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Research methodology Data used to develop the case included primary data from the company and the disguised Northwest Traffic Supply (NWTS) Traffic Supply Company leaders. The company provided financial and product data and photos. Case overview/synopsis As NWTS prepares its annual capital (CAPEX) budget, CEO Rob Carr faces a pivotal decision that could shape the company’s future. Interestingly, Manager Neil Gillis submitted the only CAPEX proposal. Gillis recommended purchasing a digital printing system to mitigate risk, improve efficiency and position the company for the future. Rob was quite surprised by the proposal. Traditionally, new investment proposals focus on addressing capacity constraints. Sign manufacturing is the fastest-growing business segment of NWTS; however, the company has excess capacity. Rob was perplexed for a moment. Normally, NWTS only invested in additional capital equipment to support growth, implement innovative technologies and/or replace aging equipment. Yet, Neil had focused on a decision that could be critical for long-term strategic viability. Rob agreed to himself that this was outside the company’s usual investment rationale but maybe it was time for an evolution of that rationale. Now Rob must weigh the financial costs and strategic benefits of this proposal. The case connects academic concepts to business decisions. It enables students to understand how strategic growth theories are applied in practical investment and operational choices. Set in an entrepreneurial environment within the supply chain management arena, students are introduced to an industry faced with government spending, infrastructure policies, digital technological advances and safety regulations. While Rob agrees that the increase in capacity is not needed to support immediate operations, it could support NWTS’s competitive strategy of industry-leading service. A lack of key equipment redundancy puts NWTS at risk during current machine breakdowns. The case helps students understand that traditional quantitative metrics alone are sometimes insufficient to make optimal decisions, and qualitative factors can sometimes tip the scales, encouraging entrepreneurs to take a more holistic approach to expansion decisions with a longer-term future in mind. The case sparks lively class discussion about investment trade-offs, risk mitigation and leadership decision-making under uncertainty. Complexity academic level Designed for senior-level undergraduates and graduate business students, the NWTS case is best suited for strategic management courses but can also be effectively used in entrepreneurship, supply chain management and related business courses where students analyze investment decisions from multiple functional business perspectives.