National Manufacturing Week details announced

RP news wires, Noria Corporation
The 2006 National Manufacturing Week conference, to be held March 20–23 in Rosemont, Ill., has become the place for small and mid-size manufacturers to go to better understand and foresee global manufacturing trends and opportunities, their impact on U.S. companies, and to develop solutions to help small and mid-sized manufacturers improve their manufacturing processes.

With an intensified emphasis on education, seminars, training and networking opportunities, the 2006 National Manufacturing Week conference promises to deliver unmatched business building opportunities for U.S. manufacturers by bringing together more global manufacturing leaders than ever before. Eight top keynote speakers and 400 additional speakers will discuss topics covering the entire manufacturing process, from design to factory floor to customer fulfillment. 

“The breadth of business insight and thought leadership that will be shared in our sessions and seminars is unprecedented in the manufacturing industry,” said Kel Marsden-Kish, industry vice president, National Manufacturing Week. “We are thrilled to provide the strengthened focus on education, learning and networking that our customers need to compete in the global marketplace, and to help translate that learning to small and mid-size manufacturers.”

Reflecting broad support from the U.S. manufacturing community, the National Manufacturing Week conference will present an expanded real-world conference uniquely reflecting the manufacturing process and geared to the needs of small and mid-sized manufacturers. The conference, which begins on March 20, will contain five primary tracks – Design, Plant, Automation, IT and Management – and 23 sub-tracks. This year, the conference will begin one day before the exhibit floor opens on Tuesday, March 21, providing more time on Monday for conference educational offerings to go into greater depth and detail.

The lineup of keynote speakers includes:

The show is sponsored by the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) and supported by 15 associations and analyst sponsors. The exhibition floor will open on Tuesday, March 21, devoting more time on Monday for conference educational offerings to go into greater depth and detail.

National Manufacturing Week is the only event for engineering teams and executives responsible for design to manufacturing process to finished goods. Tens of thousands from the U.S. manufacturing community, especially small to mid-size manufacturers, come together for in-depth education and exhibits spanning the broad spectrum of enabling technologies, systems, products and solutions necessary to grow and compete in the global economy. As part of the four-day event, four interrelated shows will be held. These include: