The strategic alliance of two giant players in formwork gives them additional heft in the North American marketplace.
The strategic alliance of two giant players in formwork gives them additional heft in the North American marketplace.
The recently announced partnership of Aluma Systems with European-based Ulma brings together technology and marketing muscle that vaults them into a secure number one position in the North American market, says Ian Steer, district general manager for eastern Canada with Aluma.
“We’re very excited by this,” says Steer. “And we’ve had a tremendous reaction from our customers.”
The partnership will offer a bigger inventory, more locations and yards for better service and a larger overall fleet of support vehicles.
“We’re not sure what the numbers are, but we were close to number one and this will make us certainly the biggest in North America,” says Steer.
He says the deal was two years in the making and started when executives with Ulma revealed they were thinking about getting into North America.
“There was a lot of back and forth,” says Steer noting discussions moved from a distribution deal to a full-fledged alliance.
The downturn in Europe means that there are currently more opportunities here in North America and that’s where the partnership will concentrate first.
“The beauty of it is that these are two systems, one metric the other imperial, but with the connectors we have we can combine the two so the customers can have any configuration they want,” he says.
With more customers leaning towards European standards, it’s great timing, he says, since the combined company can provide whatever the customer wants.
Everything from bridgework to decking can be combined, he says, regardless of whether it’s a Euro spec or North American and the transitions are seamless.
Instead of wrestling with specs, he says, the two companies can now concentrate on business.
Both are privately held. Aluma is a division of Brand Energy & Infrastructure Services. Ulma is part of the MCC Group. Headquartered in Toronto, Aluma is a global leader in concrete formwork, shoring and industrial services operating in over 50 countries.
Ulma Construcción was founded in 1961 and is part of the MONDRAGON Corporation, a worker-owned co-operative with an annual cash flow of 15 billion euros founded by a Catholic priest in a Basque town of the same name after the Spanish Civil War.
It started in earnest in 1956 as a technical college and a small shop making kerosene heaters and today employs some 93,000 people in 256 companies — all of whom are stakeholders with a single vote.
“They’re a really interesting group of people,” says Steer. “Their driving force is how many jobs this deal would create.”
Recent Comments
comments for this post are closed