In this episode of Builders, Makers, Doers, Andy and Cameron sit down with John Cox, founder of Quercus Cooperage, in High Falls – one of the few remaining traditional coopers practicing the ancient craft of handmade barrels in the United States. Together, they discuss how a nearly vanished trade survives in a modern, automated economy, and what trades owners can learn about discipline, delegation, marketing, and resilience from someone who chose niche mastery over scale.
John didn’t build a factory. He built a niche.
After years in custom woodworking, a national barrel shortage pushed him into coopering – an old trade most people assume is gone. Instead of chasing scale or investing millions in automation, he chose to stay focused, stay custom, and protect margin over volume.
In this conversation, he shares:
John also talks honestly about burnout, changing demand, supply chain uncertainty, and the pressure of keeping something meaningful alive in a fast-moving world.
This episode isn’t really about barrels.
It’s about ownership, discipline, and building something that can last – even when conditions change.
If you’ve ever felt the tension between doing the work and leading the business, this conversation will feel familiar.
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