
In May of this year, Rexel USA announced the acquisition of Talley Inc., a Los Angeles-based distributor of wireless infrastructure products, services and solutions with 11 warehouses and over 300 employees.
At the time, the company commented on the acquisition as representing βa significant milestoneβ in support of its βmission to accelerate electrification and deliver innovative, sustainable energy solutions.β
And accelerate it has β largely because, according to Rexel USA CEO Roger Little, the firmβs customer base is βasking for help.β
Little recently told Industrial Distribution that many companies in North America are finding that they need expert assistance in realizing sustainability goals β and theyβre looking to suppliers like Rexel to bring knowledge and integrated solutions to the table.
According to Little, these are objectives that many organizations have not had in the past, and companies like Rexel are well-positioned to respond.
Outside of its thousands of supplier brands dedicated to energy solutions β even a βsustainable selectionβ module on its website β Rexel USA supports its transactional sales with a more integrated approach. The company says nearly half of its employees are dedicated to taking the products it sells and crafting a tailored solution for customers. This is embodied in supply chain models that are designed to reduce inventory, cut installation costs and improve productivity. Energy teams also work to identify energy-saving opportunities β from upgrades and retrofits all the way to complete energy management solutions.
A More Complete Solution
And itβs the complete solutions that customers are clamoring for, according to Little β even more so post-pandemic.
βSaving energy has always been a good idea, but now, thereβs an increased focus on electrification and we have had many of our largest customers come to us and ask for help,β said Little. βWe do have several parts of our business that can assist them with that, whether it be installation of electric vehicle chargers for a fleet, rooftop PV and the associated inverters and racking, and the balance of the system that goes with PV ... So thereβs quite a few pieces to that. I think thereβs a lot of people with a desire, or at least a notion, of where they want to go, but not necessarily knowing all the pieces and all the systems they require to get there.β
According to Little, the U.S. distribution market is still fragmented compared to most markets globally, which allows for βhuge opportunitiesβ for companies of βgood scaleβ β a characterization Little believes applies to Rexel. Acquisition targets comprise βa combination of core and adjacencies for us: Core being good old-fashioned electrical distribution, what we do every day, and adjacencies being services and other products that we see very close to the electrical space.
βAn example of that is Datacom and or utility. Our most recent acquisition β Talley Inc., a wireless broadband distributor β is a good example of an adjacency for us. It gets us into a space thatβs extremely close to electrical, but not necessarily pure electrical like weβve traditionally been involved with.β
A Full Breadth in Support of Uptime
Despite this eye for growth, Rexel USA is committed to engaging in the basic blocking and tackling of a day-to-day industrial environment.
βObviously, uptime is a big focus of our industrial client base,β Little elaborated, βso making sure that weβve got productivity tools, weβve got uptime tools, weβve got cybersecurity tools that can help them with those different areas of their business and make sure weβre offering the best-in-class service to them.β
Then, as post-pandemic workforce challenges came hard and fast for everyone, Rexel was well-positioned: pairing an efficient business model with the entrepreneurial spirit of a smaller enterprise. Little believes that comes from culture and, for Rexel, it means being transparent about the companyβs strategy and how individual employees can be a part of it β βreally taking the voice of our associates and making sure weβre listening carefully, seeing whatβs important to them.β
Little added that the companyβs electrification efforts donβt hurt, either. For some, finding a role where they can be involved in a new, exciting energy management trend offers additional value. And every little bit counts in an environment of βconstant one upmanship,β where competitors vie for top talent with increasingly better pay and benefits. Little sees employee retention as the no. 1 challenge in the industry right now. The other? The supply chain, which he describes as sometimes βfragileβ despite the improvements made over the past two years. Never one to leave a challenge untapped, Little characterizes supply chain improvement as an βopportunityβ the company hopes to leverage.
Being βMuch Moreβ for the Industry
βWeβre not just focused on being an electrical distributor; weβre focused on being much more than that,β Little said. βOur biggest and best clients are asking us to be more than just an electrical distributor for them. They donβt just want a box mover. They want somebody that thinks far beyond that. And I believe weβre best in class at doing it.β