. >> joseph supik, mark's nephew, believes the company has found a way to balance their workflow. >>rly flexible with a lot of the stuff we can do, so we can adjust for customer nand as needed. demand for beer taps has been steady. >> those customers have given the business stability at uncertain times. >> when the millwork has fallen off, we've been able to fill in the gaps with that. >> the decision to grow the beer tap handle line has worked out so well that sales for the product now account for more than 50% of business. the one catch about following customer demand is that the business is headed in a direction that mark didn't predict. he admits that making the tap handles can be a bit repetitive. >> it's not stimulating. so we try to move people around and we try to you know make things interesting. >> that being said, clients are speaking with their dollars. and we've seeing companies that we've been dealing with for years, their demand for tap handles has increased. they would ask for a small batch in the beginning and now their batch is like once a month. it's interesting to