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Consolidation Nears Zenith With Deloitte’s Xcelicor Deal
Deloitte Consulting’s move to snap up HR tech consulting firm Xcelicor added another deal to a consolidation frenzy in the fast-growing field. But it also may be one of the last such acquisitions for a while.
October 12, 2007
Consolidation Nears Zenith With Deloitte’s Xcelicor Deal
Deloitte Consulting’s move to snap up HR tech consulting firm Xcelicor added
another deal to a consolidation frenzy in the fast-growing field. But it also
may be one of the last such acquisitions for a while.
Most midsize consulting
companies specializing in HR software installations have been gobbled up in the
past year or so, says Joe Hillesheim, founder and managing partner of Aspire HR,
a Dallas-based firm that specializes in helping clients with SAP human resource
applications. Acquired firms include PremierHR, which was swallowed by Axon
Solutions; Arinso International, which was nabbed by Northgate Information
Solutions; and Pecaso, obtained by Accenture.
“Our three main competitors
have all been acquired,” Hillesheim says, adding, “We’re one of the last one or
two” that remain independent. In late September, Deloitte Consulting
announced an agreement to acquire the assets of Xcelicor, a 98-person Tampa,
Florida-based firm that specializes in Oracle HR applications. Terms of the deal
were not disclosed. Deloitte Consulting, a unit of Deloitte & Touche USA
that provides professional services to large and midsize organizations, said the
acquisition should be completed in early October. All the acquisition
activity in the HR tech consulting world comes against a backdrop of many
buyouts in the related area of human resources software and increased spending
on HR applications. For reasons including more global operations and corporate
fears of possible worker shortages, HR software has emerged as the
fastest-growing field of business software. AMR Research predicts revenue from
human capital management applications will grow 11 percent annually from 2006 to
2011, to a total of $10.6 billion.
All that spending on HR applications
translates into growing business for companies that help organizations with HR
strategies as well as software implementation.
Xcelicor’s revenue grew 35
percent last year, on top of 41 percent growth in 2005, Xcelicor chief executive
Mark Silverstein says. Xcelicor serves both Fortune 500 firms as well as
midsize organizations. Most of Xcelicor’s projects are broad installations of
Oracle HR software, including core HR applications for tracking basic employee
data. Increasingly, Silverstein is being asked to help with key talent
management tools such as recruiting and learning management software. “More and
more of our customers are saying, ‘Talent management is really important to us,
and we need more guidance on that.’ ”
Clients stand to benefit via increased
capabilities to help implement Oracle HCM technology solutions, “particularly as
we get ready for the post-Fusion market,” Mike Fucci, national managing director
of Deloitte Consulting’s human capital service area, said in a statement. (Next
year, Oracle is slated to release the first of its Fusion applications, which
are designed to meld the best of its various product lines.)
Aspire HR
remains independent—for now. Hillesheim has received multiple takeover
inquiries. “If the right opportunity for our employees and clients comes along,”
he says, “we’d consider it.” —Ed Frauenheim
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