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SPECIAL FEATURE Ted S. Miller


Integrity and a desire to do the right thing drove this salesman


As this year’s Legacy Award in the Con- tractor/Installer category, Ted S. Miller has been described as a total salesman. Always working to better the industry, he believed in doing the right thing. After a 10-year battle against Stage 4 colon can- cer, Miller passed away in October 2012.


Starting out Miller’s 40-year career in the metal construction industry began as an award-winning sales engineer for Pittsburgh-based H.H. Robertson Co., working there from 1972-1979. It was there that he met and became friends with Dave Clapperton. As col- leagues, Miller and Clapperton had the chance to work together on a number of projects, developing a chemistry together. “We found out that his strengths were often my weaknesses, and my strengths were his weaknesses,” Clapperton says, “and by blending the two, we were a stronger whole.” When he and Clapperton became disappointed


with how Robertson was treating them, they decided to start their own company. Although they ended up leaving Robertson sooner than expected, The Miller-Clapperton Partnership Inc., offi cially started on October 15, 1979. With the support of their wives, and the products from four manufactur- ers to sell, Miller and Clapperton set up shop in the Miller’s home in Smyrna, Ga. For three years, the two worked as manufactur-


“A rising tide lifts all ships. Metal wall systems have given archi- tects great fl exibility in their de- signs because of their inherent benefi ts and performance. Let each of us in the metal construc- tion industry raise our level of quality and be held to clearly defi ned, high standards so that


collectively, we ensure that metal remains the go-to product for building owners and designers.“


er’s reps, meeting with architects, contractors and engineers. When architects began asking them how to help solve problems with metal that couldn’t be solved out of a product catalog, Clapperton explains that opened a door for them to become a specialty subcontractors of metal solutions. They then started going out and sourcing fabricators that could meet the needs of the architects they were working with and developed specifi cations accordingly. By 1984, the company also moved out of his


house and into an offi ce down the street, where Miller’s lifelong friend Doug Bruton joined the busi- ness as their fi rst employee. As the group worked together, Clapperton and Bruton began to develop a strong bond because of their focus on the production side of the house. Miller, however, was extremely talented at calling on the architects and making the promises. “Doug and I learned how to take Ted’s commitments and promises and turn them into real- ity,” Clapperton explains. In 1990, Bruton became the third full partner in Miller-Clapperton. In 1988, Ted met with Kit Emert at Reynolds


Metals Co., Richmond, Va., to help introduce a competing aluminum composite material product to what was previously a monopoly market. From there, Miller-Clapperton continued to grow and moved out of their offi ces to a 5,000-square-foot warehouse to open up its fi rst fabrication shop. It wasn’t long


24 METAL CONSTRUCTION NEWS November 2013


before the company expanded into the space next door. Today Miller-Clapperton operates from a 45,000-square-foot building in Austell, Ga. Since 1989, the company’s focus shifted to


aluminum composite material. The company has com- pleted ACM projects all over the United States, mainly in the Southeast, along with Puerto Rico and Mexico. They even dabbled in the international market, beat- ing out 11 international competitors for the Beijing International Airport-Terminal 2 project and supplying a 30-story offi ce re-clad in Hong Kong. Today, as a specialty subcontractor fabricator, Miller-Clapperton provides employment for more than 120 people.


MCA involvement Emert introduced Miller to the Metal Construc- tion Association (MCA), where he went on to be a board member and awards committee chair. Miller also founded the MCA’s MCM Fabricators Council, was its fi rst Chairman, then chaired the commit- tee to establish the Certifi ed Premium Fabricator program. “[The MCA] was an environment that al- lowed Ted to fl ourish, and the more he got involved with the MCA, the more he wanted to be in- volved,” Clapperton shares. “Not only to grow and to expand the MCM’s fabricator’s council, but to go on and be involved as a board member, and to do things such as chair the program committee.” In January 2013, Miller was posthumously


awarded the MCA’s Larry A. Swaney award for ex- emplary service to the metal construction industry.


Teaching others Bruton explains that Miller was most happy to teaching others the proper way to work with metal composite material (MCM), putting on programs in China and South America to teach architects. Miller-Clapperton also held a Reynobond University in Atlanta to teaching dealers, fabricators, distributors and architects about proper MCM techniques. In addition to writing a weekly blog for Miller-


Clapperton, he penned a monthly column, Ted’s MCM Corner, for Metal Architecture magazine. Miller was also a member of the construction advisory board for Southern Polytechnic State University in Marietta, Ga. A family man, Miller was a devoted husband to


Jo Dendy Miller for 41 years. His two children, Zane and Zeke, are both heavily involved in the business. In his spare time, Miller also served as Deacon, Sunday School teacher, choir member and was on the leader- ship team of Smyrna First Baptist Church. As Clapperton explains, Miller’s whole life was


an example of integrity. “Ted’s word was his bond … ask anyone who ever worked with him or relied upon him to deliver upon a commitment. His ex- pectations of others were based upon his expecta- tions of himself.”


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