A data-driven analysis of AI automation opportunities for Mid-West Spring & Stamping — a 97-year-old family-owned manufacturer in Mentone, Indiana. Ten specific opportunities identified across sales, manufacturing, supply chain, and administration.
Mid-West Spring & Stamping is a privately held, family-owned manufacturer founded in 1928 and headquartered in Mentone, Indiana. The company produces precision custom industrial springs, metal stampings, and wire forms for OEM customers across firearm, agriculture, electronics, medical, and mining industries. With an estimated $28M in annual revenue and approximately 90 employees across three facilities, it operates as a classic job shop — high SKU count, low-to-medium volume runs, and engineer-to-engineer customer service.
The company is led by the Overmyer family — C.J. Overmyer as President (since 1999) and Nick Overmyer as VP of Operations — with a CFO (Michael Curran) and Controller (Collette Knepp) indicating a structured finance function. The 2004 acquisition of Landrum Performance Springs expanded the product line into motorsport applications. ZoomInfo intelligence confirms the company is actively evaluating Epicor ERP and pursuing AP automation — signaling a receptive moment for broader AI investment.
Across ten identified AI opportunities in four functional areas, Mid-West Spring & Stamping could realize between $770K and $1.2M in annual savings — representing 2.8–4.3% of estimated revenue. These figures are calculated using verified local labor market rates for rural Indiana/Michigan, confirmed company data points, and industry-standard AI displacement benchmarks.
Eliminate the 2-day manual RFQ bottleneck
Camera-based defect detection on the production line
Optimize steel wire and strip steel sourcing
Automate repeat order processing via KanBan
Prevent unplanned downtime on coilers and presses
Optimize high-SKU job sequencing and setup reduction
24/7 inbound inquiry handling via phone and email
Accelerate the active AP automation initiative
Multi-plant carrier selection and route optimization
Reduce time-to-hire for plant floor and management roles
Lowest implementation cost, fastest ROI. The AP automation aligns with the active ACH initiative already confirmed by ZoomInfo intelligence, making it especially easy to accelerate.
The highest-impact cluster. Visual inspection directly supports ISO 9001 compliance. Procurement AI targets the largest single savings pool — raw material spend.
Requires sensor integration and ERP connectivity. Aligns with the Epicor ERP evaluation already underway — Phase 3 becomes significantly easier once ERP is live.
The following signals — sourced from ZoomInfo intelligence scoops, employee reviews, website analysis, and public records — confirm both the pain points and the organizational readiness for AI investment.
A high-level source in accounting confirms the company is evaluating Epicor ERP and increasing funding for the initiative. This is the ideal integration point for AI scheduling, procurement, and maintenance modules.
The company is actively adding ACH (automated clearing house) capabilities. Finance AI is not a future project — it is already in motion and can be accelerated.
Leveraging accounting analytics to support improved decision making. Signals a data-forward finance leadership team receptive to AI-driven insights.
The Request a Quote page explicitly states a minimum 2-business-day turnaround. No instant pricing, no CPQ system. This is the highest-friction customer touchpoint and the clearest quick-win opportunity.
Scheduled/repeat orders exist — the foundation for zero-touch order automation. EDI/ASN capability already in place reduces integration complexity.
Indeed review confirms high workload relative to staff size — a direct indicator of capacity constraints that AI automation can relieve without headcount increases.
Institutional knowledge lives in people, not systems. AI can capture and codify this expertise — making it transferable, searchable, and resilient to retirement.
Active capital equipment investment confirms growth orientation. New equipment is the ideal moment to add predictive maintenance sensors — before failure patterns develop.
Disclaimer: All figures are estimates based on publicly available data and industry benchmarks. Mid-West Spring and Stamping does not publicly disclose financial statements. Revenue estimates are triangulated from RocketReach ($19.2M), ZoomInfo ($36.1M), and Owler ($49.1M consolidated including Landrum). Savings calculations use local Indiana/Michigan labor market rates sourced from Indeed salary data and BLS regional wage surveys. Actual savings will vary based on implementation quality, change management, and integration complexity.