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Virgin Media O2 and Daisy Group have announced a strategic merger of their B2B operations aimed at challenging BT’s long -standing dominance in the British business communication market.
The new company, which is appreciated at approx. 3 billion pounds will combine Virgin Media O2’s infrastructure features with DAISY Group’s specialist IT services, creating a communication and IT provider with an initial annual income base of approximately £ 1.4 billion.
However, the economic structure of the merger is complex. An intercompany loan of £ 425 million comes from Virgin Media O2, while £ 835 million in debt from Daisy Group needs to be cleared.
While the agreement is ambitious, industry observers are gently optimistic about the challenges that lie ahead of us.
Daisy Group will have a 30% share, while Virgin Media O2 will retain 70% ownership of the new unit.
Still, there are still questions about how effective two different business models – Virgin’s Scale -driven Connectivity and Daisy’s Consultative IT services – can combine operations, systems and customer experience without friction.
Leadership will be managed jointly by Matthew Riley, founder of Daisy Group, as chairman, and Jo Bertram of Virgin Media O2 Business as CEO.
The merged company intends to serve a wide range of clients, from SMEs to large companies and organizations in the public sector that offer end-to-end-managed services, including 5G private networks, IoT solutions, AI-driven analysis and cloud communication.
Despite access to Virgin’s next generation of fiber and mobile networks and Daisy’s “Award-winning Customer Service”, it remains unclear whether the combined company can really deliver a best in the class, digital-first experience in scale.
Lutz Schüler, CEO of Virgin Media O2, described the merger as “a new British business connection Kraftcenter”, which promised “a one-stop shop for all communication and it needs.”
While the message is bold, it is left to see if the company can match BT’s anchored presence and navigate the logistical challenges of merging product portfolios and support operations.
On Daisy’s side, Matthew Riley called the merger “a transformation transaction” and “the most comprehensive offering for companies of all sizes,” placed it as important to deliver scalable, integrated it and communication tools into a rapidly developing digital landscape.
Both companies are talking hard, which is commendable, but the term “comprehensive offers” is often overused in B2B marketing and success in the real world ultimately depends on how good integration efforts are performed.
Set to close in the early H2 2025, pending regulatory approvals, the new unit is expected to lock £ 600 million in operational synergies over time.