Showing posts with label Publicis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Publicis. Show all posts

Publicis adds to area healthcare communications assets, buying Horsham-based Verilogue







Tom Paine



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Publicis, which already owns a number of heathcare communications assets in the area, today announced it was acquiring Horsham-based Verilogue (pdf), a healthcare analytics firm specializing in analyzing patient-physician communications.

By using technology to (confidentially and with patient approval) track and analyze patient-provider interactions, Verilogue may provide insights that can help improve healthcare communications and training.

Founded in 2006, Verilogue will maintain its current headquarters and 31 employees, the company said. It will continue to be run by co-founder and current CEO Jeff Kozloff.

Lead investor Edison Ventures will exit. Terms were not disclosed.

Publicis Health brands with a presence in the Phildelphia area include Saatchi & Saatchi Health, Publicis Life Brands, Digitas Health, Razorfish Healthware, Publicis Health Media, and Publicis Touchpoint Solutions. Another Publicis company, Princeton-based Rosetta, also has a sizeable healthcare practice.


US 1 reports on Rosetta founder Chris Kuenne's new PE firm, Rosemark Capital Group


Tom Paine



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Chris Kuenne (Rosemark Capital website)


US 1, a relatively small newspaper and website covering the Princeton area, produces some very good business coverage. One article from October by Barbara Figge Fox is on Rosetta founder Chris Kuenne and the new private equity firm he founded located on Nassau Street in Princeton, Rosemark Capital Group. Kuenne built Rosetta, an interactive marketing and strategy firm, into the largest independent agency in the US before selling it to Publicis for $575 million in 2011.

Among other things, the article gives a lot more detail than I've seen before about Kuenne's business and personal history, and the story behind building Rosetta. Kuenne, who is still supporting the management transition at Rosetta and teaching high tech entrepreneurship at Princeton (his alma mater, where his father also taught), Fox reports, started Rosemark with general partners Paul Gilbert (CEO of MedAvante) and Seamus McMahon. Kenneth Traub, co-founder of Hamilton-based Voxware and former CEO of American Bank Note Holographics, is also on board. Kuenne will cover sales and marketing, Gilbert healthcare, Traub verticals, technology and business services, and McMahon financial services.

Rosemark will focus on investing in companies with intellectual property (IP) that is enabled by technology, and hands-on support and expertise is very much part of the package. Rosemark had nine people on board as of October and expects to be adding more. It will target companies worth $10 million to $30 million, with the potential to grow by 15 to 20 percent or more per year. It is not clear whether Rosemark is raising a specific fund yet or not, but it appears to have some deep-pocketed potential partners from previous business relationships.

One of Rosemark's clients is Kuenne's childhood friend James Burke, son of the late J&J CEO James E. Burke and a cousin of NBCU CEO Steve Burke. He founded Disruptive LA to change the way indie films are marketed.

For more on this, see Fox' excellent, in-depth reporting on Rosemark's launch.




Publicis, Omnicom agree to merge; would become world's largest agency





Tom Paine



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Publicis and Omnicom announced this morning (pdf) that they have agreed to merge, creating the world's largest advertising company. Publicis is based in Paris, Omnicom in New York.

Publicis Omnicom Group had combined 2012 revenue of $22.7 billion and would have a market capitalization of $35.1 billion. It will move far ahead of WPP, which until now has been the largest agency. The deal is expected to face regulatory scrutiny in both the US and Europe.

In the Philadelphia area, Publicis has a heavy concentration of digital agencies, particularly in healthcare. They include Philly-based Digitas Health and Razorfish Healthware, and other units operating under the Publicis and Saatchi & Saatchi names based in Yardley. Publicis acquired Princeton-based digital agency Rosetta, which also has a strong healthcare practice but serves a broader spectrum of industries, for $575 million in 2011.

I don't have a complete reading on what assets Omnicom has in the Philadelphia area. TPG is a direct marketing group based here. Omnicom's DDB Health acquired Philadelphia-based healthcare communications agency Synergy in 2011. CDM Princeton is a healthcare marketing agency. I'm sure other Omnicom brands have offices or people in the area, although I haven't spotted anything else significant yet.

Ad Age provides more information on what the combined agency would
look like.
.



Daily Links 7/26/2013: Bjork talks QLIK strategy; Britt to retire as Time Warner Cable chief









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Reactions to SAP co-CEO Snabe's departure range from cool to concerned (SearchSAP)

Glenn Britt to Retire as Time Warner Cable Chief (New York Times)

Publicis Said in Late-Stage Talks on Merger With Omnicom
(Bloomberg)

NewSpring Capital Leads Equity Investment in VidSys, Inc (Business Wire)
$15.65 million round in Virginia-based software company.

