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Manufacturing is what makes the world go round. Consumerism is a fact of life, and someone has to keep up with the demand for products. This is where manufacturing comes in. Manufacturing produces items that the public will pay for either because they need or want what is being produced. So what are the driving factors that make manufacturing such a large and often lucrative field? These factors include the workforce, the raw materials, and the target audience. Will It Work Without a Workforce? The driving force behind the manufacturing industry is the workforce. Without people to do the daily work required to put out product then there would not be a whole lot to this manufacturing thing. There might be an empty room filled with machines and materials, but the idea would end there. It would be a clever concept, but it would only work on paper. Granted, more jobs are being taken over by machines, but people take care of those machines so the logic still stands. You need people. Depending on their specific niche in the car manufacturing industry, the duties change, but the hard work of employees still keeps the business going. It may be assembly, maintaining machines, or any number of tasks, but the main idea stays the same. Without someone there to do the job, it does not get done. Without a product to put out on the market, the whole concept of manufacturing kind of falls apart. From Cheap To Chic Products are made from raw materials. It is true that different stages of assembly or production may happen at different places. The products of an effort in one area are then shipped to the next locale in various stages of completion. The public usually sees only the finished product without knowing all that went into it. Every stage can be tracked back to some form of raw materials. You make something using something else, usually a few different things brought together. This brings up the issue of cost. If you bring a few things together and then pay to have them made into something, how can that turn a profit? The answer is in the raw materials and how they start out. Raw materials, often cheap and unremarkable, go through the manufacturing process to be made into something special. That something special is more than the sum of its parts and, therefore, is worth more. Ideally, this process is fast and cheap as well so that manufacturing remains a lucrative endeavour. At the end of the day, if a product is not profitable then it will not be manufactured anymore. Who Would Buy That? Cars are manufactured so that people will buy them. Cars often have a target audience who are somehow made aware of the item's availability. Advertising can happen through television, radio, newspapers, the internet, or even flyers placed on the windshields of cars. Each product that is manufactured is meant to enter the marketplace and be enticing, if not irresistible, to consumers. Without this demand, there would be no reason to create a certain item and definitely no purpose in manufacturing it on a large scale. It is this desire of the public, or some subsection of it, that creates this void that must be filled. Manufacturing thrives on a society of consumers. Auto accessories are made to supply people with something they want or need. The very desire or need for a product initiates the transaction, and the manufacturing process fills that need. There are many points in this particular circle of life but a few of the most crucial are the workforce that actually does the manufacturing, the raw materials that workers mold into the final product, and the target audience that purchases this final product. Find a need, and fill it. That is exactly what manufacturing does.
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