Molded by Time: Integrity’s Family Legacy Endures at ISSA 2025 | Booth 2305

At Booth 2305, visitors will meet Integrity Commercial Products—a family-owned manufacturer bringing old-school craftsmanship back to modern facilities. It’s proof that quality work and honest people never go out of style.

Owner Terry Stemple (right) and design engineer Bob Houry (left) built Integrity Commercial Products on a foundation of trust, craftsmanship and care. Those same values continue to guide the company today.

Where Craftsmanship Speaks Louder Than Noise

The doors of ISSA Show North America open to a blur of lights, motion, and sound. Crowds move toward the biggest displays, drawn by flashing logos and glowing taglines.

A few aisles over, the atmosphere changes. At Booth 2305, the noise fades and focus returns. A man stands behind a row of granite-finish receptacles, their clean lines and muted tones blending seamlessly into the space as a visitor lifts one of the lids. It closes with a clean, solid click. The visitor nods, impressed, and looks up.

He smiles. That sound, simple and certain, captures what Integrity Commercial Products stands for.

“Some companies chase gimmicks,” says Jay Skinner, Marketing and Sales Manager for Integrity Commercial Products. “We just want to show people products that do what they are supposed to do for a very long time.”

This isn’t a flashy debut. It’s a statement of intent. The brand may be new to the janitorial market, but it carries decades of experience molding products that last. Booth 2305 is their way of reintroducing themselves through substance rather than spectacle.

Walk past and the noise softens. What remains is craftsmanship you can touch, shaped by people who still believe good work speaks for itself.

Integrity Commercial Products designs for the places where durability meets daily life.

The Heart Behind the Name

Twenty-four years ago in Plainfield, Indiana, owner Terry Stemple set out to build something better. His goal was to create a company guided as much by its principles as its products.

Integrity Commercial Products in Plainfield, Indiana, where craftsmanship and care continue to shape every product.

He started small, producing durable hollow parts for water sports and automotive clients. His rule was simple: do the right thing, even when no one is watching. That rule became the company name.

Most mornings, Terry still walks the production floor, coffee in hand, greeting employees by name. He runs his fingers along a newly molded part, nods, and moves on.

“We built this company on trust,” he says. “If you do good work and take care of people, everything else falls into place.”

Owner Terry Stemple examines a newly molded part, staying connected to the craftsmanship that defines Integrity’s work.

Inside the factory, his philosophy hangs on banners above the machines. You are our most important asset. Quality starts here with you. They serve as daily reminders for the team.

This is where Integrity’s story deepens beyond manufacturing. It’s a story about consistency, respect, and doing hard things the right way. Those values kept the business strong across industries including agriculture, safety, and automotive, and would eventually pull it into a new market few saw coming.

Re-Engineering a Classic Design That Serves People First

A few years ago, a well-known line of rotationally molded receptacles and carts vanished from the market. Many facility managers noticed the gap. Production had shifted, designs had been simplified, and the industry was left searching for that same level of reliability.

Integrity saw an opportunity to restore what was lost. They bought the original molds and rebuilt each component to enhance strength, balance, durability, and productivity.

Subtle granite-tone finishes blend seamlessly into modern spaces. The result is clean, understated, and built for environments that demand both aesthetic appeal and durability. Each piece is designed to look as good on day one as it does after years of use, balancing form and function in every detail.

“When someone grabs a lid and feels that solid click, that is the moment they understand what we are doing,” Jay says. “These products belong in places that need to stay clean and safe, and not in a landfill after a year.”

Integrity’s engineers start with the user in mind—the person pushing, lifting, and cleaning. Handles are angled to ease the wrist. Wheels glide without scuffing. Lids open smoothly and close with precision. Every feature has a purpose.

They call it honest durability.

Integrity Commercial Products designs for the everyday places people depend on, creating durable solutions that stand up to time and use.

The team tests until failure, then fixes the cause. “We drop them off docks, leave them out in the sun, and hit them with hammers,” Jay says with a laugh. “If it breaks, we fix the reason it broke.”

That balance between practical toughness and thoughtful design became the blueprint for Integrity’s re-entry into the commercial products space. The goal isn’t novelty. It’s making things that simply work—and keep working.

The Art and Science of Rotational Molding

Rotational molding isn’t a fast process. It rewards patience and instinct, qualities rare in modern manufacturing. Each mold begins as a hollow aluminum form. Once filled with powdered resin, it moves into an oven where it slowly rotates on two axes, spreading heat evenly until every corner is coated. The result is a single seamless piece with no weak spots and no welds waiting to fail.

