Skip to main content

Q-Free reorganises, becomes full ITS supplier

Q-Free’s management is taking the next steps decided to move the company from a road user charging supplier to a fully-integrated ITS company. Over the last few years, Q-Free has acquired eight companies in order to broaden its technology and customer base. To maximise the potential of these assets the company plans further streamlining and reduction of fixed costs and investment, including organisational changes, reduction in the management team and organisation, and optimisation of investments in sales
December 7, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
108 Q-Free’s management is taking the next steps decided to move the company from a road user charging supplier to a fully-integrated ITS company.

Over the last few years, Q-Free has acquired eight companies in order to broaden its technology and customer base. To maximise the potential of these assets the company plans further streamlining and reduction of fixed costs and investment, including organisational changes, reduction in the management team and organisation, and optimisation of investments in sales and technology development.

When fully implemented, Q-Free believes the strategy, along with other cost initiatives already carried out, will deliver a reduction in annual costs of more than US$8 million and significantly improve the company’s profitability and financial robustness.

“These initiatives will further strengthen our ability to become an ITS company with competitive solutions addressing the global ITS market,” says Q-Free acting CEO Roar Østbø. “Moving forward, management will focus on developing a sound commercial and operational platform to support further growth. Furthermore, Q-Free will bring to market joint offerings, leveraging technologies from various parts of the Q-Free technology portfolio. These will primarily be in the areas of tolling, parking management and traffic management. Q-Free aims to continue the transformation and build a profitable growth company serving the global ITS market.”

Related Content

  • July 24, 2023
    Navigating the data privacy landscape
    If customer data is not protected then the journey towards better, less polluting public transport solutions is likely to be delayed, warns Alexis Suggett of Cubic Transportation Systems
  • January 25, 2012
    Tolling systems - interoperability is key
    Is US tolling as fragmented and divided as some would have you believe? And are the technology suppliers so very entrenched? ITS International spoke to the market's leading suppliers. A few years back, the prevalent view was that the North American tolling market was characterised by fragmented, proprietary solutions, each existing in splendid isolation. The reality is that a combination of pragmatism and good old market forces have seen some concerted moves made towards interoperability in many areas.
  • January 7, 2015
    Investments in autonomous driving are accelerating, says report
    Google and various automakers have increased their activity and investments toward the goal of self-driving vehicles, while Google has shifted from its previous strategy to now focus on fully driverless vehicles for the future. If successful, it will have significant implications for the auto industry, according to IHS Automotive, based on findings in its new report, Autonomous Driving: Question is When, Not If, which is an update to a previous report issued early in 2014. OEMs remain geared toward aug
  • January 7, 2013
    Integration of travel payment and information closer to reality
    Integration of travel payment and information is bringing utopia in management of transportation as a single intermodal system is closer to reality. Larry Yermack writes. For decades, transportation planners and ITS visionaries all believed that transportation would not be fully optimised until it could be managed as a single intermodal system. Relationships between modal operators left this more in the dream category than reality. However, the steady march of advances in payment technology have brought us