mParticle announced yesterday it is being acquired by ecommerce offer personalization vendor Rokt for $300 million. It’s the third acquisition of a leading CDP in a little over one month, following ActionIQ/Uniphore and Lytics/ContentStack. It’s also the first to announce the deal price.
I’ve already written in this blog about the other two deals and this one is similar enough that most of what I said before still applies. It’s clearly tough to be an independent CDP these days. ActionIQ, Lytics, and mParticle are all technically advanced products, with a particular stress on delivering real-time data – something that’s hard for cloud data warehouses like Snowflake and Google BigQuery. This is probably what made them attractive to their buyers, which are all in different businesses (conversation management, digital experience management, and ecommerce, respectively) but share the need to manage real-time customer interactions.
The buyers' businesses themselves increasingly overlap, so part of their motivation is likely to differentiate themselves from competitors. Probably more compelling, a CDPlets them position their product as the foundation platform in their clients’ customer management architecture. The platform is a powerful position because it’s tough to change platforms; applications that read data from a platform are precarious because switching applications is relatively easy. (And I do mean relatively: it’s still a lot of work in most cases.) On a more practical level, adding a real-time CDP makes it easier to do personalization, which offers a concrete advantage to potential buyers of these products. (And, yes, the data is essential for Artificial Intelligence as well.)
It’s interesting that all three buyers are relatively small firms (Uniphore has 851 employees, down 3% in the past two years; ContentStack has 609 employees, up 27% in the past two years; Rokt has 614 employees, up 21% in the past two years) and none are the biggest in their space. While they’re not struggling to survive, they do need a way to distinguish themselves from their many competitors. This is provided by the comprehensive data assembled by a CDP and the superior personalization it makes possible.
From the CDP vendors’ viewpoint, becoming part of a customer-facing system lets them reverse the trend of selling to IT and data departments and move back to the original CDP position of selling to business users. This is a more comfortable environment, since IT and data teams are much more likely than business users to want to build their own solution based on a cloud data warehouse. It also removes some competition from the giant enterprise cloud vendors like Salesforce, Adobe, and Oracle. Those companies are most appealing to central IT and data teams, although they certainly sell to business users as well.
There’s nothing radical about a CDP being embedded in a customer-facing system. In fact, statistics in our Industry Update report have long shown that what we call “campaign” and “delivery” CDPs comprise more than two-thirds of the industry. The truth is, the market long ago decided it preferred a CDP that was part of a larger product. So the latest round of acquisitions reflect a continuation of that situation, not a radical departure.
The obvious question is whether more acquisitions will follow. Likely candidates are firms that, like ActionQI, Lytics, and mParticle, have particularly advanced real-time technologies. This isn’t everyone, since many CDPs rely on standard database technology and differentiate in other ways such as industry expertise or regional presence. The biggest remaining independents (Tealium at 599 employees*, Optimove at 504 employees, and Treasure Data at 484 employees) might all be large enough to continue going it alone or at least might be too big for companies similar to Uniphore, ContentStack and Rokt to swallow. The next level down would be firms including Twilio Segment (a perpetual acquisition candidate as a spin-off from the rest of Twilio), Resulticks (293 employees), and Cordial (245 employees). Note they are still larger than mParticle (237 employees), ActionIQ (152 employees) and Lytics (49 employees).
More likely candidates are firms including BlueConic (177 employees), Redpoint Global (157 employees), and FirstHive (114 employees), as well as a variety of still-smaller firms including Blueshift, Simon Data, Lemnisk, Lexer, Commanders Act, Meiro, NGDATA, and Relay42. Several of this latter group are based outside the U.S., which may reduce their appeal, and of course every company has a unique situation. So it’s not clear which would actually be open to being acquired or be technically interesting to a potential buyer. But it wouldn’t at all be surprising to see one or more of these join the list of CDPs embedded in customer-facing system.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________- *all data from LinkedIn, as captured in the CDP Institute’s latest Industry Update, available here.