Inside the plant, the air smells faintly of heated resin and metal. Operators learn to listen as much as they watch. The low hum of the machines, the soft creak of a cooling mold, the rhythm of a shift—all signal that a part is forming correctly.

Indiana Lt. Gov. Micah Beckwith joins Integrity’s production team on the factory floor, learning the hands-on craftsmanship behind rotational molding.

By the time a part leaves the oven, cools, and is released, it has already been tested by heat, gravity, and time. That methodical pace may not be flashy, but it ensures the durability that defines every Integrity product.

A Factory That Builds People Too

Spend a few minutes at Integrity’s headquarters and you will hear as much about people as products. The company is still family-owned, with Terry Stemple as CEO and several of his children in key roles. Their leadership style is hands-on, steady, and humble.

Employees call him Mr. S. out of respect. He calls them by name. Some have been with him since the early years, others joined through work-release programs and built careers on the production floor.

Marketing and Sales Manager Jay Skinner snaps a selfie during the ribbon cutting ceremony as owner Terry Stemple addresses the crowd.

That philosophy has created a workforce that feels more like a mentorship network than a hierarchy. Veteran operators teach newer hires to read molds by touch. Younger engineers bring digital modeling tools that make the process faster and cleaner. Together, they’ve built a rhythm that feels confident, not rushed.

Faith is woven quietly into the routine. Morning meetings sometimes open with a simple thank-you for the work, for the team, for another day. It’s not performative — it’s culture. It reminds everyone that integrity is more than the name on the sign.

Rooted in Community

Integrity’s presence in Plainfield stretches beyond its factory walls. Many employees grew up nearby, and several have family members who now work alongside them. The company’s approach to hiring reflects the same values that built it: patience, opportunity, and loyalty.

Through local partnerships with schools and workforce development programs, Integrity offers hands-on training for young adults interested in manufacturing. Some come through work-release initiatives; others are students learning industrial design. “If they show up and want to learn, we can teach the rest,” Terry says.

That investment in people pays off. Several current supervisors began as entry-level operators decades ago. The company’s open-door policy and steady leadership have turned what could be a high-turnover industry into a place where people stay. “It’s rare to find that kind of stability in this business,” Jay says. “When you walk through the plant, you can feel the pride.”

Integrity quietly supports local schools and events. It doesn’t just operate in Plainfield — it belongs to it.

The Value of Building What Lasts

Integrity’s engineering team works by one rule: if it works, refine it. If it doesn’t, rebuild it.
“We could save money with less resin,” Jay says, “but that’s not how we do business. Sustainability is just common sense. If a product lasts longer, you’re already reducing waste.”

That mindset turns longevity into an advantage: fewer replacements, less waste, and more reliability. The team is also testing new resins with higher recycled content while maintaining the structural strength that defines every Integrity product.

This is where Integrity stands today: practical, grounded, and reliable. They’re not chasing trends or cutting corners; they’re proving that craftsmanship endures long after trends fade.

In an era obsessed with speed, Integrity’s story is a quiet argument for patience. It reminds us that lasting things take time, and people who care still make the difference.

From Custom Molding to a Brand Built to Last

For years, Integrity Rotational Molding quietly powered other brands behind the scenes, producing custom parts that helped clients succeed. The company built a reputation for solving tough design challenges and delivering precision when it mattered most.

Yet even as the custom business grew, owner Terry Stemple saw something more enduring on the horizon. He wanted to create a proprietary line of products that reflected not only their technical skill but also their beliefs about what manufacturing should stand for.

Founder Terry Stemple stands among the products that tell his story, sharing how craftsmanship and care shaped Integrity’s next chapter.

“There is pride in helping other companies grow,” Jay says. “But there is a different kind of pride in creating something that is truly your own and seeing it out in the world.”

That vision marked a turning point. Integrity began applying its deep experience in custom molding to develop its own commercial products line. Each design is shaped by Terry’s passion for quality, his mastery of rotational molding, and a commitment to long-term value.

The ribbon-cutting ceremony marked a new chapter for Integrity Rotational Molding with the launch of its own branded line, Integrity Commercial Products.

Terry often references the “Hedgehog Concept” from Jim Collins’s Good to Great. It describes the overlap between what you are deeply passionate about, what you can be the best in the world at, and what drives your economic engine. For Integrity, that intersection is clear.

