Jason Kane: Salt Logistics, Customer Service, and Learning from Contract Mistakes
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Jason Kane, National Sales Manager for Midwest Salt with over 14 years in the industry, joins Phil to share his journey from responding to a Craigslist ad to becoming a logistics expert in the salt supply chain. From explaining why salt is more of a commodity than people want to admit, to breaking down the complex journey from mine to contractor's truck, to learning hard lessons from contract mistakes, Jason reveals why curiosity drives knowledge, why customer service runs everything, and why being smart and truthful with suppliers is the foundation of success in this industry.
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Episode Chapters
00:22 - Intro and Welcome Jason Kane
00:46 - The History of Midwest Salt
01:38 - Jason’s Journey with Midwest Salt
05:31 - Customer Service in the Salt Industry
07:36 - Understanding Salt Logistics
08:54 - Regional Salt Sources and Types
12:33 - Challenges and Solutions in Salt Supply
14:34 - Bagged Products & Custom Solutions
16:29 - Liquid Deicing Solutions
18:33 - Government Contracts and Challenges
19:27 - Getting to Know Jason
20:56 - Availability and Client Engagement
23:16 - Industry Insights & Trends
27:08 - Things to be Mindful of in 2026
34:54 - Final Thoughts
Key Learnings
Midwest Salt Started as Bags in Basements - When owner Tony Johnson acquired Midwest Salt in 2008-2009, it was a smaller mom and pop shop delivering bags of salt into people's houses and basements, salt to water softeners, things like that. Tony came from a logistics background connecting dots with hub and spoke models, so when he saw the opportunity to acquire a company that fit his expertise, he took it. Midwest Salt is fundamentally a logistics company like many service providers.
From Craigslist to National Sales Manager - Jason joined Midwest Salt in late 2010 after responding to a Craigslist ad, having just moved from Colorado. What he thought would be a part-time job to get his feet in the industry turned into a 14-year career. He started managing warehouse stock, getting on trucks for routes, then evolved into an office sales position after two years of literally doing the heavy lifting.
Skydiving Taught Customer Service at Life-or-Death Level - Between 2012-2016, Jason spent summers as operations and customer service manager for a skydiving company while returning to Midwest Salt each winter to drive semis and deliver salt. In skydiving, customer service was literally about taking care of people's lives - ensuring planes were in tip-top mechanical condition, gear was the best available, and instructors were exceptional. This foundation taught him that no matter what you're selling, you're really taking care of people.
Customer Service Is Having a Revival - There's been a breakdown of customer service across industries, but it's starting to come back. People are seeing the value again. Companies thriving in customer service make the investment and create feedback loops - they're always asking for feedback through surveys and making it easy to provide input. Companies with terrible service make you dig to find a way to give feedback, then you never get a response - it's a black hole.
Salt Is More of a Commodity Than People Want to Admit - When it comes down to how salt moves and the cost it accrues getting from point A to point B to the end user, it's very much a commodity business. But the service layer on top of the commodity is what differentiates suppliers. It's not just about the product - it's about reliability, logist...
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