Skip to main content

engcon set up in the Netherlands

engcon is continuing to expand in Europe and has set up their first office in the Netherlands. The maker of tiltrotators is starting up its own sales company, engcon NL, that will employ a sales manager, a salesperson and another person focusing on servicing and after-sales. The office will be operating by the end of the first quarter this year. "This launch will be an important milestone for engcon and will be the object of considerable focus in future," said Krister Blomgren, chief executive of engcon's p
March 22, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
705 engcon is continuing to expand in Europe and has set up their first office in the Netherlands.

The maker of tiltrotators is starting up its own sales company, engcon NL, that will employ a sales manager, a salesperson and another person focusing on servicing and after-sales. The office will be operating by the end of the first quarter this year.

"This launch will be an important milestone for engcon and will be the object of considerable focus in future," said Krister Blomgren, chief executive of engcon's parent company engcon Holding.

He said sales of all excavators in the Netherlands during the peak year of 2007 totalled around 4,500, compared to around 2,200 excavators sold in Sweden – engcon’s home market - in the same year. As a consequence of the financial crisis in 2008, slightly fewer excavators are sold today in the Dutch market, although Blomgren believes this will change.

"We are convinced that the Dutch market is slowly but surely approaching the levels we saw around 2007. Quite simply we see considerable potential in the Netherlands, but this is also an important investment for increasing engcon's overall presence on the European market,“ he said.

engcon Holding, based in Strömsund, Sweden, employs around 165 people. European sales offices are in Sweden, Norway, Finland, Denmark, the UK, Germany and France, while engcon International is responsible for other markets. In 2014, the group achieved a turnover of more than €68.6 million.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Mixing recycled and fresh asphalt reduces costs
    February 14, 2012
    An innovative asphalt plant is allowing the use of recycled materials and achieving major cost benefits - Mike Woof reports. UK construction firm FM Conway is seeing the benefit of the €11.5 million (£10 million) it has invested in its asphalt production facilities at Erith in Kent, close to UK capital London, since buying the site in 2005. The biggest single investment in the facility has been a new Benninghoven asphalt plant, which was commissioned in June 2010 and is now the core of the Erith operation.
  • Golden opportunities in the MINT - Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria, Turkey
    May 21, 2015
    Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria, Turkey – Global Report offers up some food for thought about where smart money might be headed within the next several years – David Arminas writes China’s rate of growth may be slowing down, but other South East Asian companies are being quick to offer alternate investment opportunities, notably Indonesia. Nigeria, too, has had issues with security of investment. But there are signs that the government may be getting serious at last about tightening up rules and regulation
  • Perlini aims for €100 million China sales through new manufacturing partnership
    May 29, 2014
    Italian dump truck manufacturer Perlini has gone into partnership with an undisclosed China-based construction equipment manufacturer in a bid to sell 2,200 of the firm’s trucks to Chinese customers over the next four years. The deal could be worth €100 million to Perlini if all 2,200 haulers, most of which will be freshly designed for the Chinese market, and, according to the firm’s president and CEO Dr Maurizio Perlini, similar to the popular Perlini 131-33 RDT, are sold. Speaking of the firm’s new Ch
  • Continuing demand for construction machines
    February 21, 2012
    Corporate results from a series of equipment manufacturers for the early part of 2011 all seem to agree that demand for machines continues to improve.