Technology distributor Ingram Micro has established itself in asset disposition in recent years. Now, it is rolling out a program to grow by leveraging its subcontractor companies.
Ingram Micro, an international company with roughly $50 billion in annual revenue, works primarily in the hardware distribution business. It buys devices from OEMs and provides them to its "value-added reseller" clients, who sell them to the end users.
The company moved into the ITAD sector with its 2013 acquisition of reverse logistics firm CloudBlue. Since then, the company has quickly expanded its ITAD presence in U.S. and international markets. Last year, the company estimated that it processed more than 26,000 short tons of devices.
Ingram's interest in the ITAD sector was natural, given the volume of product the company handles, explained Todd Zegers, vice president of ITAD, commerce and lifecycle services at Ingram Micro.
"You think about the number of units Ingram Micro distributes forward, if you started sizing up what your market size is for the ITAD business or reverse logistics business within Ingram Micro, it's pretty significant," Zegers said in an interview.
Now, the company is expanding ITAD services in a different way, by sharing its capabilities with value-added resellers. The company works with 200,000 resellers worldwide, and Zegers said the move will grow the company's ITAD reach internationally.
"We know that, in the ITAD space, if you want to really gain market share you've got to have a true global presence when you want to play in the enterprise space, because every big customer has facilities around the world," Zegers said.
Technology distributor Ingram Micro has established itself in asset disposition in recent years. Now, it is rolling out a program to grow by leveraging its subcontractor companies.
Ingram Micro, an international company with roughly $50 billion in annual revenue, works primarily in the hardware distribution business. It buys devices from OEMs and provides them to its "value-added reseller" clients, who sell them to the end users.
The company moved into the ITAD sector with its 2013 acquisition of reverse logistics firm CloudBlue. Since then, the company has quickly expanded its ITAD presence in U.S. and international markets. Last year, the company estimated that it processed more than 26,000 short tons of devices.
Ingram's interest in the ITAD sector was natural, given the volume of product the company handles, explained Todd Zegers, vice president of ITAD, commerce and lifecycle services at Ingram Micro.
"You think about the number of units Ingram Micro distributes forward, if you started sizing up what your market size is for the ITAD business or reverse logistics business within Ingram Micro, it's pretty significant," Zegers said in an interview.
Now, the company is expanding ITAD services in a different way, by sharing its capabilities with value-added resellers. The company works with 200,000 resellers worldwide, and Zegers said the move will grow the company's ITAD reach internationally.
"We know that, in the ITAD space, if you want to really gain market share you've got to have a true global presence when you want to play in the enterprise space, because every big customer has facilities around the world," Zegers said.
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