Shermco Industries Acquires Ready Engineering

Jan. 12, 2021
Ready is a specialty engineering business.

Shermco Industries, Inc. (Shermco), has acquired Ready Engineering (Ready), a specialty engineering business based in Alberta, Canada, and Olympia, Wash. The Ready management team will remain with the company following the acquisition.

Ready is a specialty provider of electrical, controls, and industrial information systems. It operates in a diverse range of sectors across North America. Its specialty services include design and field engineering; power system designs; control system installations and upgrades; software verification and validation; commissioning; startup support; generator testing and dynamic modeling; NERC/CIP; protection coordination; substation protection; and CEMS automation.

The combination of Shermco and Ready immediately provides the firm’s collective customers with a unique bundled services offering, while simultaneously broadening Shermco’s reach into new and developing markets.

For more information, visit shermco.com.

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It mostly wants some basic information that will give the reviewer(s) the ability to justify not just the purchase but also the cost of acquiring the capital to do so. Because the funds will typically be borrowed by the corporation, the cost of capital must be balanced against the return on investment. There will be at least one person crunching the numbers to make what is called “the business case” for the proposed spending. Making the business case is something you should do, in some way or another, when considering spending within your approved limits. If the spending is above your approved limits, then the manager above you will need a bit beefier of a business case. The business case must take into account the value obtained versus the money spent. Consider the purchase of a thermographic camera. If you intend to purchase a mid-range camera but nobody at your facility is trained and certified in its use, the purchase is probably a waste of money. You’d be better off getting an entry-level camera and then arranging for a path toward certification if you intend to have that ability in-house and it makes operational and financial sense to do so. And generally, it makes sense to have a person or two with Level I certification so they really understand how to get the most out of a camera system that’s beyond the basic level. On the other hand, if you were a manager at an electrical testing firm with several Level III Thermographers you would be wasting your thermographers if you decided to “save money” by equipping them with only basic or even intermediate camera systems. Your firm needs to be able to troubleshoot problems when that important client calls in a panic. Your thermographers need the tools to do that job, and “cost-saving” on camera systems won’t cut it. Presumably, your clients are smart enough to already have basic camera systems; they just don’t have the expertise to use advanced systems. 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