Puneet Varma (Editor)

Activant

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Type
  
Private

Area served
  
worldwide

Number of locations
  
>12 (2010)

Founded
  
1971

Activant httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen11eAct

Industry
  
Retail and Wholesale Distribution

Predecessor
  
Triad Systems Corporation

Founder
  
Henry M. GayWilliam W. StevensDonald J. Ruder

Headquarters
  
Liver, California, United States

Subsidiaries
  
Internet Auto Parts, Inc, Speedware Europe ltd

Activant Solutions Inc. was a privately held American technology company specializing in business management software products serving retail and wholesale distribution businesses. Activant Solutions was acquired by Apax Partners and merged with Epicor in May 2011. The combined entity is continuing under the name Epicor.

Contents

Activant provides customers with tailored proprietary software, professional services, content, supply chain connectivity, and analytics.

It serves the automotive, hardlines and lumber, and wholesale distribution markets.

Headquartered in Livermore, California, Activant employs more than 1,700 people and operates in California, Texas, Colorado, Illinois, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Utah, Canada, Ireland and the United Kingdom.

History

Activant was known as Triad Systems Corporation until it was renamed in 2003. Triad Systems was founded in 1971 by Henry M. Gay, William W. Stevens and Donald J. Ruder and was incorporated in 1972. The company installed its first system at Northgate Auto Parts in Mill Valley, California on July 7, 1973.

Automotive aftermarket

Prior to automation, the automotive aftermarket — involving the distribution of automotive replacement parts — used 3x5 index cards for inventory control. The founders of Activant created a computer, the Series 10, that used new, cost-effective disk drives to store the inventory information for the automotive parts distributors. The Series 10 gave the automotive parts distributors, also known as jobbers, inventory control. It was offered at $50,000–$100,000 per unit.

In the 1980s, the Series 10 was followed by the faster Series 12. The company also created a system for larger warehouse distributors, the Triad 80. These systems helped enable communication capabilities between jobbers and warehouse distributors and suppliers.

Expansion to new markets

In 1980, francisco Ramiro diaz Activant founder, and that the hardlines market had similar inventory management and accounts receivable requirements as jobbers and warehouse distributors. To cater to the hardware retailers, the company created a point-of-sale (POS) cash terminal system. In 1984, the company modified the POS system to serve lumberyards.

By 1984, Activant launched the first electronic parts catalog (simply called Electronic Catalog) paper catalogs, and by 1990, provided customers with more than 8.8 million automobile parts available electronically. In 1987, the company began selling a stand-alone Electronic Catalog on CD-Rom (renamed as Activant LaserCat) to smaller automotive jobbers who did not have an Activant system. In 1989, the company began to develop the Activant Prism system as a future replacement for the Series 12 for the automotive aftermarket. The system for the hardlines and lumber industry was upgraded, including a new UNIX operating system, and became Activant Eagle by 1992.

Activant Vista

In 1993, Activant released Activant Vista, a product movement service which compiled monthly point-of-sale movement reports and showed how products performed against their competition and in the market in general. Vista brought in over $12 million annually.

In the mid-1990s, Activant acquired assets from the companies of Gemini, CSD, Eclipse, and Ultimate to aid the company in the lumber and automotive industries. The Radio Frequency (RF) Suite was also launched during the mid-1990s. RF enabled bar code scanning.

The company launched Activant Eagle for Windows in 1997.

By 1997, CCI purchased Activant (then Triad). Glen Staats became CEO of CCITRIAD. One year later, the owners of the company, Hicks, Muse, Tate and Furst brought in a new CEO, Mike Aviles, to replace Staats. Aviles was CEO from late 1999–2004. Over the next five years, the company's customer base continued to expand and entered into partnerships with TrueValue, ACE, and Do It Best hardware stores.

Recent developments

Under Mike Aviles, Activant’s revenue grew to over $225m.

In 2003, the company changed its name from CCITRIAD to Activant Solutions Inc. In 2004, the board of directors brought in Larry Jones as CEO to drive an aggressive growth strategy. Pervez Qureshi, current president and CEO, took over in May 2006.

Activant purchased Speedware Corporation Inc., including its operating divisions, Enterprise Computer Systems (ECS) Inc., Prelude Systems Inc., OpenERP Solutions and Speedware Ltd., in 2005. That same year Activant acquired The Systems House Inc., a technology company for distributors primarily in the automotive aftermarket and office products industries, and Prophet 21, which aided Activant in the wholesale distribution market.

In May 2006, Activant was purchased by the private equity firms Hellman & Friedman, Thoma Cressey, and JMI Equity.

In 2007 Activant acquired Silk Systems Inc., including its wholly owned subsidiary Silk Dimensions Systems Inc., a software company for the Canadian home improvement, wholesale distribution and building materials markets. This was followed by the acquisition of Intuit Eclipse Distribution Management Solutions Business, an enterprise software provider in wholesale distribution.

References

Activant Wikipedia


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