QLIK: Look Past Higher Expense to ‘.Next,’ Say Bulls (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)

Xtium Named to Lead411's 2013 “Hottest Companies in Pennsylvania” List (PR Web)

Hybrid Cloud Means Slower Sales Growth for Equinix (Data Center Knowledge)

What’s the Cloud’s Role in Tier-2 ERP? (ERP Cloud News)

NetSuite beats Q2 expectations as revenue climbed 35 percent
(ZDNet)


REVEALED: Hungry termites nibbling at Oracle's foundation
(The Register)

After demo day, incentivizing startups to settle down and stay awhile (Med City News)





Daily Links 4/24/2013: GE drops $105 mm into EMC/VMware cloud spinoff; Unisys plummets after earnings release





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Amazon: Hard luck Microsoft, AWS will always be cheaper
We're in the driving seat and the only way is down
(The Register)

Pivotal’s Audacious Plan (New York Times: Bits)
GE invests $105 million (yes, thats right) in EMC/VMware cloud spinoff.

Salesforce.com seeks more advertising, marketing revenue from social (Gigaom)

Red ink flows in difficult first quarter for Unisys (Philly.com: Philly Inc)
Unisys shares are down 20% on the day.

Comcast: Unlicensed Spectrum Now Top Route to Web Access
Exec to Tell Senate to Do More to Free Up Spectrum
(Multichannel News)

Here Comes Amazon's Kindle TV Set-Top Box (Bloomberg Business Week)

Harry Potter coming to Universal Studios Hollywood (LA Daily News)

NBCUniversal Celebrates New Digital Efforts (Hollywood Reporter)

Publicis Groupe to Spend $4 Billion on Acquisitions Over Next Five Years
Maurice Levy Says Small and Midsize Digital Firms Are Next Targets
(Ad Age)


Smart-phone app for runners wins Villanova contests (Philadelphia Business Journal)




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Medical Marketing & Media's 2012 look at Philly area healthcare marketing & communications agencies



Tom Paine




Medical Marketing & Media Magazine published its "100 Agencies" issue in July, providing profiles of what it deems to be the top 100 healthcare marketing & communications agencies. The Philadelphia region, extending up through New Jersey to New York City, continues to have a major concentration of these firms, reflecting the presence of so many pharma and medical device companies and healthcare institutions in the region. I would argue that the healthcare business largely spurred the creation and growth of the interactive design community in Philadelphia, though it has since branched out.

I examined the information MM&M collected on the 17 or so firms based in the Philly area that were included among its Top 100. Since these are mostly privately owned firms (or in just a few cases agencies within publicly held firms), they don't really have to disclose anything they don't want to so the data is understandably spotty. Overall (see the table below), it looks like most firms experienced flat results or moderate growth in 2011. The FDA approval process, patent expirations, agency consolidations, and shifts in spending allocations were often cited as factors inhibiting growth. Firms that had been focused on supporting "detailing" salesforces continue to face adjustments as industry spending shifts away from that area. Firms that started out as "totally digital" are still trying to incorporate some non-digital capabilities, while other more traditional agencies are bulking up on digital skills.

Online Form powered by
(Most data published in July 2012 issue of Medical Marketing & Media)

Perhaps the two largest firms based in the area, and also two of the strongest digital agencies, Digitas Health (Philadelphia) and Rosetta (Hamilton, NJ), both experienced flat or down years. Digitas went through about a 10% reduction in staff and a change in management structure after the departure of co-founder David Kramer. Rosetta, which like Digitas is owned by Publicis, also experienced "relatively flat revenue in healthcare in 2011 vs. 2010", Shannon Hartley, managing director of Rosetta's healthcare practice told MM&M. Publicis acquired Rosetta in June 2011 for $575 million. Publicis reported first half growth 2012 for North America of 2.6%, which it attributed in part to "the sluggishness in the healthcare sector".

Late last year, Publicis reorganized its healthcare properties, placing Digitas Health and Philly-based Razorfish Health under its New York-based Publicis Healthcare Communications Group (PHCG). Also under the PHCG umbrella are Yardley-based Publicis Touchpoint Solutions, Publicis Healthware International and Saatchi & Saatchi Healthcare Innovations, which since been rechristened as Saatchi & Saatchi Science. Rosetta, however, continues to report separately in Publicis' corporate structure, although there are apparently some synergistic initiatives with Rosetta working with other Publicis units. Razorfish Health, spun off from Razorfish in 2010, didn't give too much information about its 2011 results, except to note it was a good year for new business highlighted by the addition of the Rite Aid account. Razorfish Health also moved into new headquarters in the Wanamaker Building.

