Keeping Pace With The Demands Of The Ever-Changing Digital World

Mario Toneguzzi

The Prairie Mobile Group of Companies started as a small, family-owned company from rural Manitoba more than five decades ago and it has now grown to a number of locations from British Columbia to Ontario, dedicated to connecting Canadians.

In this interview, Kim Bishop, President of the Winnipeg-based company, discusses:

  • How the business began;
  • The business growth over the past five decades; and
  • How the National Bank helped in that growth.

Enjoy,
Mark

The Prairie Mobile Group of Companies started as a small, family-owned company from rural Manitoba more than five decades ago and it has now grown to a number of locations from British Columbia to Ontario, dedicated to connecting Canadians.

Its commitment is to keep pace with the demands of the ever-changing digital world.

Kim Bishop, President of the Winnipeg-based company, said the wireless technology company within the telecommunications space has a chain of retail wireless stores that sell cell phones to consumers and businesses in Saskatchewan.

“And then throughout the rest of Canada we have a more industrial, or commercially-focused, communications company. We sell communication devices within a number of different verticals from agricultural to mining to manufacturing and public safety agencies. And this is primarily your two-way radios, your walkie-talkies. We sell, service, commission those products and build and engineer networks for those products to operate on.”

The company has 26 locations across Canada from Coquitlam, B.C., to Toronto. It has a presence in B.C., Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Ontario.

Bishop said the company is celebrating its 55th year after her father started the company in 1968. She joined the company in 1999.

“I bought my father out in 2013. For 10 years, I’ve been the single shareholder. We’re privately held, Canadian owned, woman owned 100 per cent and proud of it,” she said.

Bishop said the plan is to open new locations in the future.

“We’ve opened new locations either organically or through acquisition. In our history of the business, we’ve acquired 19 locations. Myself as an owner I’ve done eight and 15 since I’ve been with the company. So there’s definitely activity ramping up,” said Bishop.

“There’s always businesses in our industry looking to wind things down generally because of their age and not having a succession plan with either family or employees that want to take over. So there’s definitely opportunities for us to continue to grow through Canada.”

Bishop said the company has been working with the National Bank of Canada for about 30 years. Today, National Bank experts Richard Bosc and Éric Lafrenière continue to help Bishop and the company grow and expand.

She said National Bank has provided the support and that trust and belief in what the company is doing and where its going.

“In particular, since 2020 we acquired five locations and opened two new locations organically within a matter of two years. I wouldn’t say it was risky but they went out and made a great case for us, our vision and what we were trying to accomplish and made it happen. I think that was a pretty tight time frame for us to do all those acquisitions,” said Bishop.

The National Bank is one of the major sponsors of the Business Transitions Forum.

The next BTF is coming up on November 23rd at The Vancouver Convention Centre.

(Mario Toneguzzi is a veteran of the media industry for more than 40 years and named in 2021 a Top Ten Business Journalist in the world and only Canadian)


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