Datchet: IDC mourns the loss of chairman, Mike Woodhall
Product development company IDC is saddened to announce that its chairman, Mike Woodhall, died on June 8, 2013, after a long battle with Parkinson’s disease. Woodhall was the founder of IDC over 40 years ago and built the company to the outstanding reputation it has today. He began his design career at the Ford Motor Company and later moved to GEC. In 1972, he started IDC as a one-man operation working from his home in Maidenhead, where he had set up a studio. As the contracts started to roll in, he soon had to employ staff and later moved to more suitable premises in Datchet.
At a time when mass-produced domestic products were on the increase, IDC took a significant chunk of the domestic design business. This soon progressed to sophisticated electronics products and one of Woodhall’s landmark projects came in 1975 when he designed the world’s first computer-controlled digital scanner. This was the start of IDC’s reputation for high-tech products which has developed to include the multi-award winning medical products of today.
Projects director at IDC, Brian Gough, remembers the early days of IDC and Woodhall’s commitment to staff and the company: "I've been privileged to have known and worked with Mike for over thirty years and to call him my friend and mentor. There were so many facets to Mike: he was a great designer; he gave very many people (including me) the 'head room' to grow and develop; he had a love of art and history and he had a great (some might say wicked) sense of humour. Everyone who knew him will remember the sparkle in his eye and the great times they had with him. He will be remembered often and with great affection."
Woodhall stepped down as MD in 2006, when Stephen Knowles took over the company. Since this time he has continued to provide valuable input to IDC at board level as chairman. Knowles explained: “Mike is an irreplaceable part of IDC and will be remembered by all who knew him for his spirit, tenacity and sense of mischief. As well as being a great designer and businessman, he was an incredible mentor, a true gentlemen and a great friend. He will be missed terribly."