The healthcare marketing landscape might also be shaken up if there is any foundation to the story floated by FT (usually a reliable source) as I was finishing writing this that Publicis may be planning a $6 billion plus bid for New York-based Interpublic Group. Though not a major presence in the Philadelphia area, Interpublic's healthcare assets are considerable and include Draftfcb Healthcare, Area 23 and various units operating under the McCann name.


Another significant player on the Philly healthcare agency scene, although not on the scale of Publicis, is Huntsworth Health, a unit of UK-based Huntsworth PLC. Huntsworth Health agencies in the area include ApotheCom of Yardley, Nitrogen (formerly Dorland, the oldest agency in the business), evoke interaction, a New York-based digitally oriented agency with a Philly office, Curatio, an Exton-based continuing medical education specialist, and Tonic Life Communications, a healthcare PR specialist with headquarters in London and Philadelphia.

Some significants firms based elsewhere with Philly offices include Columbus, Ohio-based Blue Diesel, San Francisco-based Eveo, and Dallas-based imc2 health and wellness, although imc2 reduced staff here at the beginning of the year.

Hamilton, NJ-based H4B Catapult, a Havas shop, said it experienced "double digit growth" in 2011, recovering from loss of its biggest account, Lovenox, due to patent expiration. It reported having about 160 employees, and opened a new Boston office. Philly-based Vox Medica acquired a boutique agency and with it brought in some new equity partners, and HLG Health Communications formally changed its name from the Hal Lewis Group. Cadient Group said its business was up 15% in 2011, and the firm focused on developing new mobile, social and analytics tools. Cadient said it was also considering making acquisitions. Roska Health Advertising said its business was up 5 to 10%, and Dudnyk, which has had a period of rapid growth, said it was up 12% for the year. DiD of Fort Washington seems to have bounced back from a major hit it took due to the production problems of client McNeil Labs. Princeton-based Compass Healthcare Marketing is seeing gains from its emphasis on orphan drugs, and CDM Princeton said it saw 15% growth for the year.

Renavatio Healthcare Communications of Newton is a promising shop focusing on specialty brands, which has grown to 35 full time staffers in little more than three years since its founding.


There are some other area agencies worth noting not on MM&M's top 100 list. Wilmington-based Aloysius Butler & Clark is a mid-sized agency with a particular strength in representing healthcare systems. Mangos of Malvern has a very strong list of local clients, including several area health systems. Tonic Design of Newtown (no connection to Huntsworth's Tonic Life Communications) may have signaled an intent to become a bigger healthcare player by announcing that former Cadient Group founding partner and Digitas Health Managing Director James Burke joined the firm at the beginning of August as Managing Director. Star Group Communications, Inc. of Vorhees, NJ is another young agency. There is another large cluster of agencies in the Parsippany/Morristown/Bedminister area further up in New Jersey.

One complaint I had a year or two ago covering this subject has lessened. Some firms were so anxious to highlight their digital capabilities that their overly souped up websites were almost impossible to navigate or locate needed information.



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Daily Links 8/3/2012: SAP settles with Oracle; Cable-Verizon deal approval reported near



Comcast, Verizon said to be near deal with regulators on joint marketing agreement, spectrum sale (New York Post)

Comcast/NBCU Will Pay GE $7.8B In 2014, Says Barclays (Investors Business Daily)

SAP Agrees to Pay Oracle $306 Million for Copyright Breach (Bloomberg)
This agreement, if approved, would end the possibility of retrial of the TomorrowNow case, which was scheduled to begin late this month. However, Oracle says it still intends to appeal to the 9th Circuit to have the $1.3 billion award in the jury verdict, which federal trial judge Phyllis Hamilton threw out, restored.
Oracle hasn't exactly been on a winning streak in the legal arena lately.

Publicis and Interpublic – a swan song for Levy? (FT Blogs: Alphaville)
Would further consolidate healthcare marketing business, if it were to happen.

Newtown-based Epam Systems quarterly profit tops estimates (Reuters)

2Q12 Performance for Trident Capital’s SaaS Portfolio; the Importance of Accurate Metrics Prediction (Trident Capital Blog)
Trident Capital's views on the SaaS market always make for an interesting read.



