Under Joe Hickey’s guidance, ROCK Networks has become one of Canada’s fastest-growing telecommunications companies, with operations stretching from Alberta to Newfoundland. But the founder and president of the Ottawa-based firm says it’s poised for even bigger things ahead after the company was acquired by Toronto’s PomeGran in a deal that was officially announced in late […]
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Under Joe Hickey’s guidance, ROCK Networks has become one of Canada’s fastest-growing telecommunications companies, with operations stretching from Alberta to Newfoundland.
But the founder and president of the Ottawa-based firm says it’s poised for even bigger things ahead after the company was acquired by Toronto’s PomeGran in a deal that was officially announced in late February.
“It’s not an easy decision to sell your company,” Hickey, a Newfoundland native who christened his firm after his home province’s nickname, told Techopia on Thursday.
“The name ROCK Networks is very personal to me. (The two companies) were on the same road. PomeGran was a little bit further ahead than ROCK, so that gives the fuel to the ROCK engine to carry both companies forward into the future.”
Terms of the transaction, which closed at the end of 2023, were not disclosed. Hickey, who was ROCK’s majority shareholder, now has a significant stake in PomeGran – both as a stockholder and an executive after moving into the president’s chair at the Toronto-based company last month.
Founded by Ottawa-based entrepreneur Kalai Kalaichelvan, who now serves as executive chairman, PomeGran owns a number of telecom service providers in several provinces. Its holdings include southwestern Ontario-based Canquest Communications, Northern Ontario’s CochraneTel and Quebec-based Digicom.
Its newest subsidiary is ROCK, which began as a supplier of radio equipment but has moved aggressively into the broadband space in recent years. In his new role as PomeGran’s president, Hickey will be responsible for mapping out a long-term growth strategy, with a stated goal of helping to propel the company “into the upper echelons of the Canadian telecom space.”