Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Findel plc

 
Hoover's Profile: Findel plc
(London:FDL)
Contact Information
Findel plc
Burley House, Bradford Road, Burley-in-Wharfedale
Ilkley, West Yorkshire LS29 7DZ, United Kingdom
Tel. +44-1943-864-686
Fax +44-1943-864-986

Type: Public
On the web: http://www.findel.co.uk

Findel makes it easy to find the items you want -- and some items you didn't even know that you wanted. The diversified firm's Express Gifts division is a leader in online and catalog shopping to some 1.5 million customers throughout the UK. Home shopping accounts for about 60% of the company's annual revenue. Findel's two other lines of business are: Findel Education, the largest independent supplier of some 18,000 educational products to schools and other learning institutions in the UK as well as 150 other countries; and Notttingham Rehab Supplies (NRS), a provider to Britain's National Health Service. Findel was founded in 1955. Investment firm Schroders plc owns about 29% of the company's shares.

Key numbers for fiscal year ending March, 2008:
Sales: $1,286.3M
One year growth: 11.4%
Net income: $33.3M
Income growth: 11.9%

Officers:
Chairman: Keith Chapman
Chief Executive and Director: Patrick E. Jolly
COO: Philip Maudsley

Competitors:
Littlewoods
N Brown Group
Otto GmbH & Co KG

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Company History: Findel plc
Top

Incorporated: 1955 as Fine Art & Philately
NAIC: 454113 Mail-Order Houses; 322232 Envelope Manufacturing; 322233 Stationery, Tablet, and Related Product Manufacturing; 424120 Stationery and Office Supplies Merchant Wholesalers

The United Kingdom's Findel plc operates through three primary divisions: Home Shopping, Education, and Findel Services. Home Shopping represents the company's largest division, at more than 50 percent of sales, and is centered on the company's core Express Gifts Ltd. mail order business. The Express Gifts catalogs, Studio and Ace, reach a customer base of more than one million nationwide, with a focus on the 25- to 45-year-old female with children demographic. Through Express Gifts, Findel sells a variety of clothing, home furnishings, gardening, and other items, and offers Europe's largest "personalization" service. The company also operates online, through web sites linked to its two catalog titles. Since its takeover of Novara plc in 2001, Findel is also the leading independent specialist in educational supplies in the United Kingdom. Under this division, the company manages nine distinct brand ranges under the names Davies Sports, Galt, Hope Education, NES Arnold, Percussion Plus, Philip Harris Education, Step by Step, UNILAB, and, in Northern Ireland, EDCO. In addition to its sales to schools and institutions, as well as to the U.K. government, the Education division also operates in retail sales channels, through its Galt brand, which is distributed in more than 5,000 stores throughout the United Kingdom. Findel's third division, Services, provides fulfillment and logistics support services, ranging from call center operations to product development to pickup and delivery services to mail order and catalog companies, and Internet and television-based marketers. Services represented more than 25 percent of Findel's sales of £368 million ($580 million) in its 2003 year. The company, listed on the London Stock Exchange, is headed by CEO D.A. Johnson and chairman Keith Chapman.

Three small, family-owned companies joined together to create a greeting card company in 1955. That company, called Fine Art & Philately, published and distributed greeting cards, and also operated a business-to-business mail order house, supplying retailers in the United Kingdom. The three companies were TE Webb & Co, which published greeting cards and sold them via mail order; Ivory Cards, which specialized in fund raising and charitable services based on greeting cards sales; and Joseph Arnold & Co., which acted as supplier to the other two. Following the formation of Fine Art & Philately, the company focused its greeting card and mail order operations under the TE Webb name.

Fine Art set its sights on growth at the start of the 1960s, and in 1961 took a listing on the Birmingham stock exchange. The following year, the company made its first major expansion, when it agreed to merge with Foxhill Christmas Card Company. Under terms of that deal, the Foxhill brand operations were transferred to TE Webb, while Foxhill shareholders gained a 50 percent stake in the newly enlarged company. Following the merger, Fine Art & Philately changed its name, to Fine Art Developments plc.

