After years of just breaking even, the owner of Backdraft Manufacturing and Automation thinks he’s found the secret to shift the Luverne, Minn., company to profitability: AI.
This summer, owner Tyler LeBrun toyed with Microsoft Co-pilot AI and another AI application while trying to figure out how to help a gun-parts manufacturer with a solution to lower noise levels.
The AI tools analyzed 30 million data sets of gunshot recordings in about two hours, LeBrun said. Normally, that would have taken weeks of his employees’ work time.
Technology like AI and advanced automation are coming at a critical time for small manufacturers, which are struggling mightily with President Donald Trump’s changing tariff strategies, inflation and labor shortages. Smaller marketers and service providers also are growing more quickly because of AI tools.
The discovery proved a game changer for the already highly automated seven-year-old Backdraft in the southwest corner of the state.
That one Co-pilot project for the gun manufacturer saved $6,000 in payroll costs, led to the design of a product for the customer and resulted in $20,000 in new contracts, LeBrun said.
LeBrun now expects his company, with $3 million in annual sales, to post a solid profit this year as he applies the AI tools to more customers and projects.
“AI just helped us get to the market quicker,” he said. “And there are different opportunities that will snowball from this. We’re going to keep using it.”