Their passion is visible in the way the team studies every lid, hinge, and handle, always searching for a better way to build it. Their expertise comes from decades of perfecting rotational molding until it became second nature. Their economic strength lies in creating products that outperform and outlast competitors while giving customers confidence their investment will hold up over time.

By focusing on what they love, what they excel at, and what keeps the business strong, Integrity has created a foundation that will sustain growth for years to come. “When your foundation is steady, you can weather any cycle,” Jay explains. “That is the beauty of doing something you believe in. It lasts.”

Built for the Work That Never Stops

Walk through Integrity’s new product line and you will see a simple truth: every piece is designed for the workday that never ends at five o’clock.

New for 2025, the Eagle 55-Gallon Dome Top Receptacle anchors the collection. Designed for hospitals, airports, and public facilities where performance cannot fail, each one is fire-resistant, weather-tough, and molded with thick, uniform walls built to endure heavy use.

Nearby, the IntegriTops™ series brings that same reliability into cafeterias, food courts, and commercial kitchens. Each lid fits tight for odor control and easy cleaning.

Then there are the Dunnage Racks, simple and solid, NSF-approved for hygienic storage and versatile enough for point-of-purchase displays. They keep supplies off the floor and ready for inspection.

It’s not a flashy lineup, but it reflects what the industry actually needs: durability, hygiene and trust. Facility managers aren’t looking for reinvention. They’re looking for equipment that won’t let them down. “That’s what our customers remember,” Jay says. “They tell us, ‘We bought one 20 years ago and it’s still going strong.’”

Integrity’s commercial line is built for high-traffic environments where dependability, hygiene, and design work hand in hand.

From hospitals to universities to national chains, their designs prove reliability under real-world pressure.

Each product carries the same mindset: fewer parts, better balance, and materials that outlast constant motion. Rounded corners, smooth seams, and thick bases keep Integrity’s products in service long after cheaper alternatives wear out. Those same details also give the line its signature look, polished and professional, designed to complement modern interiors.

The Booth That Tells Their Story

At ISSA 2025, Integrity Commercial Products will show what that philosophy looks like in person. Booth 2305 is designed like a working showroom, functional yet visually refined. There are no marketing walls or digital screens—only products built to be lifted, pushed, and admired up close.

“We’re not bringing a script,” Jay says. “We’re bringing the people who made the parts.”

Visitors will find heavy-duty receptacles, tilt trucks, and Dunnage Racks built for hospitals, schools, and food-service operations. Everything on the floor is made in the USA. Each item carries the same signature quality that defines Integrity’s approach: solid, functional, and designed for decades of use.

The team members staffing the booth are the same ones who molded the products. When someone asks a question, the answer comes from experience, not a brochure. “Once they touch the material,” Jay says, “we don’t have to say much.”

Booth 2305 isn’t a sales pitch. It’s a handshake, a quiet reminder that trust still matters.

Building for Generations

Integrity’s story isn’t only about the longevity of products, but the continuity of purpose. Terry Stemple still walks the floor, still asks questions, and still believes faith and good work belong in the same breath. His children continue that legacy, guiding the company toward steady growth while keeping its principles intact.

The Integrity team at an employee appreciation event, celebrating the people who make the company’s success possible.

After ISSA, the Commercial Products division will expand into new categories: maid carts, linen systems, and storage solutions that blend industrial strength with hospitality design. Behind the scenes, automation and data tracking are improving consistency. The team is also testing energy-efficient molding ovens and updated resin formulations to reduce environmental impact without compromising performance.

“Technology helps us move faster,” Jay says. “People still make it right.” Their goal is simple: to make industrial products that don’t just perform but also elevate the spaces they serve.

Integrity doesn’t look for the spotlight. They build what lasts. You can see it in the way a lid closes cleanly, a cart rolls straight, or a customer comes back years later. Their work proves that care still matters, and that good people still make a difference.

Somewhere on the floor in Plainfield, a lid closes with that same solid click—the sound of Integrity. Still holding strong.

Visit Integrity Commercial Products at Booth 2305

See the full line of heavy-duty receptacles, tilt trucks, and NSF-approved Dunnage Racks during ISSA Show North America.

Meet the team, learn about specifications, and experience firsthand why Integrity’s name means exactly what it says.

More information: https://integritycommercialproducts.com/

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