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LiveRamp

#4490

Rank

$1.74B

Marketcap

US United States

Country

LiveRamp
Leadership team

Mr. Scott E. Howe (CEO & Director)

Mr. Warren C. Jenson (Pres, CFO & Exec. MD of International)

Mr. Mohsin Hussain (Exec. VP of Engineering & CTO)

Products/ Services
Advertising, Advertising Platforms, Analytics, Brand Marketing, Data Integration
Number of Employees
1,000 - 20,000
Headquarters
San Francisco, California, United States
Established
1969
Company Registration
SEC CIK number: 0000733269
Revenue
500M - 1B
Traded as
RAMP
Social Media
Overview
Location
Summary
LiveRamp Holdings, Inc., a technology company, provides enterprise data connectivity platform solutions in the United States, Europe, and the Asia-Pacific. The company offers RampID, a true people-based identifier; Safe Haven, an enterprise data enablement platform; LiveRamp Data Marketplace, a solution that seamlessly connects data owners' audience data across the marketing ecosystem; and AbiliTec, an offline identity resolution platform. It serves financial, insurance and investment services, retail, automotive, telecommunications, high tech, consumer packaged goods, healthcare, travel, entertainment, non-profit, and government industries. The company was formerly known as Acxiom Holdings, Inc. and changed its name to LiveRamp Holdings, Inc. in October 2018. LiveRamp Holdings, Inc. was incorporated in 2018 and is headquartered in San Francisco, California.
History

Foundation and early years

The company was founded in 1969 as Demographics, Inc. by Charles D. Ward in Conway, Arkansas. The company was initially involved in producing mailing lists using phone books, and payroll processing.In 1980, the company changed its name to Conway Communications Exchange, and in 1983 it incorporated as CCX Network, Inc. and made its first public offering. In 1988 it became Acxiom Corporation.

1990s

In November 1997, Acxiom acquired Buckley Dement, a provider of healthcare fulfillment and professional medical lists.In May 1998, Acxiom made the announcement that it would acquire one of its competitors, May & Speh.

2000s

In 2003, Wired Magazine criticized the company for only accepting third party consumer opt-out requests from the Direct Marketing Association.In early 2004, Acxiom acquired part of Claritas, a European data provider.In 2005, Acxiom acquired Digital Impact for $140 million and integrated its digital and online services into its business. In 2005 Acxiom was a nominee for the Big Brother Awards for Worst Corporate Invader for a tradition of data brokering.In early 2006, EMC Corporation acquired Acxiom’s information grid software in a $30 million deal. However, EMC canceled the software purchase after 2 years of development because the software was not up to commercial software standards, essentially 'giving back' the grid technology software to Acxiom.On May 16, 2007, Acxiom agreed to be bought by investment firms Silver Lake Partners and ValueAct Capital in an all-cash deal valued at $3 billion, including the assumption of about $756 million of debt. However, in October 2007, citing poor credit markets, the companies terminated the deal. The company also announced that Chairman Charles Morgan was retiring upon the selection of a successor.On January 17, 2008, Acxiom named John Meyer as new CEO and president.On July 11, 2008, Acxiom acquired ChoicePoint's database marketing solutions division.

