Baker & Taylor

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Baker & Taylor, a distributor of books and entertainment, has been in business for over 180 years.[1] Based in Charlotte, North Carolina and privately owned, in 2008 the firm had $2.26 billion in sales, employed 3,750, and was # 204 on Forbes list of privately owned companies.[2]

Offerings

Baker & Taylor's core business distributes tangible media content (i.e., books, calendars, music CDs, DVDs, Blu-ray discs), digital content (i.e., ebooks and e-spoken word audio), and collection development and processing services to libraries throughout the world. Digital content is available through the company's Axis 360 platform via the Blio app or the Axis360 app.[3] Its retail unit distributes approximately 1 million+ book titles and music CDs, DVDs, and Blu-rays to brick and mortar and Internet retailers (booksellers, craft stores, department stores, comic book stores).[4]

Ownership history

Castle Harlan Partners is Baker & Taylor's majority owner, having acquired it from the investment firm Willis Stein & Partners.[5] In 1994, it[which?] the Follett Corporation of River Grove, Illinois had intended to acquire Baker & Taylor from the then majority holder, the Carlyle Group, who was looking to sell its interest to concentrate on the defense industry.[6]

Arnie Wight became president of the company on May 23, 2007.[7] Jack Eugster became chairman and chief executive officer, replacing Richard Willis, on January 4, 2008.[8][9] Thomas Morgan took over the CEO role on July 7, 2008.[10] In January 2014, George Coe replaced both Wight and Morgan as president and CEO.[11]

In February 2015, Baker and Taylor's publishing group and U,S. marketing services were acquired by Readerlink Distribution Services.[12] Under the acquisition agreement, Readerlink took over ownership of the firm's 504,000 sq. ft. Indianapolis distribution center, as well as their general offices in San Diego and editorial offices in Ashland, Oregon.[12] Baker and Taylor (UK) and B&T (Mexico) were not included in the acquisition, and will remain subsidiaries of Baker & Taylor.[12] A Readerlink spokesperson said no offices, distribution centers, or operational changes were planned, and indicated that all current management and employees of the acquired divisions were joining the Readerlink.[12]

Lawsuit

In 1999, Baker & Taylor paid a settlement of $3 million USD to the US government to settle a federal lawsuit. The suit claimed that Baker & Taylor had overcharged the federal government, as well as state and local libraries using federal funds. These charges occurred after 1992, when Baker & Taylor was sold by its then-parent company, W. R. Grace and Company. Baker & Taylor denied all allegations.[13]

Divisions

In 2009, Baker & Taylor bought the North American arm of Blackwell UK as well as Blackwell's Australian library supplier, James Bennett. In return, Blackwell acquired the UK-based Lindsay and Croft from Baker & Taylor. Blackwell's North American division was merged into Baker & Taylor's YBP Library Services.[14]

See also

Notes

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  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 Jim Milliot, Jim (23 February 2015). "Readerlink Buys B&T Publishing, Warehouse Units", Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 20 December 2015
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External links