alanrockwood
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...It's a very good bet that Simon and his fellow manager/owners want to cash in on the huge risk they took and on their decade of exhausting hard work...
With regard to motivation for selling, this is probably the most important comment made in the thread so far. I am very surprised it took so long in this thread for this obvious point to be made. A sell out is how the owners of a startup company make their money. (Loosely speaking, I include companies formed by management buyouts in the same boat as startups)
Basically, there are two main reasons for a closely held company to sell out. One is to avoid some kind of impending financial disaster, and the other is to cash out on one's investment and hard work. Those two reasons are not necessarily mutually exclusive.
Regardless of what will happen to Ilford products in the end, one thing is almost certain, namely that big changes are in store. They may come in the short term, or they may come in the longer term. For one small company where I used to work the major changes came in a series of seismic events over a period of a relatively few short years. The final result was that after a year and a half the last owners of the company and/or technology got rid of every one of the original employees, except for one regional service person, and the product in question ultimately failed, in part because the original employees who knew how to design and build the product were let go.