2010s

In 2010, Acxiom acquired part of GoDigital, a Brazilian direct marketing and data quality company. In October 2010, the company launched AbiliTec Digital, a web-based tool to match digital identities to traditional name and address data, such as that collected from loyalty programs.On July 27, 2011, Acxiom named Scott E. Howe, as the company’s chief executive officer and president.In December 2011, Acxiom announced the sale of its background screening business, Acxiom Information Security Services , to Sterling Infosystems, now SterlingBackcheck.In 2012, the NY Times reported that the company had the world’s largest commercial database on consumers.In 2013, CNBC announced that the Federal Trade Commission was investigating Acxiom and eight other companies to learn how they collected and used consumer data.On May 14, 2014, Acxiom announced that it had acquired LiveRamp, a data onboarding company, for $310 million. LiveRamp was founded in 2011 as a spinout of RapLeaf, a marketing data and software company founded in San Francisco, California in 2005 by Auren Hoffman and Manish Shah. LiveRamp's services combined customers' CRM and loyalty program data with other available data sources, to better segment and target consumers. Acxiom kept the business operating under the LiveRamp name.In July 2015, the company sold its IT outsourcing division, Acxiom IT Outsourcing , to Charlesbank Capital Partners and M/C Partners, and Acxiom ITO was subsequently rebranded as Ensono. In December, Acxiom acquired the Boston-based advanced-advertising unit of Allant, a third-party data shop focused on advertising and marketing.In November 2016, LiveRamp acquired two data and identity-matching startups, Arbor and Circulate, for more than $140 million combined.The company also announced the launch of IdentityLink, a method of anonymizing consumer's identities as they are tracked across multiple platforms. In August 2016, Acxiom sold its marketing automation solution, Acxiom Impact, for $50 million, to New York City-based marketing firm Zeta Interactive, now Zeta Global.By 2017, LiveRamp was reportedly worth $1.5 billion. In January 2017, Acxiom launched Audience Cloud, an anonymous targeting tool that allowed demographic segmentation of customers without revealing their actual identities. On March 10, Acxiom announced that it was moving its headquarters back to Conway, Arkansas after selling its corporate office building in Little Rock, Arkansas. The building was acquired by Simmons Bank. In May, LiveRamp announced a consortium formed with two other ad tech companies, AppNexus and MediaMath, to compete with Facebook and Google in the area of programmatic advertising, the term used to refer to the use of automation software to buy advertising.In February 2018, LiveRamp acquired Pacific Data Partners, an aggregator of anonymized business data. Also in February, Acxiom announced a reorganization from three divisions into two - a Marketing Solutions group and its LiveRamp business. In May, the company announced international expansion into Brazil, Netherlands and Italy, and released Global Data Navigator , a portal for identifying available data elements by country. In June 2018, Consumer research firm GfK MRI has partnered with Acxiom. In July, advertising company Interpublic Group of Companies announced they were buying Acxiom's Marketing Solutions business for $USD2.3 billion. The deal did not include the LiveRamp business. Also in July, LiveRamp announced a partnership with tracking software company Sonobi to help publishers sell targeted digital ads. The sale of the Marketing Solutions business to IPG closed in October, and Acxiom officially changed its name to LiveRamp, and its ticker symbol to RAMP. The Acxiom brand was transferred to IPG alongside the AMS business unit.In April 2019, LiveRamp acquired consent management platform provider Faktor. In July, LiveRamp acquired the Boston-based television analytics company Data Plus Math for $150 million.

2020s

In January 2020, the company launched its own consent management platform, called Privacy Manager. In March, the company launched Safe Haven, a tool allowing advertisers and media owners to share customer data while following privacy laws. In July, LiveRamp acquired Acuity Data to enhance Safe Haven’s retail trade analytics capabilities.

Mission
LiveRamp’s mission is to make it safe and easy for companies to use data effectively, and doing so starts with our people. We strive to make LiveRamp a place where all people can thrive because it is simply the right thing to do.
Vision
LiveRampers are empowered to live our values of committing to shared goals and operational excellence. They are active collaborators with customers, partner,s and each other to do what's best for our business and communities. By continually building inclusive, high belonging teams, LiveRampers can deliver exceptional work, champion innovative ideas, and ramp to their best selves.
Key Team

Mr. Gerald C. Jones (Chief Ethics & Legal Officer, Exec. VP and Assistant Sec.)

Ms. Sharawn Tipton (Chief People Officer)

Mr. Frederic Jouve (Group Managing Director of Asia Pacific)

Ms. Janet Cinfio (Chief Information Officer & Sr. VP)

Ms. Lauren Dillard (Sr. VP of Fin. & Investor Relations)

Ms. Amy Lee Stewart (Sr. VP, Gen. Counsel & Global Chief Data Ethics Officer)

Ms. Jessica Shapiro (Chief Marketing Officer)

Recognition and Awards
LiveRamp won 2 awards in 2016. In 2016, LiveRamp won for Top 30% Rated CEO and Top 30% Rated Team. Based on 804 ratings and 74 participants, employees at LiveRamp are very satisfied with their work experience. The overall culture score, 81/100 or A, incorporates employee ratings based on their feedback on the Compensation, Office Culture, Meetings and more.
References

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LiveRamp
Leadership team

Mr. Scott E. Howe (CEO & Director)

Mr. Warren C. Jenson (Pres, CFO & Exec. MD of International)

Mr. Mohsin Hussain (Exec. VP of Engineering & CTO)

Products/ Services
Advertising, Advertising Platforms, Analytics, Brand Marketing, Data Integration
Number of Employees
1,000 - 20,000
Headquarters
San Francisco, California, United States
Established
1969
Company Registration
SEC CIK number: 0000733269
Revenue
500M - 1B
Traded as
RAMP
Social Media