Boeing/Jeppesen/Nobeltec buy C-Map, meaning ???

Ben Ellison

Ben Ellison

Panbo editor, publisher & chief bottlewasher from 4/2005 until 8/2018, and now pleased to have Ben Stein as a very able publisher, webmaster, and editing colleague. Please don't regard him as an "expert"; he's getting quite old and thinks that "fadiddling fumble-putz" is a more accurate description.

5 Responses

  1. DefJef says:

    Ben,
    Great to read that you did the deed and are back in one piece!
    My sense is that we are seeing the consolidation in the marine industry as we saw in the other “high tech” industries… a few players which own the market… consolidation .. and did I say consolidation.
    We will see perhaps better products but fewer offerings and this will make it harder for the little guys to compete.
    Raymarine is a perfect example of a big giant which gobbled up some companies and sells overpriced gear which is released before the bugs are sorted out… and gives what I feel is crappy customer support. I have called and spoken with their tech support and received completely wrong information about their product (the C80 which s the one I have).
    I don’t care for thees acquisitions and leveraged buyouts… I don’t think the consumers benefit. Little companies go under and all the consumers who own those products are SOL.
    Jef

  2. GPSNavX says:

    The loss of marineplanner.com is a good example of how this consolidation hurts the consumer. MarinePlanner was a good source of international raster charts at reasonable prices. Maptech bought up these companies to remove competition.

  3. Russ says:

    I think when they replaced the GM of Nobeltec with a Jeppesen exec and started the rebranding we should have known they were getting serious. Nobeltec is first and foremost a content company and didn’t own much in the way of marine content since the Passport charts are only slightly repackaged Transas charts.
    One possible outcome is that Nobeltec will become a derivative of their commercial products and more robust in the process. The other possible outcome is that it will be marginalized as the “consumer” product in a commercial company. However, Jeppesen does have a good track record with private pilots so there may be room for optimism.
    It certainly hurts Transas and has to give Navionics a push.

  4. Dan says:

    It is certainly an interesting development. Is it definite that the hardware manufacturing iss not part of the deal?
    I know that the C-Map network is very complex with nearly 20 different companies bearing the C-Map name, eventually all linking back to C-Map SRL Italy, but which were the manufacturers and where are they now?

  5. ENCman says:

    C-Map’s purchase is simply the positining of a US based company reacting to the UKHOs purchase of 7Cs last year. Two main ECDIS kernels exist – c-map and 7cs and the orgainisation that can control this (and the distrbution of the SENC formatted charts) will have a dominant position. It will be interesting to see how the EU react in Jan to the purchase as I have heard of many maritime gurus complain about this “consolidaiton” and the fear of US involvemet in what has been a UK (HO) market for the past few hundred years…

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