Thursday, June 3, 2010

Hearst Buys ICrossing, Signals Further Agency Deals

http://adage.com/digital/article?article_id=144207

Hearst today confirmed it's acquiring digital agency iCrossing for approximately $325 million

Though Hearst wasn't after a search shop, the publisher was attracted to how iCrossing integrates search into its other digital marketing services, said Matthew Petersen, senior VP-Hearst Magazines. "What is compelling about search is how performance-driven, below-the-line marketing is the foundation for other services [iCrossing has] created, and helps in search-engine optimization and web development," he said. "As social and search dovetail more, that primary foundation is incredibly important."

Hearst is taking a page from Meredith, which has been the poster boy for publishers getting into digital marketing. Mr. Petersen, a Meredith alum who joined Hearst in March, will head a new business unit, Hearst Marketing Services, which iCrossing will fall under. ICrossing will operate as a separate operating unit and keep its name.

"ICrossing is going to operate very independently; where appropriate, we'll bring them in," Mr. Petersen said. "But our No. 1 priority is to support and fuel its independent growth."
Frank A. Bennack, Hearst's vice chairman-CEO, may not be putting away his wallet quite yet.

"I expect [Hearst] will continue to add, but we're not rushing to add tomorrow," Mr. Scales said.
Hearst's acquisition strategy is quite different than Meredith's. The latter has acquired a number of small marketing services shops over the years, while Heart is swallowing one large agency right from the start. Hearst's size drives this different approach, Mr. Petersen said.

"We needed a sizable asset with a large amount of capabilities and capacity," he said. "Hearst is 10 times what Meredith is."

This acquisition leaves only two large, independent digital agencies in the market: Hamilton, N.J.-based Rosetta, which is looking for acquisitions rather than buyers, and private equity-backed AKQA, San Francisco.

http://www.adweek.com/aw/content_display/news/agency/e3i0179550940df36d1658effb93dc5405b

The acquisition nets the owner of newspapers like the San Francisco Chronicle and magazines including Cosmopolitan a 600-person digital shop with its roots in search marketing and optimization. In recent years, iCrossing has beefed up its capabilities in Web creative, analytics and social media.