To say that
Superior Maintenance Co. Inc. (SMC) owner and President Kevin Shurn is enamored
with Toyota Motor Corp.’s “Toyota Way” would be a huge understatement.
In fact,
with more than 30 years as a supply chain partner to Toyota Motor North America
Inc., the Japanese automobile manufacturer’s Plano, Texas-based U.S.
headquarters, he will tell you that his company is the embodiment of the Toyota
Way.
Shurn
founded SMC — a full-service facility management and production services
provider in Elizabethtown, Kentucky — in 1988, the same year he received his
first Toyota contract. The relationship has been steadfast. SMC has enjoyed the
benefit of longstanding service contracts at key Toyota manufacturing plants in
Georgetown, Kentucky; Princeton, Indiana; and San Antonio, Texas. SMC also maintains the Toyota North American
Headquarters in Plano, Texas.
Call him a
copycat, but Shurn has an intense and unwavering focus on replicating the
Toyota Way. The concept is defined as a set of principles of organizational
culture based on two pillars known as kaizen — a process of Total Quality
Management that demands continuous improvement and respect for people.
Imitating
the Toyota Way has put SMC on a highly desirable perch within the Toyota supply
chain. Over time, SMC’s Toyota supplier relationship has blossomed from
primarily janitorial to facilities management; production support of
subassemblies; sequencing and sorting; industrial machinery maintenance; and
grounds maintenance.
Shurn said
his approach as a Toyota supplier has been to get deep into the weeds of how
Toyota operates its business and the philosophy behind it.
“Through
all the years of working with the Toyota production system, we’ve developed the
Superior Production System. As a result of us practicing the Toyota Way, we’ve
developed the SMC Way,” he said. “Toyota is the foundation of our success.”
Accolades
for SMC Way
The St.
Louis, Missouri, native’s association with Toyota has been boundless and
afforded SMC competitive advantages in the marketplace and supply chain. It is
an association Toyota has clearly welcomed.
Going back
to 2004, SMC won a Toyota Supplier award for outstanding quality. That followed
with SMC’s receiving a National Supplier of the Year award from the National
Minority Supplier Development Council Inc. (NMSDC) in 2005 and 2011 for its
work with Toyota. The SMC Way earned Shurn the 2013 Ernst & Young
Entrepreneur of the Year Award. In 2014,
Shurn was selected by Toyota to join them at a business event at the White
House with President Barack Obama.
Most
recently, in 2023, SMC received the Business First Family Business of the Year
Award. Toyota also is SMC’s sponsor in
the NMSDC’s vaunted Corporate Plus program. This program signifies that members
have a proven track record of successful performance of national contracts for
a sponsoring corporation. Currently only
139 of the more than 17,000 NMSDC-certified minority-owned business enterprises
are members of the highly selective program.
“We accomplished our most monumental SMC Way
driven partnership when we formed a joint venture with one of Toyota’s group
companies, Toyota Tsusho in 202. It’s been a great relationship,” Shurn said.
“The
competitive advantage we have is that we know (Toyota’s business) as well as
Toyota does because we were under their wing for over 30 years,” he said. “They
have always been a nurturing company that believes in developing their
suppliers. That’s the culture. We copy everything they do and that has led us
to be successful all these years,” Shurn said.
Bonnie
Clinton, vice president, chief procurement officer, indirect procurement shared
services at Toyota Motor North America Inc. said there are also other factors
she attributes to Shurn’s success.
“Kevin’s
passion, energy and positive attitude are at the forefront of the business he
created and the many ways he gives back to the community,” she said. “He has
set the bar high for those who follow in his footsteps and those he mentors.”
Kaizen
in action
With a
residence in downtown Louisville, about an hour north of the company’s
Elizabethtown headquarters in central Kentucky, Shurn said Toyota’s culture of
respect for people touched him personally during a time of one of the most
disconcerting events in Louisville’s history.
The 2020
killing by the police of Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old Black woman, that
sparked many months of social justice protests that still resonates in the city
today.
Shortly
before Taylor’s killing, Shurn said SMC opened a facility in the city’s
long-underserved West Louisville enclave for the assembly and repackaging of
parts and components for shipping to Toyota warehouses, providing needed
employment for dozens of workers and economic enrichment for families.
“My goal
for years has been to create jobs and opportunities,” he said.
With
persistent marching and angst arising from the incident and a subsequent
protracted investigation, Taylor emerged a global symbol for injustice, like
with the George Floyd case in Minneapolis. Shurn called it “scary times” in
Louisville but backing him up was Toyota’s respect for people, he said.
“They
[Toyota officials] called me to see how I was doing and wanted to know how they
could help,” he said.
Winding
down
As an
entrepreneur responsible for delivering paychecks to 1,500 employees, Shurn
probably will agree that he has been through a wringer of responsibility.
Turning 68
years old in October, he is looking ahead to the next generation of SMC,
understanding that his running day-to-day operations of his company will be
winding down.
“I’ll never
get all the way out of the business,” he admitted.
But a key
priority is succession planning. Shurn said his daughter, Sydney and
son-in-law, Jamie Goldsmith, are heavily involved in operations as executives
in the business, and his goal is to get them ready for greater responsibility
within three years. Shurn’s brother Sid Shurn will be retiring as senior vice
president by year’s end, and he hopes his grandson, Darrion, will move up the
ladder.
“My goal is
getting them developed where they can take over the company, and we can
continue to grow. That’s the game plan for what’s going on right now,” he said.
The sky
is the limit
During the
run-up to retirement, Shurn, nevertheless, has some significant goals ahead for
SMC. Topping the list is continuing to grow through cost reduction and focusing
on increasing business in certain areas, he said, including “the challenge now
to get more business outside of Toyota.”
He said
another process he picked up from Toyota is the concept of Hoshin, a seven-step
process that originated in Japan after World War II that involves communicating
strategic goals throughout a company and acting on them.
Through the
Hoshin process, Shurn sets the vision and mission of the company through an
annual plan, delegating targets that teams are responsible for and relentlessly
reviewing them and adjusting to stay on track.
He believes
SMC has a compelling story to sell to large corporations needing to outsource
staffing operations, manufacturing and production and dock operations among
potential growth areas.
“The growth
opportunities are better than they have ever been in our 30-plus years of
business,” Shurn said. “The sky is the limit as to what we can grow.”
He
highlights with pride where he has come from. Growing up in St. Louis, he
served as a high school custodial aid, hawked sodas at Busch Stadium, home of
the St. Louis Cardinals Baseball Club, and was employed as a grill man at
McDonalds.
Shurn said
his parents raised him to also be generous, honest and exhibit character and
integrity.
So, he said
he always seeks opportunities to help others succeed, such as with SMC’s
“Mentor Monday” program where he mentors young African American men and women
in business with the promise that “we can help each other.”
It is with
such an approach that he received one of his highest personal compliments ever
— from a famous neighbor in Louisville who was an entrepreneur and inventor and
the father of a former Louisville mayor.
“He said,
‘How can we create more people like you,’” Shurn said.
“I get joy
out of helping and developing others,” he said. “If I don’t do it, who is going
to do it?”!
To learn
more about Superior Maintenance, visit smc.cc.