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Delivering on a Promise: Mid-America Taping and Reeling Outpacing the Competition
February 10, 2025 | Linda Stepanich, IPCEstimated reading time: 2 minutes

A motto on the conference wall at Mid-America Taping and Reeling, “Promise only what you can deliver and then deliver more than you promised,” has led Barbara Pauls from the has led from starting her business in her parent's basement to a thriving company with locations in Illinois and Florida and 75 employees.
IPC member Mid-America is a leader in supplying tape and reel services to the electronics industry. It specializes in surface mount, axial and radial taping, baking, dry packing, lead forming, and memory device programming.
Barbara was a college student in the mid-1980s, working for a printing broker who had set up his own business. As she watched him, she realized, “I could do this. I want to start my own business. I don’t want to depend on someone else for a living, and I want to forge my path.”
With that determination and an innate curiosity, she sought opportunities to realize her dream. Her first outreach was to her own family. “I went to my uncle, who had made himself a multimillionaire in eyeglass frames,” she says. “I told him I wanted to start my own business and asked him for ideas. He said he’d met someone who was selling an axial lead taping machine. I had no idea what that meant, but I learned that this was a growing industry.”
She shared that information with her father, an engineer at Navistar, “who told me that it was a way to sequence electronic components for automation and that I should investigate it,” Barbara says. “There was no internet back then, so I researched the Thomas Register of North American Manufacturers at the local college library to find out who was putting circuit boards together and who I could approach for a sale.”
Barbara and her father set up her first axial taping machine in her parents' basement, and she started cold-calling local businesses to build a client base. Her first client, Bally, agreed to give her their business only after an audit. “I was mortified when he said he would come to the basement of my parents' house since I didn’t have an office,” she says. “But I passed the audit with flying colors," and her business was born.
Read the rest of this article in the Winter 2025 issue of IPC Community.
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Dutch Government Takes Control of China-Owned Chipmaker Nexperia, Citing Security Concerns
10/14/2025 | I-Connect007 Editorial TeamThe Dutch government has taken control of Chinese-owned chipmaker Nexperia, escalating tensions with Beijing amid intensifying global disputes over semiconductor technology and intellectual property.
SEMICON West: The Path to a $1 Trillion Future
10/14/2025 | Marcy LaRont, I-Connect007After more than 50 years in San Francisco, SEMICON West moved its 2025 show to Phoenix, which is significant because it highlights the importance of Arizona as a semiconductor and tech hub. Though the show will be back in San Francisco in 2026, the overwhelmingly warm welcome SEMI received from Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs, Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego, and ASU President Michael Crowe—who has been responsible for ASU repeatedly achieving the U.S. News and World Reports most innovative university ranking—was remarked upon repeatedly. All indications are that SEMICON West may well be back in Phoenix after that 2026 season.
Elementary, Mr. Watson: High Power: When Physics Becomes Real
10/15/2025 | John Watson -- Column: Elementary, Mr. WatsonHave you ever noticed how high-speed design and signal integrity classes are always packed to standing room only, but just down the hall, the session on power electronics has plenty of empty chairs? It's not just a coincidence; it's a trend I've observed over the years as both an attendee and instructor.
The Right Approach: Electro-Tek—A Williams Family Legacy, Part 1
10/15/2025 | Steve Williams -- Column: The Right ApproachThere is no bronze bust in the lobby or portrait in the conference room of Electro-Tek's founder—my Dad, Charles “Chuck” Williams—so with the facility closing last year after 56 years, I feel it is time to tell the story. Chuck Williams founded Electro-Tek in 1968 in our basement, eventually moving into the second floor of an old 1913 building in downtown Milwaukee that is still standing (the first of three eventual facilities).
ICT Symposium Review: Sustainability and the Circular Economy
10/09/2025 | Pete Starkey, I-Connect007It was pleasant autumnal weather as we made our way once again to Meriden, the nominal centre of England, for the 2025 Annual Symposium of the Institute of Circuit Technology. Delegates were welcomed by technical director Emma Hudson who introduced and moderated a skilfully coordinated programme, focused on the highly relevant theme of sustainability.