Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

newsworthy

Private equity firm acquires TMS vendor MercuryGate

Summit Partners installs former RedPrairie chief Juliano as CEO, announces plans for growth.

Logistics technology provider MercuryGate International Inc. today said it has been acquired by the Boston-based private equity firm Summit Partners, and has named Joe Juliano, the former president of supply chain software vendor RedPrairie Corp., as its president and CEO.

MercuryGate plans to work with Summit on accelerating innovation and enabling global ecosystem growth for its software as a service (SaaS)-based transportation management system (TMS), the company said.


Monica Wooden


Monica Wooden
Steve Blough


Steve Blough

Cary, N.C.-based MercuryGate has been led by CEO Monica Wooden and President Steve Blough since they co-founded the company in 2000. As part of this transaction, Wooden will now transition into a customer-facing role as chief revenue officer, Blough will take on the position of chief product officer, and Juliano, who holds the title of executive-in-residence (EIR) with Summit Partners, will take over the executive reins.

Terms of the acquisition were not disclosed, but MercuryGate said the deal closed on Aug. 23. In addition, Summit Partners managing directors Peter Rottier and C.J. Fitzgerald will join the MercuryGate board of directors.

The deal comes at a time when the transportation management sector is facing enormous pressure from rising e-commerce parcel shipping volumes and a capacity crunch in the trucking freight market.

That challenging business climate contributed to the company's decision to seek an investment partner, MercuryGate Chief Marketing Officer Karen Sage said in an interview. "We went with a private equity partner in part because of a shared vision with Summit on where we want to take the company," Sage said. "We didn't want to go with another technology firm because we are really passionate about what we do and want to stay focused in this area."

MercuryGate defines its position in the market as providing a powerful TMS platform at an affordable price, and says it has applied that formula to a range of customer segments, including shippers, third party logistics providers (3PLs), freight forwarders, freight brokers, and carriers.

Following the acquisition, MercuryGate plans to continue all relationships with all those current clients, even as the company positions itself for rapid growth. "[The acquisition] is going to bring MercuryGate to the next level of scale. It will offer our customers opportunities for greater success and growth," Sage said. "Expansion into different areas is very much on the table. There is a lot of opportunity for us."

The pressure for companies to control their supply chain and transportation costs offers an opportunity for MercuryGate to expand its position in the sector, Summit Partners' Fitzgerald said. "MercuryGate offers a strong product with incredibly rich functionality," Fitzgerald said in a statement. "We believe the company is strongly positioned for continued growth, as organizations large and small seek SaaS solutions to manage their transportation and logistics operations for improved productivity and operational efficiency."

Joe Juliano


Joe Juliano

MercuryGate's new president and CEO can help guide the company's planned growth by relying on hissupply chain industry experience and his specialty in SaaS-based systems, Summit said. Prior to joining Summit Partners, Juliano was president and CEO of IQNavigator, a SaaS-based workforce management software vendor, and was president of RedPrairie, which merged with JDA Software Inc. in a $1.9 billion deal in 2012. Juliano has also served as president and CEO of the SaaS-based supply chain financing company PrimeRevenue.

Another factor fueling MercuryGate's ambitions is the aggressive game plan of its new parent company. Summit Partners invests in companies in the sectors of technology, healthcare and life sciences, and growth products and services, the firm says. Among its other investments are the business software giant Infor, including its GTNexus supply chain software unit, and the ride-sharing pioneer Uber Technologies Inc.

According to its website, Summit Partners helps the companies it acquires grow by offering the guidance to expand their geography, prepare for mergers and initial public offerings (IPOs), ramp up their sales force, recruit talent, scale their infrastructure, and support acquisitions.

"We selected Summit Partners amongst many other suitors because Summit shares our vision and commitment to extend the foundation we have built into a platform for accelerated innovation, global ecosystem enablement, and customer scale," MercuryGate's Wooden said in a statement. "I was looking for an investment partner that had the growth-oriented strategic and operational resources to take us to the next level, and I found that formula in Summit Partners."

