Lock in a year of Digiday+ for 35% less. Ends May 29.
Adobe’s clearly serious about reorienting itself to become a central player in digital ad buying: it has spent $2.4 billion in the past year on acquisitions in ad tech.
The company gave the figure in a blog post announcing it has closed the acquisition of digital marketing manager Efficient Frontier, its latest acquisition. The deal cost Adobe $400 million, according to company officials, and will add 350 employees. Combined with Adobe’s earlier purchases of video ad platform Auditude, data manager Demdex and Web content management system Day Software, Adobe has spent $2.4 billion. Adobe spent $248 million on Day, according to financial filings. It reportedly paid $120 million for Auditude. Adobe has stated in financial filings that Web analytics giant Omniture was its biggest move, costing $1.8 billion. It doesn’t appear like Adobe is finished either.
“With Efficient Frontier, we continue to make customer-driven business decisions as we build a powerful and comprehensive digital marketing platform to drive business impact through the marketing department,” Adobe gm of digital marketing Brad Rencher and gm of advertising and digital marketing David Karnstedt wrote in a company blog post.
In November, Adobe cut 750 positions in North America and Europe, stating it was doing so in order to reorient its business around growth in digital media and marketing. Its executives have positioned the company as a credible alternative to Google, as an independent third-party tech provider without the sort of conflicts Google invariably has. There’s little doubt it will have plenty of additional companies to choose from for future acquisitions in the crowded ad-tech landscape.
More in Media
The NBA’s contract with YouTuber Kenny Beecham could be a new blueprint for sports leagues
The NBA’s blueprint for working with creators like Kenny Beecham could be a sign of where sports leagues are headed.
Twitch tweaks monetization tools to try and help smaller creators build a following
Twitch’s new community-driven monetization tools seek to give creators more ways to get paid, but creators need to get discovered first
Media Briefing: Publishers brace themselves for the zero-click era amid Google’s AI search overhaul
Publishers are meeting Google’s AI search overhaul with resignation rather than resistance, bracing for a zero-click future on the horizon.