£250,000 investment puts finishing touches to manufacturer’s recovery

A Black Country manufacturer that puts the finish on boutique hotels, nuclear reactors and life-saving medical equipment has just completed its latest investment drive.

Professional Polishing Services (PPS), which has increased its workforce by 25% since lockdown eased, has just installed a new dull polishing line to help it boost capacity and achieve its target of £2m sales by the end of 2022.

The company has spent more than £250,000 on the latest purchase and this gives it the capability to apply a variety of finishes, such as dull polish and satin finish, onto stainless steel, aluminium, brass and copper sheet.

It comes just two years after it took ownership of new extraction equipment, pick and place systems and two Autopilot PHA bright polishers with automated handling, acquisitions that were only operational for six months before Covid-19 struck.

Kirsty Davies-Chinnock, managing director of PPS, said: “Like many firms, we’ve had to withstand some tough times over the last 18 months, but the recovery is now back on and we’re trying to put in place the technology we need to meet escalating demand from pretty much every sector, including automotive, construction, food and drink, nuclear and leisure.

“In the early days of the lockdown, we furloughed everyone except two senior managers and myself, who moved to the shopfloor to ensure work for the medical sector was completed. Before long we had to call staff back, as we were polishing steel that was going into ventilator stands and the big vats that were helping to develop the vaccines.”

She added: “More than £750,000 has been invested in reinforcing our position as a market leader in the last three years and we are confident this will play a key role in us achieving record performance over the next twelve months.”

Professional Polishing Services offer a bespoke stainless steel and non-ferrous polishing service to a client base that spans the world, with its efforts seen as far afield as Hong Kong and Australia.

The company’s fast lead times has seen it grow sales by £500,000 in the last 12 months, taking it to £1.7m by the financial year-end.

Davies-Chinnock added: “There are plenty of challenges in manufacturing, but I think we are all really pleased with how the economy appears to be bouncing back and we want to make sure we play our role in the recovery.

“The latest investment will give us capacity to take on new work and deliver faster lead times, yet it isn’t the end of our spending. I’ve already got my eye on another two machines, which would be UK firsts for the polishing sector.”

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