YCM Alliance
Published

How I Made It: Doug Schulte, Select Machining Technologies

Doug Schulte was introduced to machining as a young child, often visiting his father at the LeBlond Machine Tool company where he worked in Cincinnati. Here, Schulte — who ended up dedicating his entire career to the industry — shares some of the key insights he’s discovered along the way.

Share

Modern Machine Shop's Logo, white lettering against a red background

To some of his friends, Doug Schulte is known as “machine tool Google.” His encyclopedic knowledge of the specs and mechanics of machine tools comes from a lifetime spent in the industry. It all started with his dad, John, who joined machine tool manufacturer LeBlond in the early 1950s.

 I GUESS YOU COULD SAY I was born into this busi­ness. My dad started working for LeBlond around 1953, and after 32 years he went to work for a small company who was the LeBlond Makino distributor at the time, the R.O. Deaderick Company [now part of The Morris Group].

a photo of Doug Schulte, senior product manager at select machining technologies, wearing a black golf shirt and gray slacks

Doug Schulte, Senior Product Manager for Select Machining Technologies. Photo Credit: Modern Machine Shop

I REMEMBER GOING TO THE FACTORY with him where they had several different lathes on the floor. If I had a science project at school where I needed to make something, we would go to LeBlond and make it. The idea that you could cut metal was astounding to me.

I QUICKLY REALIZED that I’m not the manufacturing engineering type of guy. So I went to Cincinnati Technical College (now Cincinnati State), which had a program called Industrial Sales and Marketing.

 SINCE ‘88 I’VE BEEN WITH THE MORRIS GROUP. But I didn’t differentiate it. It always felt like I was working for Dad. And I continued to work for Dad until he retired in 2001.

IF I SELL SOMEONE SOMETHING AS SIMPLE AS A SAW, and that saw was a good saw, when that person did get around to buying a lathe or a machining center, I was probably going to get the phone call. That was my thinking. I never want to turn a customer over to a competitor and say, “Go buy from them.”

I WAS EMBARRASSED EARLY ON IN MY SALES CAREER with a customer in Tennessee. An engineer asked me a question and my answer was incorrect. He called me on  it. After I left, I said to myself that I’m never going to let that happen again. Ever since, if I was promoting a machine to a customer, I would know every aspect of that machine forward and backward. I would know the specs better than the manufacturer.

MY DAD WOULD ALWAYS BE ASTOUNDED because I hate to read. I’ve got books on my bookshelf but there are very few of those books that I’ve read. But I’ll sit down with a machine tool manual and read it cover to cover.

 EARLY IN MY CAREER, Dad pointed out that I asked a lot of questions in the sales meetings. But I noticed the older sales guys would never do that. So I asked Dad why no else asked questions. He said, “Well, they don’t want to admit that they don’t know the answer.”

 IT’S A FANTASTIC INDUSTRY. If the country’s not manufacturing something, the country’s not surviving. And it’s a fun industry — the kind of things we do, the kind of things we make, the kind of parts you see, the people you deal with. I’ve developed friend­ships all over the world. There are (machine tool) builders that I don’t represent anymore that still wish me happy birthday every year. You’re tied to a very small industry that has so much impact on every­body’s lives. And most people don’t know it.

Okuma
YCM Alliance
IMTS 2024
MMS Made in the USA
VERISURF
Gravotech
Koma Precision
World Machine Tool Survey
Hurco
CHIRON Group, one stop solution for manufacturing.
Thermo SL Brass EDM Wire
Gardner Business Intelligence

Related Content

Turn/Mill

Palmgren Launches Combination Bench Lathe, Mill

The 11" bench engine lathe and gear head mill is able to handle a wide range of turning, milling and drilling operations typically found on much larger machinery.

Read More
Basics

10 Things to Know About Creep-Feed Grinding

Because of the high material removal rate creep-feed grinding can deliver in challenging materials, grinding might not be just the last step in the process—it might be the process.

Read More
Turn/Mill

A New Milling 101: Milling Forces and Formulas

The forces involved in the milling process can be quantified, thus allowing mathematical tools to predict and control these forces. Formulas for calculating these forces accurately make it possible to optimize the quality of milling operations.

Read More
Turning Machines

Threading On A Lathe

The right choices in tooling and technique can optimize the thread turning process.

Read More

Read Next

3 Mistakes That Cause CNC Programs to Fail

Despite enhancements to manufacturing technology, there are still issues today that can cause programs to fail. These failures can cause lost time, scrapped parts, damaged machines and even injured operators.

Read More
Basics

Obscure CNC Features That Can Help (or Hurt) You

You cannot begin to take advantage of an available feature if you do not know it exists. Conversely, you will not know how to avoid CNC features that may be detrimental to your process.

Read More
Large Part Machining

The Cut Scene: The Finer Details of Large-Format Machining

Small details and features can have an outsized impact on large parts, such as Barbco’s collapsible utility drill head.

Read More
YCM Alliance