Go-Ahead Group

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Go-Ahead Group plc
Type Public (LSE: GOG)
Founded 1995
Headquarters Flag of England Newcastle upon Tyne, England, UK
Area served United Kingdom, Ireland and Europe
Key people Keith Ludeman
Industry Public transport, aviation services, parking management
Products See below
Revenue £1027.9m (2007)
Net income £45.2m (2007)
Employees 24,372 (2007)
Subsidiaries Aviance UK, Blue Triangle, Brighton & Hove Bus and Coach Company, Docklands Buses, Go North East, Go South Coast, London Central, London General, London Midland, Meteor Parking, Oxford Bus Company, Southern, Southeastern,
Website http://www.go-ahead.com/

The Go-Ahead Group plc is a rail and bus operating company that was created following the privatisation of the UK's train and bus industries.

Contents

[edit] History

Go-Ahead was initially formed as the Gateshead-based Go-Ahead Northern when the management team acquired that company during the privatisation of the National Bus Company (UK) in 1987. Early expansion saw the acquisition of a number of smaller competing bus operators in the north east, including Gypsey Queen and Low Fell Coaches. At the same time, a number of pubs were purchased, this element of the business trading under the name Go-Ahead Leisure.

Despite bidding for a number of other larger bus operators in the intervening period, the first major acquisition was Brighton & Hove Bus and Coach Company in November 1993, which was quickly followed by the Oxford Bus Company in March 1994. The privatisation of London Buses in the mid-nineties saw Camberwell-based London Central acquired in November 1994, and this purchase was built upon in June 1996, when fellow London bus operator London General was acquired from the management and employee team that acquired the business at privatisation.

[edit] Acquisitions

In 1997, the Brighton bus business was expanded with the acquisition of the former municipal operator Brighton Blue Buses. In September 1999, Metrobus, a large operator operating in London, Surrey and Sussex was acquired. More recently, Wilts and Dorset and Southern Vectis PLC have joined the Go-Ahead family. The Southern Vectis acquisition brought with it Eastleigh based bus operator Solent Blue Line.

In December 2005 the group purchased The Birmingham Coach Company, which operates express coach contracts on behalf of National Express and local bus services in the West Midlands under the Diamond Bus name. The group had been known for some time to be keen to begin operating in the area. On 22 February 2006 Go-Ahead purchased another operator in the West Midlands, Probus Management Limited, trading as Peoples Express, for £2.4m, adding around 100 vehicles to its West Midlands operations. In August 2006 the Birmingham Coach Company (trading as Diamond Bus) and Probus operations were regrouped under the Go West Midlands Limited legal entity, with the bus operations branded as Diamond in the West Midlands.

A map of the London Midland Network, operated by Govia
A map of the London Midland Network, operated by Govia

[edit] Disposals

On March 3 2008, Go-Ahead sold Go West Midlands to Rotala's Central Connect, just after two years since purchasing them. This was after a review following the group's interim results published on February 15 2008. [1]

[edit] Rail operations

The company has also been active in the rail market, winning the right to operate the Thames Trains, Thameslink, New Southern Railway, and Southeastern franchises, the latter three in co-operation with Keolis under the name Govia. The Thames Trains franchise was lost to First Group in 2004, and after exclusion from bidding for the new Thameslink franchise, lost that to First also.

On 30 November 2005, the UK Secretary of State for Transport, Alistair Darling, announced that Govia had been successful in winning the Integrated Kent Franchise, and took over on April 1, 2006. The franchise continues to use the previous Southeastern branding, but the bid was mounted using the name London & South Eastern Railway.

More recently, in November 2007 Govia began operating the new London Midland franchise. This includes part of the previous Central Trains and Silverlink County franchises.

[edit] Other business areas

Other subsidiaries are Metro Taxis in Newcastle, Aviance UK (an airport services business formed through the acquisition of Gatwick Handling, Midland Aviation and Reed Aviation, and Meteor Parking, a car parking company based at Stansted Airport that trades under a number of brands from airports and railway stations around the UK.

[edit] Senior management

  • Sir Patrick Brown - Non-executive Chairman
  • Keith Ludeman - Group Chief Executive
  • Nicholas Swift - Group Finance Director
  • Christopher Collins - Non Executive Director
  • Rupert Pennant-Rea - Non Executive Director
  • Carolyn Sephton - Group Company Secretary

Keith Ludeman was appointed as Chief Executive on 10 July 2006 following the resignation of Chris Moyes due to an undisclosed serious illness, subsequently revealed to have been a brain tumour.

[edit] Operating divisions

[edit] Bus operations

See also: Bus transport in the United Kingdom

[edit] Current rail franchises

[edit] Previous rail franchises

[edit] Others

[edit] Competition

The principal competitors of the Go-Ahead Group are:

All of these are larger groups with operations in more than one country. The main distinguishing features of the Go-Ahead Group are the relatively high degree of autonomy the group offers its individual operating companies, and its focus on investing in local management. These tactics are thought to have helped two of the group's bus operating companies, in Oxford and Brighton, to gain a reputation as among the best in the UK outside London.

[edit] Gallery

[edit] References

  1. ^ Go-Ahead - "Disposal of Go West Midlands" Accessed 3rd March 2008

[edit] External links

Major Public Transport Companies in the United Kingdom
Arriva Group - ComfortDelGro Corporation - FirstGroup
Go-Ahead Group - National Express Group
Stagecoach Group - Transdev Group - Translink - Veolia Transport
See also:
Transport for London - Passenger Transport Executive
Strathclyde Partnership for Transport
Languages