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When I sat down with Alex Mazerolle from Archer Precision, I thought I knew where the conversation was going. We were originally planning to talk about their ProShop journey and some of the operational improvements they've made along the way. What I didn't expect was to walk into a full-on masterclass in how to build a modern, high-performance machine shop.
As Alex started sharing his perspective, it became clear pretty quickly that this wasn't just about software or systems. It was about vision. He's spent the last decade intentionally building a company that's transparent, disciplined, and designed to scale—what he calls a "glass box" instead of the traditional black box most shops operate in.
What really stood out to me is how much of this comes down to mindset. Alex challenges a lot of the default thinking in our industry—the idea that the owner has to carry everything, that firefighting is just part of the job, or that growth naturally leads to chaos. Instead, he's built Archer around systems, clarity, and repeatability so the business doesn't depend on any one person, including himself.
We also kept recording after the "official" episode ended, and honestly, that might be the most valuable part of the entire conversation. Alex opens up about the trap so many of us fall into as owners, what it takes to get out of it, and how he's thinking about building a team and a workforce for the future.
If you're trying to build a shop that's not just busy, but truly valuable and sustainable, there's a lot in here worth paying attention to.
You will want to hear this episode if you are interested in...Subscribe to Machine Shop Mastery on
Apple, Spotify
By Paul Van Metre4.8
3030 ratings
When I sat down with Alex Mazerolle from Archer Precision, I thought I knew where the conversation was going. We were originally planning to talk about their ProShop journey and some of the operational improvements they've made along the way. What I didn't expect was to walk into a full-on masterclass in how to build a modern, high-performance machine shop.
As Alex started sharing his perspective, it became clear pretty quickly that this wasn't just about software or systems. It was about vision. He's spent the last decade intentionally building a company that's transparent, disciplined, and designed to scale—what he calls a "glass box" instead of the traditional black box most shops operate in.
What really stood out to me is how much of this comes down to mindset. Alex challenges a lot of the default thinking in our industry—the idea that the owner has to carry everything, that firefighting is just part of the job, or that growth naturally leads to chaos. Instead, he's built Archer around systems, clarity, and repeatability so the business doesn't depend on any one person, including himself.
We also kept recording after the "official" episode ended, and honestly, that might be the most valuable part of the entire conversation. Alex opens up about the trap so many of us fall into as owners, what it takes to get out of it, and how he's thinking about building a team and a workforce for the future.
If you're trying to build a shop that's not just busy, but truly valuable and sustainable, there's a lot in here worth paying attention to.
You will want to hear this episode if you are interested in...Subscribe to Machine Shop Mastery on
Apple, Spotify

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