Teeth Whitening Good for Local Business
Mar 13th 2023
GREG GILBERT / THE SEATTLE TIMES
If the Tooth Fairy ever decides
to hang up her wings and jump on the health-care jobs wagon, she might
consider touching down in the Cascade foothills at Sonicare.
This is about the time of year the top-selling electronic toothbrush
company — with more than 10 million units sold worldwide — starts
ramping up to its traditionally busy holiday sales season by hiring
temporary and seasonal workers at its rural Snoqualmie headquarters.
Already the fourth-largest medical-technology employer in the region,
Sonicare's Snoqualmie plant is the workplace for 415 engineers,
administrators, manufacturing workers and call-center staff.
It's about a 30-minute jaunt from its sister plant in Auburn, where 132
workers package and ship the assembled toothbrushes around the world.
Starting this month and through November, Sonicare fills 20 to 40
seasonal openings to gear up for the holiday rush. Yet when it comes to
the production-plant floor, most year-round assemblers are Sonicare
veterans, says company human-resource specialist Holli Morley.
"We don't have a lot of turnover," says Morley. "Many of our assemblers
have been with us for more than 10 years."
These workers have seen tremendous company growth.
Sonicare begin spinning its first bristles for customers in 1992 under
locally based Optiva. By 1997, business magazines were touting it as the
country's fastest-growing private company.
Two years later, Sonicare moved from its Bellevue base to its current
176,000-square-foot Snoqualmie facility. Shortly after, Dutch business
giant Royal Philips Electronics acquired the company and gave it a name
makeover: Philips Oral Healthcare. Within months, Sonicare produced its
10 millionth rechargeable power toothbrush.
"When we first started, our products were assembled by hand," said
Morley. "Now it's more about assembling our products with the help of
robotics and automation."