 
    The gods were smiling on the 
 Within days the season dramatically changed from dreary chilly late winter to high temperatures, just in time to bathe the amassed demonstration equipment and the 4,000 guests in summer sunshine.     
 
 But there won’t be any such dramatic changes within the Wirtgen Group, according to Domenic Ruccolo. After 28 years with 
 
 “No plans are in place to put the leaping deer on any of the [Wirtgen] brands,” said Ruccolo. “The brands are world-leading and when you have the opportunity to make the acquisition of such brands, there is no point in changing a very good thing.”     
 
 He said it was a “perfect match” between John Deere’s construction which features earthmoving equipment, and forestry division and the Wirtgen Group which focuses on road construction. “There is absolutely no product overlap.”     
 
 The few changes that have occurred includes the Wirtgen brothers stepping down from their private family business, putting it into the hands of the publicly traded John Deere.     
 
 About six people from John Deere, including Ruccolo, moved over to Wirtgen. “There’s really not a whole lot need of more from John Deere on that standpoint,” he said.     
 
 John Deere and Wirtgen  production will remain separate. Importantly, investments planned by  the brothers will continue apace, with much of the millions of euros  already spent on upgrading facilities and expanding sites.     
 
 What  John Deere does get is a global reach for its quality products, he  said. “One of Wirtgen’s strengths is its global sales and distribution  network through its company-owned subsidiaries – “a cornerstone of  success for Wirtgen”.     
 
 There  is a saying in English, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. This appears  to sum up John Deere’s attitude to its acquisition. As he pointed out  during an hour-long press conference in which he also took questions  from the media, John Deere does not have a history of growing by  acquisition. Organic growth, “what drives John Deere”, has been the  model and the company is doing very well, even without acquiring  Wirtgen.     
 
 For 2018, sales of John Deere are likely to be around 29% up on last year. Wirtgen will account for around 12% of the increase.     
 
 Wirtgen  is now within John Deere’s construction (earthmoving) and forestry  division. Sales for this division will rise by 80%, with around 56%  coming from Wirtgen.     
 
 For  John Deere to start aggressively selling its earthmoving and forestry  products on a much more global scale, it gets Wirtgen’s sales talent and  local knowledge. “We’re not in Europe [but] were in Europe once upon a  time and we feel we are back in Europe now.” But even on this score he  is cautious about disturbing a finely tuned Wirtgen machine.      
 
 The  American company’s other division – it has only two - is agriculture  and turf, an area where John Deere has its own highly developed  telematics systems for large-scale agriculture equipment such as used  for the accurate planting of seeds.     
 
 He  claims that John Deere – 182 years old - now has the world’s largest  range of road construction equipment. Synergies abound in the supply  chains of the two companies, he explained. Over time, some john Deere  components, such as engines, could be incorporated into Wirtgen  machinery to more vertically integrate the acquisition.     
 
 “And  in other technologies. In electronics, telematics is a big part of the  construction industry, as well for the Wirtgen Group. John Deere has  significant presence and capabilities that will enhance the Wirtgen  Group systems.”     
 
 Since  2005, the Wirtgen Group’s Technology Days event has been held  alternately at the headquarters of cold milling specialist Wirtgen, road  paver manufacturer Voegele and roller manufacturer Hamm. The event that  has grown from 1,000 attendees at the first show in 2005 to around  4,000 from more than 100 countries.     
 
 This  year at Voegele’s expanded 370,000m² site in Ludwigshafen am Rhein, the  three companies of the Wirtgen Group demonstrated the latest  developments in cold milling, cold recycling, soil stabilisation, paving  and compaction. Two live demonstrations involved 25 machines milling,  feeding material, placing asphalt and compacting an area of around  3,000m2. There were also specialist talks, factory tours and a machinery  exhibition featuring around 70 of the group’s products.     
 
 As  the acquiring partner in the acquisition, part of John Deere’s work is  already done. The US firm has bought a global business that is not  looking for a partner to help with a long-term strategic and financial  plan. Wirtgen already has one, and one that is well-on the way to  completion, especially manufacturing capacity.     
 
 “Wirtgen  Group is not going to deviate from sustainable investment strategy that  has led to the size and importance of Wirtgen. We are continuing to  invest in our own [John Deere] factories and subsidiary network for  sales and service.”     
 
 At  the Voegele site, there are new production material storage areas, a  new 22,200m2 dispatch hall completed in April, and a planned extension  to the final assembly line to be ready by the beginning of 2020 latest.  This is at least a €34 million investment, not including the essential  upgrades to production and assembly machinery.     
 
 At  
 
 Meanwhile,  at Kleeman, there’s been a 50% increase in production that cost around  50 million.  At asphalt mixing specialist 
 
 Globally  there are new Wirtgen subsidiaries opening up, including in China and  Bulgaria, as well as a new training centre in Nashville, in the US.     
 
 It  is likely that telematics will create the merging of minds between John  Deere and Wirtgen. But could there actually be some joining of forces –  employees, sites, physical resources – of John Deere and Wirtgen?  “Absolutely,” said Ruccolo. “That’s kind of already underway.”     
 
 Telematics  plays a big role in the Wirtgen’s WITOS paving system and there is more  and more demand from customers. John Deere manufactures a lot of  electronics components used in Deere, not only in earthmoving and  forestry, but most importantly in agriculture.     
 
 
     
         
         
        


