SEARCH searchBY TOPIC
right_division Green SCM Distribution
Bookmark us
sitemap
SCDigest Logo
distribution

Focus: Distribution/Materials Handling

Feature Article from Our Distribution and Materials Handling Subject Area - See All

From SCDigest's On-Target E-Magazine

- July 9, 2014 -

 

Supply Chain News: Warehouse Management Players Accellos, HighJump to Merge


Deal Brings New Heft to Accellos, Helps it Move into Tier 2 and Tier 1 Customers

 

 SCDigest Editorial Staff

 

Consolidation continues on in the supply chain software market, as in a mildly surprising move, Accellos announced it was acquiring HighJump Software. Both companies are known primarily as Warehouse Management System (WMS) providers, though each also offers EDI-based trading partner solutions as well.

 

The move by Accellos will certainly give it additional heft in its quest to move into the WMS market's top ranks, also aspired to by Softeon, TECSYS, and Cloud-focused players Snapfulfil and Logfire, among others, all chasing traditional best of breed leaders Manhattan Associates and JDA (after its acquistion of RedPrairie in late 2012.

SCDigest Says:

start
Given the different markets the two products serve, Collins added that the company is in no hurry to merge the two WMS solutions.
close
What Do You Say?
Click Here to Send Us Your Comments
feedback
Click Here to Post or See Reader Feedback

Accellos, based in Colorado, will retain the HighJump name, and its current CEO Michael Cornell will keep that role in the combined company.

Accellos has its WMS roots in part in a product that was called Radio Beacon, which it acquired in 2006. Radio Beacon catered to smaller DC operations.

Under Accellos, the company has continued that small to lower mid-market focus, especially in areas such as wholesale distribution, consumer goods manufacturing, and the 3PL market. It has had great success selling into companies that use mid-market ERP solutions such as Microsoft Dynamics, Sage, SAP1 and others, primarily using a channel strategy of value-added resellers of these ERP packagers, bolstered by pre-built integration with those systems.

HighJump, based in the Minneapolis area, has a customer base that certainly skews larger than that of Accellos, though it has largely targeted the mid-market as well over its history, though with some tier 1 customer success. It has its roots in a company called Data Collection Systems Inc., which provided shop floor data collection technology, but which moved into the WMS market in the mid-1990s. In 2004, it was acquired by 3M in a surprising move, when for awhile 3M had ideas of being in the supply chain software business.

But with a new CEO later coming into 3M that plan was soon changed, and HighJump was spit back out as an independent company a few years afterwards under new investors. The company struggled initially, but after a new CEO and private equity backer a few years later, the company has regained momentum and posted strong results of late, especially in the omni-channel market.

Dwight Klappich, who follows the WMS market for Gartner, thinks the move is largely a positive one for Accellos.

"Overall this is a good merger and makes a now much larger combined vendor solely focused on supply chain execution, including a notable presence in B2B integration, about 40% of the business," Klappich told SCDigest. "The merger is synergistic, improving the viability of both beyond the combined revenues with some potential for the cross sell of products."


(Distribution/Materials Handling Story Continues Below )

CATEGORY SPONSOR: LONGBOW ADVANTAGE - JDA SUPPLY CHAIN CONSULTANTS

Download Longbow Advantage

Business Briefs

 

 

The Keys to WMS Success,

Maximizing JDA WMS

Performance and More

 

 

 

 

 

But, Klappich added, there will be challenges:

"While there is potential to serve two strata of market - small and medium, and medium to large - few vendors have pulled this off because there are notable differences in how a company approaches these distinct markets," Klappich added. "It affects sales, support, R&D, pricing and other areas. High-end customers focus on breadth and depth of functionality, while low end customers are more concerned with ease of use, implementation time and effort and total cost of ownership."

Chad Collins, chief marketing officer at Accellos who himself once worked at HighJump, said the companies had been talking for awhile, but the plans accelerated when Accellos' private equity backer, Accel KKR, made money available to do such a deal. While details of the transaction were not announced, it was surely in the several tens of millions of dollars at minimum - a major investment indeed.

Collins said the deal shows that Accel KKR has confidence in Accellos' management team since its investment in the company in 2012, and that it also sees a bright future for HighJump.

He added that he sees a lot of synergy between the smaller consumer goods manufacturers that make up a sizable portion of the Accellos' customer base and HighJump's trading partner network solution, helping those customers to get compliant with retailer requirements for packaging and labeling (Accellos) and EDI transactions (HighJump), now from one company.

Given the different markets the two products serve, Collins added that the Accelloss is in no hurry to merge the two WMS solutions, though that couldn't be ruled out some day in the future.


Any thoughts on this merger or the WMS market generally? Let us know your thoughts at the Feedback button (email) or section (web form) below.


Recent Feedback

WMS solutions are all over the board, but few serve the purpose of reducing costs and locating material at the point of work. Great article here and good luck to Michael Cornell. This sounds like a great merger.


Matt Peterson
Manager, Digital Services
Apex Supply Chain Technologies
Jul, 10 2014
 
.