I’ve been in and around manufacturing sales for over 30 years. I’ve trained sales teams in 48 states, worked with shops of every size, and watched this industry go through cycles that would make most people nervous. Offshoring waves. Trade wars. Recessions. COVID supply chain disasters.
But I’m going to tell you something I haven’t said in a long time.
**The wind is at the back of the American machine shop right now — and if you’re not positioned to catch it, you’re going to watch someone else ride it.**
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## What’s Actually Happening Out There
Let me give you the real picture, not the headlines.
The ISM Manufacturing PMI hit 52.7 in March 2026 — its highest reading in years. Any number above 50 signals expansion. This is the first time we’ve seen sustained positive momentum after nine consecutive months of contraction through late 2025.
The manufacturing sector capped off the first quarter of 2026 with the first positive manufacturing job growth in three years.
Since 2010, nearly two million manufacturing jobs have returned to the United States — roughly 40% of those lost to offshoring. And 94% of manufacturers who have begun reshoring say it is working.
Apple. Stellantis. GlobalFoundries. These are trillion-dollar companies making multi-billion dollar bets on American production capacity. That matters to your machine shop even if you never touch a semiconductor.
Here’s why: when the big players reshore, they need a supply chain. And that supply chain runs through precision machining shops, metal fabricators, and contract manufacturers just like yours.
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## The Real Drivers Behind This Moment
This isn’t political cheerleading. These are structural forces that don’t reverse overnight.
**1. Tariffs have changed the math permanently.**
The motivation right now is tariff mitigation — and you do not need higher demand to support reshoring. The U.S. has a $1.2 trillion trade deficit. That more than anything drives confidence in the theme and the duration behind it.
For years, the calculation for big manufacturers was simple: overseas labor is cheaper, so offshore. Tariffs broke that math. When you add duties, freight risk, quality control issues, and 12-week lead times, domestic sourcing starts to look very attractive — even at higher per-unit cost.
**2. Supply chain trauma is still fresh.**
Every procurement manager who watched their production line shut down in 2021 because a container ship was stuck in a canal is not going to forget that lesson. Around 38% of manufacturers are actively reshoring to reduce geopolitical risk, and nearly half of US businesses plan to increase nearshoring in 2026.
Shorter supply chains. Faster iteration. Domestic accountability. These are things your shop can deliver that a factory in Southeast Asia cannot.
**3. Tax policy is now working in your favor.**
Recent tax legislation permanently restored full expensing for research and development and capital equipment purchases, expanded interest deductions, and reinforced workforce tax credits.
That means the machine tool you’ve been putting off, the automation investment you’ve been considering — the government is now helping pay for it.
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## The Opportunity Is Real. But So Is the Gap.
Here’s where I need to be honest with you, because I’ve seen this movie before.
A rising tide lifts all boats — but only the boats that are seaworthy. And after 30 years of watching machine shops leave money on the table, I know exactly what sinks them when opportunity shows up.
**It’s not their equipment. It’s not their quality. It’s their sales operation.**
Right now, at this exact moment, I’m talking to shop owners who are:
- Quoting more work than ever — and closing less than 30% of it
- Personally chasing every follow-up because their reps don’t have a process
- Flying blind on pipeline because nobody is tracking opportunities consistently
- Watching competitors win jobs they should have won because the other shop followed up faster
The opportunity window that’s opening in 2026 is real. 69% of US manufacturers have begun reshoring supply chains, and 94% say it is working. New buyers are actively looking for domestic suppliers right now. OEMs are qualifying new vendors. Procurement teams are building shorter supply chains.
The question is not whether the orders are out there. **The question is whether your sales operation can capture them.**
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## What Shops That Win in 2026 Will Do Differently
I’ve worked with hundreds of manufacturers across this country. The ones that come out of boom cycles as bigger, more profitable businesses share a few things in common.
**They have a real sales process — not just good salespeople.**
The best machine shop sales rep in the world can’t build a predictable pipeline alone. You need a system. Consistent quoting cadence. Follow-up sequences. Opportunity tracking. Win/loss review. Without that infrastructure, individual talent walks out the door and takes your pipeline with it.
**They don’t depend on the owner to close every deal.**
If you are still the primary closer in your business, you have a ceiling. There is a hard limit on how much revenue a single person can drive. The shops that scale in a boom are the ones where the owner has already stepped back from daily selling — because they built a team and a process that doesn’t require them.
**They treat sales management as a function, not an afterthought.**
You wouldn’t run your shop without a quality system. You wouldn’t run your finances without an accountant. But most small manufacturers are running their sales operation on instinct, spreadsheets, and hope. In a flat market, that’s survivable. In a boom, it’s a catastrophic missed opportunity.
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## This Is Why I Built https://t.co/ugMIBEtwtM
After three decades in manufacturing sales — training thousands of professionals, working with shops from $1M to $50M in revenue, across 48 states — I launched https://t.co/ugMIBEtwtM with one focused mission.
To give small and mid-size manufacturers access to the kind of senior sales leadership that Fortune 500 companies take for granted — at a price that actually makes sense for their business.
No long-term contracts. No commissions. Flat monthly rate. Half the cost of a full-time sales manager.
Our clients average 40%+ revenue growth within 90 days. Not because we perform miracles — but because most shops have more opportunity in their existing pipeline than they realize. They’re just not capturing it.
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## The Window Is Open. Don’t Miss It.
The year 2026 will be a defining moment for manufacturers. Economic volatility and shifting policies are forcing companies to retool how they plan, operate, and compete.
I’ve watched boom cycles come and go. The shops that win are always the ones that were ready before the wave arrived — not the ones scrambling to build a sales operation after the phone starts ringing.
If your pipeline is inconsistent, your close rate is lower than it should be, or you’re still the one closing every deal — now is the time to fix it. Not when orders slow down. Now. While the market is moving in your favor.
The Great American Machine Shop Comeback is underway. The only question is whether your shop is ready to be part of it.
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**Doug Brooks** is the President & CEO of ASE Corporation and founder of https://t.co/ugMIBEtwtM. With over 30 years of experience in manufacturing and industrial sales leadership, Doug has trained thousands of sales professionals across 48 states and 4 countries. His work has been featured in *The Wall Street Journal*, *The Washington Post*, *U.S. News & World Report*, and *Smart Money Magazine*.
**Ready to build a sales operation that captures the 2026 opportunity?**
Book a free 10-minute call at [https://t.co/ugMIBEtwtM](https://t.co/344HCaSRU8) or call (904) 871-4290.
Check out my latest article: Are You the Accidental Sales Manager of Your Own Business? Here's Why it's Costing You. https://t.co/K8uxBOXlcQ via @LinkedIn