Social media is ablaze with rumors that NICE is set to acquire Playvox, the workforce engagement management (WEM) provider.
Adam Saad, CTO and Founder of Tech Stack Advising, seemed to start the rumor mill churning last night with a LinkedIn post.
In the post, he wrote:
NICE has long been THE gold standard for WEM for over a decade now – so it’s interesting to see the acquisition intent.
Indeed, while Playvox offers workforce management (WFM), quality assurance (QA), and gamification tools, there’s little that NICE doesn’t have already.
As such, the potential move seems less about extending NICE’s portfolio and more about landing new customers, which it can expand its business with over time.
Additionally, there may be a more sinister motive behind the potential move.
Playvox Offers a Long-Term Growth Opportunity
Alongside Genesys, NICE leads the CCaaS space in terms of market share. The latest Gartner Magic Quadrant and Forrester Wave reports highlight many reasons why.
Meanwhile, as Saad noted, most already consider NICE the diamond standard for WEM.
As such, few customers will leverage NICE for one and not the other. Overall, that’s positive, but it limits the vendor’s ability to “expand” existing customers beyond new AI solutions.
Yet, the prospective Playvox acquisition changes that. It’ll allow NICE to increase its WEM install base – with very few cross-over customers – to which it may upsell CCaaS down the road.
That’s significant as – while Playvox customers may leverage cloud WEM – many will not yet have moved their core contact center platform to the cloud.
After all, while it’s relatively easy to switch from spreadsheets and Erlang Calculators to a SaaS system, CCaaS requires much more thought (and resources).
Therefore, NICE may introduce itself to and build relationships with a substantial on-premise base.
Playvox Delivers a Short-Term Revenue Boost
In the shorter term, the acquisition will allow NICE to sustain its double-digit revenue growth, with Playvox reportedly earning $75MN in annual revenue (as of May 2024).
In this sense, the move mirrors NICE’s LiveVox acquisition. Indeed, that didn’t offer much in the way of new tech – beyond bolstering its outbound proposition – but added $140MN to the vendor’s bottom line.
Moreover, as there was so much cross-over between the businesses, NICE could cut much of LiveVox’s costs and serve its customers more economically.
Unfortunately, that – ultimately – resulted in layoffs at LiveVox. But, whether history will repeat itself and impact Playvox’s 160-strong team is all – at this stage – speculation.
The Sinister Motivation: NICE Could Be Weakening the Competition
As referenced, NICE has many fair reasons to acquire Playvox. Yet, one possible, more sinister motivation could be to limit its competition, according to Jim Davies, Co-Founder and Executive Partner at Actionary.
Indeed, the prominent WEM analyst told CX Today:
As WEM becomes an increasingly fundamental component of a viable CRM customer service and CCaaS application, this acquisition would weaken NICE’s competition who rely on Playvox for WEM.
Of course, there is a drawback in that the value of independent WEM and WFM vendors – like NICE itself – increases with these competitors.
Nevertheless, as Saad noted: “Playvox is the preferred WEM solution for customers using Salesforce.”
As such, by rolling up the competition, NICE – which offers its CCaaS and WEM solutions on AppExchange – could effectively take out the competition and gain momentum from the rising CRM-WEM convergence trend.
After all, Salesforce remains the outright leader within the CRM software space, and NICE may want more than just one seat onboard the gravy train.
Final Thoughts: NICE Is an Acquisition Master, and Market Consolidation Is Coming
Some may raise an eyebrow over the lack of new capabilities Playvox brings to NICE. Yet, the CCaaS giant has a history of effective acquisitions. It’s something it has done extremely successfully.
Think back to its inContact acquisition in 2016. That laid the foundation for its surge to the top of the cloud contact center mountain.
Since then, it has snapped up Brand Embassy, MindTouch, and The Mattersight Corporation. Those are just a few examples of its widescale acquisition endeavors.
Now, it seems to have its latest target lined up, which may mark Barak Eiliam’s last acquisition of his successful CEO stretch, as he plans to step down at the year’s end.
In doing so, he will leave NICE at the forefront of a CCaaS market that’s decelerating in growth and facing increased consolidation. Indeed, interesting times lie ahead.
CX Today contacted NICE for a comment on the speculation but did not receive an immediate response.