricane Center back in 1993. We are a Government Service Administration (GSA) contract holder with the federal government.

Again, right now anybody can get business. But before last year where was the business coming from? If you didn’t have a diversified product offering you were limited, and if you were in only one or two segments of the market you were limited. What we’ve always been able to do is appeal to different markets because it’s always hot somewhere.

HP: What trends and cycles do you see occurring in the industry? How is your business addressing them?
Buzzella: The shutter business gets hot, more companies spring up. As the demand softens the weak companies go out of business, the strong go to the auctions and buy up what’s left. After the state-shaking hurricane season last year the hurricane shutter business is going to be strong this year, and even if we don’t get a hurricane this year it’s going to be strong next year.

I’ve grown up in the business. If you’re only in the Florida market and Florida doesn’t get hit, you could be in trouble. Florida didn’t get hit in 1994 through 1998. During all those years we were busy in the Caribbean Islands and the Carolinas because they were getting whacked every year. We can survive the slow periods. When it’s busy we can handle volume. We manufacture better than 300 accordion shutters a day.

HP: Where do you see yourself and your company five years from now?
Buzzella: We’re going to continue on the path that has served us well so far. We’re continually, non-stop, designing, redesigning, retesting and re-engineering our products so that they will perform better and better. We strive to deliver the best performing products for the least cost to our customers.

As far as product innovation, I don’t believe there’s a company that’s in our league for innovating things. We’re going to develop products that perform a little better. Our new Bahama and Colonial shutters are phenomenal.

HP: Are there any community projects you are involved in?
Buzzella: We are in our sixth year as a corporate sponsor for Habitat for Humanity. Everything they build in South Florida, we supply the hurricane shutters for free. In addition, this year we’re sponsoring the building of a house.

We are very proud to have Habitat for Humanity as our “white-hat” cause. We would like to put a challenge out to our competitors in the industry that they look for a “white hat” cause in their area of the country and do the right thing. Give a little back.


INTHPA.COM



 

HP Home | Magazine | Conference | Subscribe | Media Kit | Contact | Industry Links

Copy © 2007 Hurricane Protection magazine
L.C. Clark Publishing, Inc.