Engineering consultant also reorganises business around four skill areas
WYG has boosted its presence in South Africa, Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina as part of its plan to internationalize the company.
The move is one part of a three-point strategy introduced by chief executive Paul Hamer to turn the business around after it was forced into a refinancing deal with its lenders last year.
It will set up separate subsidiary companies in South Africa and Croatia and has opened an office in Bosnia and Herzegovina capital Sarajevo.
Chief executive Paul Hamer said: 鈥淎s we continue to move forward, we remain committed to creating a fit for purpose business that is strong, sustainable and better positioned to compete more effectively in our chosen markets and countries.鈥
He added that the group would start looking to expand further overseas in two to three years. He said: 鈥淏y 2012-13 we鈥檒l have created a very sustainable base from which to acquire. It鈥檒l be more about enhancing our global capabilities. It鈥檚 going to be technically driven rather than revenue.鈥
It currently operates in 40 countries and said it is growing its overseas turnover by about 20% per year. In June last year its overseas percentage contribution to group turnover was described as in the 鈥渓ow twenties鈥.
In a separate move, the group has also reorganized the business around four divisions: buildings and critical infrastructure; transport solutions; energy and sustainability; and risk and assurance services. Full details are expected in the autumn.
Hamer said: 鈥淚t allows us to marshal our resources and move them to where we need. It is to induce collaboration.鈥
Prior to the shake-up, teams had often operated only in one region rather than across the whole group, Hamer said.
鈥淚reland and international didn鈥檛 use the capabilities and resources across the group.鈥
Last month WYG sold its rail arm to Amey after it was identified as a non core asset. It followed a statement by Hamer in January that up to 25% of WYG鈥檚 operations would be鈥漧ooked at closely in the mirror鈥 as part of a strategic review.
The review follows a turbulent 2009 that saw Hamer inherit a company that gone on a 拢85m debt-driven spending spree over five years in 18 countries.
No comments yet