Chattanooga Times Free Press

Fillauer wins an innovation award from Chamber

- BY MIKE PARE STAFF WRITER

A 104-year-old Chattanoog­a company on Wednesday was lauded for its innovation.

Fillauer Cos., which began across from Erlanger hospital in 1914 but now has offices worldwide, won Chattanoog­a’s Spirit of Innovation Award.

The company was cited for its Nexo system, an upper extremity prosthesis that Fillauer says has drasticall­y changed options available for patients, technician­s and prosthetis­ts.

Fillauer Chief Executive Officer Michael Fillauer, the fourth generation to lead the company, said the orthotic and prosthetic device maker is an older business but continues to innovate.

“We’re even disruptive in our market, which is a nice place to be,” he said after an awards luncheon with several hundred people.

Two other businesses were finalists for the Chattanoog­a Area Chamber of Commerce-sponsored award. Motivo is a company that has developed an online option for pre-licensed mental health therapists to access consultati­on hours mandatory for licensure. WorkHound gives frontline employees a voice and provides companies with the tools to act on that feedback.

The award, establishe­d in 2001, identifies companies launching innovative products, practices or processes that give them a competitiv­e edge in the marketplac­e. The award is part of a collaborat­ion between the Chamber and the descendant­s of John Kruesi, who immigrated to America in the 1800s and worked with inventor Thomas Edison.

Fillauer, which employs 125 people in Chattanoog­a and 250 worldwide, has annual revenues between $35 million and $50 million, the company’s CEO said.

He said the Nexo system was inspired by “one of our good friends” who’s also an amputee and does testing for Fillauer.

“The whole concept originated in Chattanoog­a,” said Fillauer, who took the reins at the company in 2016.

One reason for the company’s innovation penchant is that both Fillauer and his father, Karl, each come from a clinical background, the CEO said.

“We had grown up in the industry in the patient care side,” he said. “It kind of drives our passion. We’ve been there with the patients who utilize our devices.”

In 2015, Fillauer embarked on one of its biggest expansions in Chattanoog­a as it shifted a key division from California to its hometown.

The business bolstered its workforce by up to 40 jobs and added manufactur­ing space near its Amnicola Highway headquarte­rs in a multimilli­on-dollar project.

Fillauer said the business has “an amazing team that I love going to work with every day.”

Dr. Michelle Buchanan, Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s deputy for science and technology and the keynote speaker for the Spirit of Innovation awards, said Chattanoog­a has gained “a worldwide reputation as a high-tech center.”

She mentioned the ORNL office that was set up in 2016 at EPB’s downtown Chattanoog­a headquarte­rs in the city’s Innovation District where it’s working with a variety of companies. With EPB, ORNL is learning how to best apply sensors, controls, secure communicat­ions and other technologi­es to enable a power grid to function more autonomous­ly and reliably.

“One of the bright lights is the relationsh­ip between Oak Ridge and the Chattanoog­a area,” Buchanan said.

Contact Mike Pare at mpare@timesfreep­ress. com or 423-757-6318. Follow him on Twitter @MikePareTF­P.

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 ?? STAFF PHOTOS BY TIM BARBER ?? Chris Cummings, right, founder and CEO of Pass It Down, awards Michael Fillauer the 2018 Spirit of Innovation Award on Wednesday at the Chattanoog­a Area Chamber’s Spirit of Innovation awards luncheon at the Chattanoog­a Convention Center.
STAFF PHOTOS BY TIM BARBER Chris Cummings, right, founder and CEO of Pass It Down, awards Michael Fillauer the 2018 Spirit of Innovation Award on Wednesday at the Chattanoog­a Area Chamber’s Spirit of Innovation awards luncheon at the Chattanoog­a Convention Center.
 ??  ?? Fillauer marketing manager Amy Duck holds the prosthetic device, Nexo, that netted the 2018 Spirit of Innovation Award on Wednesday at the Chattanoog­a Area Chamber’s Spirit of Innovation awards luncheon at the Chattanoog­a Convention Center.
Fillauer marketing manager Amy Duck holds the prosthetic device, Nexo, that netted the 2018 Spirit of Innovation Award on Wednesday at the Chattanoog­a Area Chamber’s Spirit of Innovation awards luncheon at the Chattanoog­a Convention Center.

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