Design World – WOMEN IN ENGINEERING – OCTOBER 2021

Page 108

2021 Women in Engineering

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Sandy Emry Account Application Engineer

Würth Industry North America BS Finance – minor in Business Administration, Illinois State University

Sandy Emry began her career in the fastener industry in 2001 as part of a Sales Development Training Program with a fastener manufacturer. She completed the program in seven months and was relocated to Kansas City and became a member of the field sales team working with distributors. In 2016, she became Vertical Team Leader specializing in the Recreational Vehicle market industry. In 2019, she was promoted to Director NA Distribution Sales where she managed a $168M piece of business. In 2020, she began her engineering career with Würth and currently supports two different OpCos at various customers.

Talk about the culture at your company. What makes it inclusive or supportive of women in engineering and automation? Würth is the largest industrial distributor in the world and very much has a family feel to the business. The culture is based on team, honesty, customer first and employee growth. The entire Würth family is based on each member becoming a better person/ employee. The door is open for anyone to pursue career choices they feel fits them best. There is an atmosphere of promoting within, educating employees on new developments both industry specific and the business environment itself. Each employee is encouraged to pursue fields of interest that best fit their skill sets. Our engineering team is diverse and includes people of different areas of expertise, experience and education. We all work together to help solve some of the more complicated opportunities. Give an example of your involvement in: a design project, a product launch, the development of a new technology. Throughout the past years, it was a common belief baking electroplated parts with hardness of RC 39+ would alleviate the risk for hydrogen embrittlement. Through extensive testing, the fastener industry has found that baking parts with this hardness after electroplating does not alleviate this risk. So, Würth mandated not selling product with hardness RC 39 or harder that have been electroplated. I have been working with our Quality and Sales teams to identify those parts that are at risk. I then reached out to our customers’ engineering contacts to discuss their corrosion requirements and provide options for a finish that will alleviate this serious risk. This project is one I am proud of because I know we are making a big difference, not only for our customers, but in the consumer market as well. What first drew you to engineering? I have always been drawn to research and understanding how things are manufactured and the reasoning for all the processes involved. Early in my career, I found it fascinating as to how fasteners are designed and manufactured. Previously, my mind set was “a screw is a screw.” I quickly found out this is not the case. The amount of detail and engineering that goes into the design and production of fasteners is amazing. When working with customers on cost savings/improvement projects, I enjoy seeing how their products are designed/manufactured. I find great satisfaction when I am able to assist with designing a part/fastener that allows our customer to improve their product life, production processes and save money at the same time. I worked with one customer and we managed to consolidate five fasteners into one part and saved our customer tens of thousands of dollars. For the rest of Sandy Emry’s insights, visit www.designworldonline.com/WiE.

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DESIGN WORLD

10/14/21 2:53 PM


Articles inside

Würth Indsutry North America - Sandy Emry

3min
pages 108-109

Wolfspeed - Yueying Liu

3min
page 107

Sager Electronics - Lisa Auffrey

8min
pages 104-106

Quantum Devices - Samantha Ludt

2min
page 103

Porex - Denisa Peshkatari

2min
page 102

Phoenix Contact - Melissa Sommer

3min
page 101

maxon - Virginie Mialane

2min
page 98

Microchip Technology - Ingrid Tay

3min
page 99

Mitsubishi Electric Automation - Agnieszka Zupancic

2min
page 100

Master Electronics - Jennifer Paukert

2min
page 97

igus - Nicole Lang

3min
page 96

Honeywell Process Solutions - Alicia Kempf

2min
page 95

Teri Ivaniszyn

9min
pages 89-91

Encoder Products Company - Sarah Walter GE Digital - Sowjanya Chalamkuri, Kristen Sanderson ............................... 167/168

8min
pages 92-94

Transmission Company Inc. - Toha Poveda ECIA - Tobi Cornell, Juliet Rene Fajardo,

3min
page 88

CentroMotion - Miriam Prieto

2min
page 86

Accumold - Angela Williams

2min
page 84

Digi-Key - Autumn Richardson

2min
page 87

Advantech - Shannon Steward

2min
page 85

Dr. Amy Wang

8min
pages 78-83

Jill Tietjen

12min
pages 70-77

Karen Panetta

11min
pages 62-69

Maureen Lincoln

7min
pages 44-49

Sibongile Manthata

6min
pages 56-61

Danielle Lower

9min
pages 50-55

Caitlin Kalinoswki

9min
pages 30-37

Hester Anderiesen Le Riche

7min
pages 38-43

Ella Atkins

11min
pages 12-19

Amanda French

8min
pages 24-29

Kara Branch

4min
pages 20-23
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