Manufacturing Runs The World

This Is What Modern Manufacturing Really Looks Like


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Are you ready to see modern manufacturing through a completely new lens?Most people imagine factories as dirty, boring, or dying—but the reality of modern manufacturing engineering and product development is far more dynamic, complex, and human. This episode of Manufacturing Runs the World breaks outdated stereotypes and reveals what manufacturing actually looks like behind the scenes today.In this conversation, Adrienne Clark, Director of Engineering Operations at Re:Build Fikst, shares what it really takes to turn abstract ideas into real, manufacturable products. Adrienne works at the intersection of manufacturing engineering, product development, prototyping, automation, and medical device manufacturing, supporting engineering teams as they navigate uncertainty, win new work, and solve complex problems.One story from the episode captures this reality clearly.While working on a medical device manufacturing project, Adrienne’s team was invited by a surgeon into a cadaver lab to evaluate a cranial plate prototype designed to help bond skull fractures. This wasn’t done for shock value—it was real-world validation. In modern manufacturing, engineering and design decisions can carry real human consequences, which is why hands-on prototyping, testing, and validation matter so much.This episode highlights a truth many engineers learn the hard way: you don’t solve complex manufacturing problems by waiting for perfect answers—you solve them by building, testing, and learning quickly.Adrienne explains why early prototyping is a game-changer in engineering and manufacturing. Spending months debating a “maybe” solution often teaches less than building something quickly—even with cardboard, duct tape, or a rough prototype—to see whether an idea actually works.At Re:Build Fikst, this learn-by-doing mindset shows up everywhere:Manufacturing engineering and product developmentCAD design paired with physical prototypingMedical device manufacturing and validationAutomation and custom equipment designEngineering teams that learn by makingEngineers are encouraged to work directly with the tools that bring ideas to life—from CAD modeling and SOLIDWORKS to 3D printing, laser cutting, CNC machining, and low-volume manufacturing. This hands-on exposure helps engineers become better designers by understanding how parts are actually made, assembled, and used.CHAPTERS 00:00 – A Medical Device Project That Led to a Cadaver Lab00:22 – Manufacturing Isn’t Dirty, Boring, or Dying00:48 – What Engineering Operations Really Looks Like01:06 – Becoming the Company Historian and Team Support01:48 – Growing Through Re:Build Fikst’s Acquisition02:54 – From Engineering Co-Op to Career Path03:34 – Why Product Design Consulting Accelerates Learning05:05 – Navigating Ambiguity in Engineering Problems05:56 – Why Early Prototyping Beats Waiting07:21 – Engineering Validation with Real Consequences09:05 – Automation, Robotics, and AI in Engineering12:07 – Why Engineers Should Use Every ToolA big thank you to our sponsors for supporting Manufacturing Runs the World and helping us share real stories from the factory floor.🔹 Ellison TechnologiesEllison Technologies empowers manufacturers with advanced CNC machines, automation, and expert support—helping shops work smarter, faster, and more competitively.👉 https://ellisontechnologies.com🔹 GSC – 3D & AutomationGSC is one of the nation’s leading resellers of SOLIDWORKS CAD software and Markforged industrial 3D printers, empowering engineers and manufacturers with cutting-edge design, simulation, and additive manufacturing solutions.👉 https://gsc-3d.comYour support helps keep these conversations about manufacturing, automation, and leadership alive. Thank you for investing in the future of industry.

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Manufacturing Runs The WorldBy Justin Schnor, Flipeleven