Fine Art's expansion continued into the mid-1960s, as the company added retail operations under subsidiary Findel Stores Ltd. The company also expanded its manufacturing facilities, placed under subsidiary Foxhill Group, and by 1967 produced more than 95 percent of the cards sold through its growing number of greeting cards subsidiaries. These included Miller Greetings, Collisons Ltd., and Studio Cards, a specialty Christmas card producer. The company had also ventured onto the European continent, taking an 80 percent stake in a joint-venture, Editions Ivoire, based in Paris.

By the end of the decade, Fine Art had added subsidiaries in West Germany, the United States, and Ireland. The company also switched its listing to the London Stock Exchange, then entered Australia at the beginning of the 1970s through mail order subsidiary Bell & Howell.

Fine Art developed strongly through the 1970s, notably through acquisitions, such as that of A. Vivan Mansell & Co., a fine art color printer, in 1970. The company also acquired mail order greeting cards company Leswyn Cards that year. Then, in 1971, Fine Art paid £650,000 to British Publishing Company to acquire its greeting card operations, including the companies W. Barton, British Greeting Cards, Raphael Tuck & Sons. Also acquired that year was greeting card company Delgado & Mowbray. At the end of 1971, Fine Art's sales neared £8.4 million.

By the middle of the 1970s, Fine Art was already Europe's largest manufacturer of greeting cards. Yet the company itself had shifted the focus of its revenue growth from its greeting card business to its mail order operations. The company began expanding its product ranges, adding lines of stationery, games, and toys, but also perfume, jewelry, and home furnishings and equipment. By 1976, more than 70 percent of the group's £26 million in sales came from its non-greeting card mail order operations.

Fine Art's revenues grew strongly into the 1980s, rising to £58 million by 1980. In that year, the company added greeting card group Wilson Bros to is holdings, paying £4.3 million for its long-time rival. Yet by the following year, Fine Art ended a 25-year run of revenue and profit, as its sales started to slip, sinking the group into the red by 1982.

Retail became the bright spot for the group, particularly after its acquisition of educational retailer Early Learning. Fine Art began a rapid expansion of the chain, doubling the number of stores to more than 40 by the end of 1983, and to more than 90 by the end of 1984, including its first international stores. In 1985, however, the group sold off the Early Learning chain, to the John Menzies group.

Fine Art then returned its focus on its mail order and greeting cards businesses, which took a new step forward in 1984 when it acquired Selective Paper Group Ltd. That purchase, at a cost of £13 million, helped boost Fine Art's turnover to nearly £100 million. Also in that year, future chairman and CEO Keith Chapman joined the company.

Despite the sale of Early Learning, Fine Art had not abandoned retailing. Instead, the group developed a new retail concept, closer to its greeting card base, called Papertree. Fine Art invested heavily in building that business, opening some 100 stores by the beginning of the 1990s. Yet the company, already suffering from the dismal economic climate, found it difficult to find profits through its Papertree arm. The company sold off a number of other operations, including its stake in the Bell & Howell mail order firm in Australia, and its attempt to enter the direct mail market, Venture Marketing.

By the mid-1990s, Fine Art's long-time combination of greeting cards and mail-order businesses, including a newly developing educational supplies business, no longer seemed a viable match. Instead, in 1997, Fine Art decided to split itself into its two halves, spinning off the greeting cards business as Creative Publishing. That business was subsequently acquired by U.S. greeting card giant Hallmark in 1998.

Fine Art was now focused in three primary areas: home shopping, including mail order; educational supplies; and fund-raising, which produced catalogs for charitable organizations. At the same time, Fine Art recognized the growth of a new sales channel--the Internet. In 1999, the company joined a partnership to launch a charity-based Internet service provider, Care4Free, which promised to donate 70 percent of its profits to charities of the subscriber's choice. In another move, echoing the group's former life as Europe's leading greeting card group, Fine Art launched a new web site, www.say-it-with-ease.com, which allowed customers to send electronic greeting cards.

At the same time, Fine Art sought new outlets for its long-time expertise in mail order distribution services, and at the turn of the century decided to step up providing services to third-party customers, such as discount fashion retailer Matalan, for whom Fine Art launched a home shopping catalog in 2000. In that year, Fine Art announced a decision to exit the charity and fund-raising business, a move completed in 2001 through a management buyout. By then, Fine Art had changed its name, to Findel plc.

