This week Watchfire announced the company has been acquired by H.I.G. Capital, a private equity firm based in Miami that has $50 billion worth of other companies in its collection.
Usually when news breaks that a private equity firm has taken over a company my reaction is: "uh oh." This is based on past observation of major companies being wrecked by the meddling of such outside firms. Sears is a good example; 20 years ago it was a retail stalwart, today it's a hollow shell of its former self, thanks in large part to the private equity owners who mismanaged the retailer into the ground. Corel appears to be limping along after 20 years of private equity control. Corel is barely able to maintain its name-sake Draw application (yet the subscription price keeps ticking upward, now $269 per year for 2 applications). Lately version upgrades have been buggy and very under-whelming. I'm worried Draw's days are numbered.
Since the 1990's we've ordered a decent number of variable message displays from Watchfire, even going back to when the company was called Time-O-Matic. We were buying time/temperature displays and variable message displays from Time-O-Matic that had incandescent bulbs. That was before the transition to LED and the company name change.
These days we order most of our variable message displays from Daktronics. But we still order Watchfire units from time to time. They're the next best choice to us because the product is reliable and tends to hold up well for the long term. When you sell a customer a variable message display you also need to be prepared to help them maintain it over at least a 7-10 year period. Daktronics and Watchfire are both American-based and the products are assembled state-side.
I worry an outside private equity firm will go hunting for "efficiencies" -ways how to cheapen the product from Watchfire. We know the drill. Fire as many American employees as possible. Outsource as much manufacturing and assembly as possible. So on and so forth. If what I fear comes to pass the units from Watchfire may end up being no better in quality than the no-name "OEM" garbage coming in from China.
Usually when news breaks that a private equity firm has taken over a company my reaction is: "uh oh." This is based on past observation of major companies being wrecked by the meddling of such outside firms. Sears is a good example; 20 years ago it was a retail stalwart, today it's a hollow shell of its former self, thanks in large part to the private equity owners who mismanaged the retailer into the ground. Corel appears to be limping along after 20 years of private equity control. Corel is barely able to maintain its name-sake Draw application (yet the subscription price keeps ticking upward, now $269 per year for 2 applications). Lately version upgrades have been buggy and very under-whelming. I'm worried Draw's days are numbered.
Since the 1990's we've ordered a decent number of variable message displays from Watchfire, even going back to when the company was called Time-O-Matic. We were buying time/temperature displays and variable message displays from Time-O-Matic that had incandescent bulbs. That was before the transition to LED and the company name change.
These days we order most of our variable message displays from Daktronics. But we still order Watchfire units from time to time. They're the next best choice to us because the product is reliable and tends to hold up well for the long term. When you sell a customer a variable message display you also need to be prepared to help them maintain it over at least a 7-10 year period. Daktronics and Watchfire are both American-based and the products are assembled state-side.
I worry an outside private equity firm will go hunting for "efficiencies" -ways how to cheapen the product from Watchfire. We know the drill. Fire as many American employees as possible. Outsource as much manufacturing and assembly as possible. So on and so forth. If what I fear comes to pass the units from Watchfire may end up being no better in quality than the no-name "OEM" garbage coming in from China.