Genesis Equipment Solutions
At a Glance
- Industry: Power equipment rental
- Location: Dubai, UAE
- Relationship since: 2010
- Fleet grown roughly threefold, revenue substantially, headcount about the same, sixteen years on.
The Situation (2010)
When Genesis came to us in 2010, it was already a serious operator in the UAE power equipment rental market. The fleet was real, the customers were real, the cash flow was real. What was missing was a single system that could keep up with how the business actually ran. Sales, operations, service, stores, and accounts each worked hard, but each held only a piece of the truth. Everyone believed they had the right numbers. No one could see the whole.
What That Looked Like Day to Day
- Rental terms set by sales, but installation information reaching accounts too late, so invoices were delayed and billing periods were missed
- A sales team often unsure which equipment was actually available to rent
- Critical spare parts unavailable when needed, and others reordered when they were already in stock
- High-value assets sitting unbilled because the paperwork could not be found
- Debtors going unchased because the record of rentals did not talk to the record of payments
What We Found
The presenting problems looked like failures of discipline. They were not. They were failures of visibility. Teams operating on fragments of the truth produce decisions that fit the fragment they can see. The answer was not to chase each symptom one by one. It was to build a single system where all five teams worked from the same operational facts, with asset status, billing triggers, collections, and profitability visible in one place.
One requirement stood out as specific to the UAE. Post-dated check management is a category of cash-flow risk fundamental to how rental businesses operate here, and no generic rental system encodes it. It has to be built around, not bolted on.
What We Built
- Phase 1, 2010, on-premises: A system built around how Genesis actually operated, with the integration of all five teams as the priority. It covered rentals end to end, maintenance and downtime against every asset, spares tied to real usage, and finance, with post-dated check management as a first-class part of the finance module rather than an afterthought.
- Phase 2, 2020, cloud and BI: We moved the system to the cloud and added a business intelligence layer. Maintenance dashboards, asset profitability views, collections analytics, and management reporting were now drawn from the same data the operational teams worked from.
A Decision Worth Recording (2020)
When we suggested the cloud rebuild and the BI layer, the decision did not come quickly. There was a pause of about six months. During it, other vendors presented their own demos, and the choice was weighed in the open, against real alternatives. In the end, the judgment was that the people who understood the business best were the ones who had been building its software for ten years. The technical work of a rebuild was within reach of any capable team. The understanding was not. Software is easy. People are hard.
The Outcome
Sixteen years on, Genesis has grown its fleet roughly threefold and its revenue substantially, while its headcount has stayed about the same. That last part is the truest measure of what the software has done. In a rental business, the instinct as you scale is to add people, in operations, in accounts, in dispatch, in asset management. Holding the team roughly flat while the business grows several times over is unusual, and it is what the system was for.
- They stopped losing track of their own assets
- They stopped reordering spares they already had
- They could see which assets earned and which quietly cost money
- Post-dated check management took an entire category of cash-flow risk off the table
- Maintenance became a planned function rather than a reactive scramble
Optimizing Wholesale Distribution with Smart Solutions
If you run a rental operation and any of this feels familiar, the next step is a conversation, not a pitch.