Skip to main content
AMufacture appoints Andrew Jameson as CFO to support rapid expansion and seven-fold capacity growth.
Expansion
2 min read

AMufacture appoints Andrew Jameson as CFO to support rapid expansion and seven-fold capacity growth.

AMufacture
AMufacture

Service

Originally reported by VoxelMatters

AMufacture appoints Andrew Jameson as CFO to support rapid expansion and seven-fold capacity growth. Portsmouth-based contract manufacturer AMufacture has appointed Andrew Jameson as Chief Financial Officer to oversee its scaling operations and recent seven-figure investment round from Maven Capital and Turner. The company, which recently expanded its HP Multi Jet Fusion printer fleet, is positioning itself to shift from prototyping to high-volume industrial contract manufacturing. This leadership change follows the 2025 appointment of Chairman David Hollander, formerly of Dyson, as the firm targets increased market share in the UK defense and industrial sectors.

This appointment highlights the ongoing professionalization of mid-sized 3D printing service bureaus as they transition into mainstream manufacturing supply chains. AMufacture operates within a competitive landscape of contract manufacturers that must balance high capital expenditure for polymer and metal systems with the operational efficiency required to serve demanding sectors like aerospace and defense. By securing executive talent with experience in private equity and multi-subsidiary management, the company is aligning its financial structure with the rigorous demands of industrial-scale production. This move addresses the common scaling gap where service providers struggle to manage the transition from low-volume prototyping to consistent, high-throughput manufacturing.

Jameson brings a background in corporate advisory and private equity that will be essential for managing the capital-intensive nature of expanding an industrial 3D printing fleet. For AMufacture, the immediate priority is to demonstrate consistent utilization rates and operational margins to its investors while integrating its expanded HP printer capacity into existing defense-focused workflows. Buyers and partners should focus on the company's ability to maintain quality standards and lead times as it scales production volume beyond its current footprint.

Topics

AMufactureAdditive ManufacturingContract ManufacturingHP Multi Jet FusionPortsmouthUKFinanceIndustrial 3D Printing