I thought it would be worth looking at the European 24/7 competitor GSML. Company website here - GMSL - Home
Glassdoor has mostly postive comments beside grumblings about lack of career progression. Not much insight into the company and no issues raised about the tech stack or managment. Only 17 reviews too so not sure to take too much away from that.
The employee reviews on their website are quite dated too.
Looks like their hiring a few developers (source from Indeed).
Seem to be using cloud with AWS according to the job description so assume modernish software too - not all desktop.
Technologies
The technologies we use for development include:
- C#, NUnit
- ASP.NET, MVC
- React, Javascript
- SQL Server, Oracle, DynamoDB, PostgreSQL
- AWS
- VMWare
Comapny Description
GMSL is a small company based in Cambridge, UK. We have two offices in Cambridge (our head office and a fully equipped DR facility a few miles outside the city centre) together with an office in Birmingham, UK where we carry out the CVA function on behalf of the UK gas industry.
The company was founded in 1996, at the start of the Network Code daily balancing regime in the UK, and since 2002 has been 100% owned by Fluxys SA, the Belgian gas network owner and operator. We now have over 95 staff providing operations services and software to gas and power shippers across the European gas and power networks.
The company began developing software for use in-house to enable us to provide these services and our range of products has grown as we have expanded into new networks. We continue to rely on our own software to support our operations business and that of our clients.
GMSL continues to focus on gas and power operations and related software. We now work for around 50 operations clients and have over 80 software licensees.
What is interesting is they post their client list - GMSL - Client list on their website. Wonder what the overlap is between EOL and themselves if any.
Quite a few investment banks/exchanges - they also seem almost all focused on gas too.
They look quite small - I wonder if EOL could even acquire them? I assume there might be a bit of regulator pushback if they did. Founder's have been there about 26 years but not old but not overly young if they wanted an exit - private held.