Most distributors view a fifty-dollar online order as a transaction. Kristin Livesay views it as a handshake. As the Vice President of Sales and Marketing at Component Supply, Kristin uses a "starting point" strategy to turn small, urgent R&D orders into long-term custom fabrication partnerships.
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In this conversation, Kyler Nixon asks Kristin how her team bridges the gap between raw manufacturing and the engineers who need "onesies and twosies" to prototype life-saving devices. Kristin breaks down why their e-commerce platform functions primarily as a lead-generation engine and how personal follow-ups help customers transition from standard parts to volume production.
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They also discuss the counterintuitive approach Component Supply takes to trade shows. Instead of glossy, intimidating displays, they build booths that look like workshops to attract hands-on engineers. You will hear why "trick or treaters" at trade shows are a distraction, how internal branding builds culture, and why just because you have always done something doesn't mean it isn't stupid.
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👤 Guest Bio
Kristin Livesay is the Vice President of Sales and Marketing at Component Supply, a specialized supplier for the medical device industry based in Sparta, Tennessee. With over a decade of experience, she focuses on removing supply chain friction for researchers and engineers.
Kristin ensures that R&D teams have fast access to critical components like hypodermic tubing, wire, and Nitinol. She champions a philosophy where online efficiency serves as the entry point for deep engineering support and custom fabrication.
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📌 What We Cover
- E-Commerce as Lead Gen: Why 60-70% of initial online orders are viewed as introductions rather than final sales.
- The "Starting Point" Strategy: How a single piece of tubing leads to volume fabrication contracts.
- Trade Show Strategy: Why building a booth that looks like a workshop attracts more engineers than a polished corporate display.
- Internal Branding: How the Bits and Pieces podcast and newsletter foster team camaraderie and ownership.
- Handling Logistics: The challenges of shipping 72-inch wires and absorbing the manufacturer's minimums for R&D clients.
- Marketing for Retention: Using content to educate customers on capabilities they didn't know existed.
- Strategic Partnerships: Expanding reach by placing products on other platforms without sacrificing service quality.
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🔗 Resources Mentioned
- Component Supply
- Bits and Pieces Podcast
- Kristin Livesay on LinkedIn