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Daily Links 12/5/2011: ReadWriteWeb names Lancaster-based appMobi its "most promising company for 2012"



Lancaster-based appMobi is ReadWriteWeb's Most Promising Company For 2012 (ReadWriteWeb)

Taleo, Kenexa Spike On SAP/Success Factors Deal; Who Is Next? (Forbes: Tech Musings)

SAP Overpaying For SuccessFactors, S&P Analyst Says (Forbes: Tech Musings)

SAP splashes out in cloud-computing frenzy (Reuters)

Kenexa's Growing HR Footprint (ZDNet Blogs)

IBM Rachets Up Acquisition Machine (Wall Street Journal: Deal Journal)

PhillyInc: Venture capital still on the upswing (Philadelphia Inquirer)

CMCSA, TWC: Stifel Ups To Buy On Wireless Deal (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)

Comcast to start selling Verizon mobile early 2012 (Reuters)

Comcast CFO: NBCUniversal Integration Continues to Go 'Really Well' (Hollywood Reporter)

The Future of TV Begins Now on Xbox 360 (Microsoft News Center)
FiOS later this month; Comcast Xfinity On Demand in "early 2012".

Razorfish CEO to Set New Digital Course for Publicis in Wake of Lang Departure (Ad Age)
Implications for Rosetta Marketing?

Siemens amps up its smart grid bid with eMeter startup acquisition (VentureBeat)
eMeter has also been working closely with SAP on applications.

USA Technologies replaces CEO who posed as investor (Philadelphia Business Journal)



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Daily Links 7/22/2011: Reports (doubted by some) that Apple might bid on Hulu

Apple Said to Consider Making Bid for Hulu (Bloomberg)

Don’t Hold Your Breath on That Apple Hulu Deal (All Things Digital)

Analyst: Comcast Stock Price Values NBCUniversal at 'Close to Zero' (Hollywood Reporter)

Big Cable Braces For A Lousy Quarter (All Things Digital)
Comcast reports earnings on August 3.

Verizon CEO Ivan Seidenberg Steps Down, COO Lowell McAdam Steps Up (TechCrunch)
I admire Seidenberg greatly for challenging the Telco culture and investing in FiOS; whether that will ultimately be judged to have been a good investment remains to be determined.

IPhone Bolsters Verizon Results (New York Times)

FiOS Sizzles In Verizon's Q2, Topping $2 Billion
Fiber-Optic Network Services Now Represent 57% Of Telco's Consumer Wireline Business
(Multichannel News)

Congress, FCC hit brakes on T-Mobile, AT&T merger (The Hill)

Show Us the Money: Five PA Venture Capitalists to Watch (Keystone Edge)

Digital Media-Buying Platform MediaMath Nets $20 Million
Startup to Expand Into Video, Social and Mobile Ad Buying
(Ad Adge)
Previous investor Safeguard Scientifics leads Series B round.

SAP BusinessObjects Customers Await New Platform (Information Week)


Anexinet rebounds, seeks software pros (Philly.com: Philly Deals)

Publicis Revenue Increases on Latin America, Digital Media (Bloomberg via San Francisco Chronicle)

Lovell Minnick To Exit ALPS After 6 Six Years (PE Hub)

Ben Franklin TechVentures Named to Inc. Website’s Top-10 List (Press Release)
DreamIt Ventures also made the Inc. list (which I am not going to link to because their slide show keeps crashing my computer).



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Daily Links 7/21/2011: Comcast splits media business between WPP, Publicis

Comcast Splits Media Business Between WPP, Publicis
With NBC Acquisition, Conflicts Made It Difficult to Consolidate at One Shop
(Ad Age)

TruePosition Alleges Plot Against Its 9-1-1 Location System
(PC World)

TruePosition Announces Renewal of Agreement with AT&T (Business Wire)

Moto Mobility Zooms 17%: Nokia Results, Patent Issues In Focus (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)
The InterDigital effect?
Update: Apparently investor Carl Icahn is pushing MMI to realize the value of its patent portfolio

Congratulations to myYearbook (Business Insider)
By First Round Capital Managing Partner Chris Fralic.

Express Scripts will buy rival Medco for $29.1B (AP via Forbes)
Both have fulfillment operations in Philly area; merger could also mean more pricing pressure on Pharma companies.