Findel plc now embarked on a three-prong strategy for the new century. The company restructured into three divisions: Home Shopping, which included the group's core catalog and Internet-based operations; Findel Services, for its fast-growing third-party distribution services operations; and the group's fast-growing Educational Supplies operations. The latter appeared to have high hopes, particularly after the U.K. government promised a new £1.5 billion schools spending initiative through 2005.

Educational supplies took on a still greater focus for the group when it launched a takeover of rival group Novara. Formed in 1997 through the merger of two prominent U.K. educational supply companies, Nottingham Group and Philip Harris, Novara boasted a range of prominent brands, including segment leaders such as NES Arnold and the Philip Harris brand itself. Yet merging the two companies proved difficult for Novara, and by 2000 the group's profits and share price had slumped, while group sales had fallen by more than 50 percent, leaving the company vulnerable to takeover.

Further Reading

Blackwell, David, "Fine Art Poised for E-Commerce," Financial Times, May 23, 2000, p. 28.

Cassidy, Siobhan, "Home Shopping Sales Growth Lifts Findel," Financial Times, May 23, 2003, p. 27.

"Findel Fine Despite School Cash Squeeze," Birmingham Post, October 16, 2003, p. 21.

"Findel Gets its Sums Right as School Funding Crisis Bites," Yorkshire Post, May 22, 2003.

"Findel Gets Out of Charities Business," Yorkshire Post, April 12, 2001.

Kiphoff, John, "Findel Optimistic on Purchase of Novara," Financial Times, December 7, 2001, p. 26.

— M.L. Cohen


Wikipedia: Findel plc
Top

Findel plc is a British home shopping company, based in Burley in Wharfedale, West Yorkshire. It is listed on the London Stock Exchange. Its chief executive is Patrick Jolly.[1]

Contents

Group Companies

Nottingham Rehab

Nottingham Rehab

  • Nottingham Rehab (NRS)

Express Gifts

Express Gifts, the largest company within the Findel plc group, is one of the UK's leading mail order companies selling a wide range of greeting cards, gifts, home and garden items through its Studio and Ace catalogues.[opinion needs balancing] Most of its business is undertaken in the Autumn run-up to Christmas. More than 3 million major catalogues are distributed each year by the company.[citation needed]

Findel Education

Findel Education is the largest dedicated supplier of educational products in Europe[citation needed], with a Head Office in the Greater Manchester area of Hyde. Customers include state and independent schools from nursery to secondary level, hospitals, charities, and other educational bodies. Product range covers all curriculum subjects as well as all the furniture, audio-visual, stationery and janitorial needs of schools and nurseries. The company trades in the UK and internationally through a series of high profile catalogue brands including Hope Education, NES Arnold, GLS, Philip Harris, Galt, Step by Step, UNILAB, Davies Sports, Percussion Plus and EDCO. Findel Education undertakes PFI work in the UK.

Findel Services

Findel Services is a white label provider of consumer fulfilment solutions. Turning over £100 million, Findel Services has the claimed capacity to pick up to 1 million items per day, aimed mainly at Web and Digital TV based media. Clients include Matalan.co.uk, EMI Records Group, Provident Personal Credit Ltd, Confetti.co.uk, Marks & Spencer, and Petsathome.co.uk.

Kleeneze Europe

Kleeneze Europe is a multi-level marketing company, founded in 1923 by Harry Crook in Bristol, England. Following the 13 October 2006 collapse of Farepak and its parent European Home Retail, Findel purchased Kleeneze together with I Want One Of Those.com and Kitbag companies from the group for £34 million,[2] of which £2.5 million went directly to the failed Farepak.[1]

I Want One Of Those.com

Gifts and gadgets website IWantOneOfThose.com (IWOOT) came 16th in the FHM July 2004 listing of top websites[3].

Kitbag.com

Bought as package together with Kleenze Kitbag describes itself as Europe’s largest online sports retailer. See Kitbag more details.

References

External links


 
 
Learn More
Kitbag
Clinton Cards plc
Findel

What is rung in plc? Read answer...
What is mean plc? Read answer...
What is an example of a plc? Read answer...

Help us answer these
What Are plc Advantages?
Why is plc calling you?
How can you restart plc?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Hoover's Profile. ©2008 Hoover's, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Company History. International Directory of Company Histories. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Findel plc" Read more