The Latest

More Stories

Stampin’ Up!’s Riverton, Utah, distribution center

Stampin’ Up!’s Riverton, Utah, distribution center

Picking reimagined

What happens when your warehouse technology upgrade turns into a complete process overhaul? That may sound like a headache to some, but for leaders at paper crafting company Stampin’ Up! it’s been a golden opportunity—especially when it comes to boosting productivity. The Utah-based direct marketing company has increased its average pick rate by more than 70% in the past year and a half. And it’s all due to a warehouse management system (WMS) implementation that opened the door to process changes and new technologies that are speeding its high-velocity, high-SKU (stock-keeping unit) order fulfillment operations.

The bottom line: Stampin’ Up! is filling orders faster than ever before, with less manpower, since it shifted to an easy-to-use voice picking system that makes adapting to seasonal product changes and promotions a piece of cake. Here’s how.

Keep ReadingShow less

Featured

autostore AS/RS at toyota materal handling site

New AutoStore AS/RS at Toyota Material Handling’s DC will increase parts volume and fulfillment speed

With its new AutoStore automated storage and retrieval (AS/RS) system, Toyota Material Handling Inc.’s parts distribution center, located at its U.S. headquarters campus in Columbus, Indiana, will be able to store more forklift and other parts and move them more quickly. The new system represents a major step toward achieving TMH’s goal of next-day parts delivery to 98% of its customers in the U.S. and Canada by 2030, said TMH North America President and CEO Brett Wood at the launch event on October 28. The upgrade to the DC was designed, built, and installed through a close collaboration between TMH, AutoStore, and Bastian Solutions, the Toyota-owned material handling automation designer and systems integrator that is a cornerstone of the forklift maker’s Toyota Automated Logistics business unit. The AS/RS is Bastian’s 100th AutoStore installation in North America.

TMH’s AutoStore system deploys 28 energy-efficient robotic shuttles to retrieve and deliver totes from within a vertical storage grid. To expedite processing, artificial intelligence (AI)-enhanced software determines optimal storage locations based on whether parts are high- or low-demand items. The shuttles, each independently controlled and selected based on shortest distance to the stored tote, swiftly deliver the ordered parts to four picking ports. Each port can process up to 175 totes per hour; the company’s initial goal is 150 totes per hour, with room to grow. The AS/RS also eliminates the need for order pickers to walk up to 10 miles per day, saving time, boosting picking accuracy, and improving ergonomics for associates.

Keep ReadingShow less
US Bank truck shipments Q3

U.S. Bank: truck freight shipments and spending slow their decline

Truck freight shipments and spending continued to contract in the third quarter, albeit at a slower pace than earlier this year, according to the latest U.S. Bank Freight Payment Index.

“The latest data continues to show some positive developments for the freight market. However, there remain sequential declines nationwide, and in most regions,” Bobby Holland, U.S. Bank director of freight business analytics, said in a release. “Over the last two quarters, volume and spend contractions have lessened, but we’re waiting for clear evidence that the market has reached the bottom.”

Keep ReadingShow less
nimble smart robots for fedex

FedEx picks Nimble for fulfillment automation

Parcel giant FedEx Corp. is automating its fulfillment flows by investing in the AI robotics and autonomous e-commerce fulfillment technology firm Nimble, and announcing plans to use the San Francisco-based startup’s tech in its own returns network.

The size of FedEx’s investment wasn’t disclosed, but the company was the lead investor of Nimble’s $106 million “series C” funding round, announced last week. The round was co-led by existing shareholder Cedar Pine LLC.

Keep ReadingShow less

Logistics gives back: October 2024

For the past seven years, third-party service provider ODW Logistics has provided logistics support for the Pelotonia Ride Weekend, a campaign to raise funds for cancer research at The Ohio State University’s Comprehensive Cancer Center–Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute. As in the past, ODW provided inventory management services and transportation for the riders’ bicycles at this year’s event. In all, some 7,000 riders and 3,000 volunteers participated in the ride weekend.


Keep ReadingShow less