Archive for January, 2009
Welcome to Scorpion Racing Products
Scorpion Performance and SRP today:
Created in 2008, SRP ñ Scorpion Racing Products is the marketing and distribution company for the products that Scorpion Performance manufactures, which are the highest quality products from the most technologically advanced tools and machines in the world. By utilizing todayís and tomorrowís most sophisticated technology, Scorpion Performance is able to maintain its leadership role in producing the absolute finest precision parts. This technology also enables the company to achieve superior quality at economies of scale that make SRPís prices ultra-competitive. And the icing on the cake is the priceless advantage of once again being able to stamp ìMADE IN USAî on these products!
Scorpion Performance has proven that its commitment to fully automated, robotically controlled tooling, combined with its round-the-clock production capacity, effectively offsets the low wage advantages the Asian tigers rely on to attract U.S. business. To beat the Asians at their own game, Scorpion embraces the very latest robotically-controlled automation technology, then its engineers coax even greater productivity out of it ñ exceeding even the manufacturersí specs. This productivity is a major marketing point for SRP, and of course, faster manufacturing means faster distribution to customers.
Simply put, SRP beats the competition by offering its customers superior quality that meets and beats Asian pricing and delivery schedules. Plus, while most U.S. competitors are locked into old machinery and traditional manufacturing of precision parts, SRP benefits from Scorpionís commitment to updating and replacing its sophisticated tooling at least every three years.
The Economic Implications of SRPís ability to say ìMade in Americaî
The staggering trade imbalance the U.S. has worked its way into has reached precarious levels; most noteworthy in the disastrous devaluation of the dollar vs. most major world currencies. Much of this is the result of U.S. companies and marketers rushing to low-wage manufacturers, primarily in the Far East.