July 2011 Business Outlook Survey (Philly Fed)
Not great, but a better outlook than last month.
Factory activity rebounds in Philly region (MarketWatch)

Philadelphia official fired for accepting meals, gifts from city contractors (Philadelphia Inquirer)

Comcast kills off Stephen King movie series (Marketplace)

Will Cisco Bail on Set-Top Boxes? (Light Reading Cable)

Case Study: Philadelphia Museum Uses Foursquare to Increase Awareness (Street Fight)

McDermott Says SAP Has `Great' Position in Brazil
(Video: Bloomberg via Washington Post)

Talk About Agile Commerce: Monetate has moved, into a cool new space (Monetate Blog)



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With Rosetta acquisition, Publicis continues to build digital Health Marketing juggernaut

French advertising giant Publicis last week announced its acquisition of Hamilton (or Princeton, depending upon which story you read, though the actual headquarters address is Hamilton), NJ-based digital marketing agency Rosetta Marketing for $575 million in cash. While I have not been able to get exact figure for how much of its revenue currently comes from healthcare, a Rosetta press release from July of last year put the figure at $60 million, which appears to include the acquisition of New York-based Wishbone at the end of 2009. Rosetta projects agency-wide revenue for this year of $250 million. It currently employs about 1100, and expects to increase that number to between 1350 and 1400 within the next year. Rosetta was founded in 1998 and was the second largest independent digital agency in the U.S in 2010 according to Advertising Age.



This will put Rosetta under the same corporate roof along with two Philly-based Publicis agencies; Digitas Health and Razorfish Health (the music on Razorfish Health's homepage will blow you away if your volume is set high). Digitas Health traces its roots back to Philadelphia's Medical Broadcasting Corp, which Digitas acquired in 2006, and is run by Medical Broadcasting cofounder David Kramer. Later that same year Publicis acquired Digitas for $1.3 billion. Digitas Health's annual revenue is cited by major trade pubs as being more than $150 million, and its website says it employs more than 600.


Razorfish, which had been acquired by Microsoft as part of its acquisition of aQuantive Inc. in 2007, subsequently was sold to Publicis for $530 million in 2009. Razorfish's health/pharma/meds practice was broken out as Razorfish Health, a stand-alone agency, last year, and is managed by Razorfish/i-Frontier veteran Kathy Thorbahn (i-Frontier was acquired by aQuantive in 2002, and later merged with Razorfish). MedAD News put Razorfish Health's 2010 revenue at $20 to $25 million, with 160 employees.


Publicis also owns several other health-related agenices, including Newtown-based Saatchi & Saatchi Healthcare Innovations.


Publicis says it intends to continue to manage these as separate businesses. As is the norm in the industry, large agencies tend to maintain multiple separate entities that reflect different specializations, and also to avoid competitive and possible ethical conflicts that can limit growth. Publicis Chairman Maurice Levy said Rosetta brings digital marketing consulting services to the global organization, commenting, "Rosetta is very different from Digitas, which comes from the direct-marketing world. And Razorfish is coming from the world of digital agencies." The Rosetta acquisition will push Publicis' percentage of digitally-derived revenue to over 30%. Rosetta will also remain independent of Publicis' digital umbrella organization VivaKi, of which both Digitas Health and Razorfish Health are a part.


Rosetta founder & CEO Chris Kuenne is an interesting guy with some local roots and a devotion to rigorous strategic analysis and measurement. Kuenne spent several years as a marketing manager for J&J consumer brands such as Tylenol and Band-Aids before going out on his own. His father taught economics at Princeton. Here is a recent piece Kuenne contributed to Business Week on managing corporate culture.



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Daily Links 5/17/2011: Seeking "savoir-faire," Publicis buys Rosetta for $575 million

Publicis to Acquire Rosetta for $575M (ClickZ)
How will Princeton-based digital shop work with Philly-based Publicis units Digitas Health and Razorfish Health in Pharma/Med/Life Sciences, where Rosetta has a strong presence?

Seeking "savoir-faire," Publicis buys Rosetta for $575 million (Medical Marketing & Media)

Publicis Groupe to Acquire Digital Shop Rosetta for $575 Million
Marks Change of Heart for Fiercely Independent CEO Kuenne
(Ad Age)

Ben Franklin group announces investments of $2M (Philadelphia Business Journal)

HP: We Underinvested In Services, Says Apotheker (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)

InterDigital Opens San Diego Outpost in Quest to Ease “Bandwidth Crunch” (Xconomy San Diego)

Philadelphia To Roll Out EHR From eClinicalWorks (Information Week)

Netflix Now The Largest Single Source of Internet Traffic In North America (TechCrunch)

Meet DOCSIS, Part 2: the jump from 2.0 to 3.0 (Ars Technica)

Daily Show mocks FCC's Baker for taking Comcast job (Ars Technica)

The Top 7 U.S. Cities To Find An IT Job Right Now (Forbes: CIO Central)
Philadelphia, Edison NJ are two of them, report says.

Philadelphia Must Catch Up on Open Government, Councilman Says (Government Technology)

Universal Business Payment Solutions Acquisition Corporation Announces Closing of its Initial Public Offering (Business Wire)



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