Two-piece can and end-making machinery for global beverage and food producers
Stolle manufactures high-speed production machinery for the global canmaking industry, with a tech stack anchored in CAD (AutoCAD, Solidworks) and CNC control systems (Fanuc, Mazak, DMG Mori). Active hiring skews toward manufacturing and engineering roles at mid-level, while project work focuses on design automation, bill-of-materials workflows, and standardizing CNC programming — suggesting internal operational friction around consistency and scheduling efficiency.
Stolle is a 501–1,000-person manufacturer of two-piece can and end-making machinery headquartered in Centennial, Colorado. The company designs, builds, and deploys complete canmaking production lines for beverage and food manufacturers globally, alongside providing OEM spare parts and field service support. Revenue derives from machinery sales, installation, and ongoing technical support; the business is structured around design engineering, manufacturing operations, and customer lifecycle support. Pain points cluster around project delivery timelines, cost control in engineering, and standardization of CNC programming across production.
Primary CAD tools are AutoCAD and Solidworks; CNC control relies on Fanuc, Mazak, and DMG Mori systems. Project and data management runs on Microsoft Project and internal ERP/PDM systems for bill-of-materials construction.
Active projects include automated machinery design, ERP/PDM bill-of-materials workflows, machine manual creation and updates, CNC programming standardization, acceptance testing, and occupational health and safety compliance programs.
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