HR technology provider Kronos has decided
it's time to get into the talent acquisition game.
Chelmsford, Massachusetts-based Kronos on
Thursday announced plans to buy Beaverton, Oregon-based Unicru for $150 million
in cash.
The deal is a sign of the growing
interest in pre-employment assessment, and further expands Kronos past its roots
as a maker of time-and-attendance technology systems. Unicru specializes in
software used to assess and hire hourly workers. Its customers tend to be large
employers, such as Best Buy, Toys "R" Us and Marriott.
Kronos, which sells a variety of
workforce management software products including payroll and scheduling
applications, says the combination of companies will let customers integrate
employee selection strategy with actual labor performance and connect labor
planning to hiring.
Jim Holincheck, research vice president
at market analysis firm Gartner, says that the deal should allow Kronos to pitch
additional services to its many customers with large hourly workforces. It also
marks Kronos' first step into the talent management arena with a firm known for
sophisticated analysis of candidate and worker data.
"The scientists that Unicru has on board
are very smart," he says. "That's part of the value for Kronos."
Unicru is slated to operate as Kronos'
talent management division, headquartered in Beaverton. Unicru chief executive
Chris Marsh will join Kronos as president of the division. The acquisition is
expected to close this year.
"Kronos views this strategic acquisition
as fundamentally changing the landscape of workforce management," Aron Ain,
Kronos' CEO, said in a statement. "Importantly, this acquisition moves us
significantly closer to our goal of becoming the first $1 billion software
company focused exclusively on meeting the human capital management needs of
both large enterprises and small- and medium-size organizations on a worldwide
basis."
Founded in 1977, Kronos posted revenue of
$519 million in its last fiscal year. Unicru, which was founded in 1987, is on
pace to post revenue of $46 million in 2006, says Brad McMahon, Unicru vice
president of corporate development. Unicru's revenue has been growing at a rate
of 25 percent to 35 percent annually the past several years, McMahon says.
The move is part of a broader
consolidation trend in the area of recruiting technology.
Holincheck says Unicru made a more
palatable target for Kronos than other recruiting software firms such as Vurv,
given Unicru's focus on hourly hiring in particular industries such as retail.
He also says Unicru customers should have little fear that their products will
be neglected once the company is gobbled up—a common concern when tech firms
merge.
Kronos "is not necessarily a bad
destination," Holincheck says. "For example, they're not going to abandon the
retail sector."
--Ed
Frauenheim