You may have to forgive some of us for our enthusiasm at the launch of Ceridian HCM Holding as a public company.
It's a compelling growth story right now, sure. Yet some us can't help but be a little excited just by seeing a Control Data successor re-emerge as a publicly held Minnesota technology company.
Control Data (CDC) is a name younger people in the state may not even recognize, although they probably should. It's one of those companies that helps explain why the economy of Minnesota eventually caught and then passed the economies of neighboring states like Wisconsin in the back half of the 20th century. It helps explain how companies like UnitedHealth Group could have thrived here.
There's a certainly a strong family resemblance to the old Control Data in Bloomington-based Ceridian HCM, too, a fast-growing company providing human capital management software that recently filed to go public.
Its main offering is called Dayforce, used by employers for basics like making sure employees get paid accurately as well as things like recruiting and scheduling work. It promises a cloud-based system so easy and intuitive to use that it can be considered "consumer-grade."
Not much the old Control Data produced could have been easy to use, as its first mission was building big computers for customers like the U.S. Navy. A full corporate genealogy — from Ceridian HCM back to Control Data — begins in 1957 in St. Paul, where talented staffers led by Bill Norris had come to fear that their careers would dead end in a company then called Sperry Rand.
Norris colleagues including Willis "Bill" Drake and Arnold "Bud" Ryden got a company called Control Data going, including drafting the prospectus of a soon-to-be legendary stock offering — 600,000 shares to be sold at a buck each. Norris was named president and a company birth announcement of sorts ran as a sophisticated help-wanted ad in a September 1957 issue of Electronic News.
"Control Data Corporation has just started," it read. "We're going to grow."