Netsize

Amdocs Snaps Up ChangingWorlds; (Customer) Information Is Power

Author: Peggy Anne Salz

This explains some of the radio silence at ChangingWorlds and why Barry Smyth, ChangingWorlds Chief Scientist, sought me out at the recent recommender conference Recsys 2008 to demo his new and super-cool social search app. I can’t give too much away now, but let’s just say search (like advertising) is fast becoming content and Barry, who was the brains behind ChangingWorlds’ path-breaking personalization technology, has developed a game-changing approach that will rock when it comes to mobile (and it will!). I did an in-depth Q&A with Barry earlier this week, so check back early next week for the inside track.

But the news today is the acquisition of ChangingWorlds by Amdocs, a company that has quietly and cleverly added capabilities that build on its billing expertise to deliver the right content to the right user in the right context. As I observed in this earlier analysis of Amdocs, the company isn’t there yet (no one is), but they have correctly placed personalization and relevancy at the core of their competitive strategy. The decision to acquire all of ChangingWorlds’ shares for $60 million in cash is a brilliant move – and one that makes Amdocs the one to watch.

A larger trend at play here is the run on personalization companies. Think of Qualcomm snapping up Xiam, a company specialized in personalization and recommendation technology. Go further back, and you might recall Real Networks acquired Sony Network Services (a company that had perfected personalization to stream mobile music according to your mood), or that Microsoft-owned FAST also bought AgentArts, a personalization and recommendation company based in Australia. And the list goes on…

In fact, my standard PowerPoint presentation, which I have presented at several mobile search seminars and a recent master class in London, contains a slide explaining the pivotal importance of recommendation and personalization (aptly titled Was it good for you too?) which also recounts the recent raft of M&A that has transformed the space.

Personalization companies are hot – and with good reason. If the end-game is about delivering advertising, apps, content and even search results that I am likely to find both genuinely useful and interesting, then technology provided by the likes of ChangingWorlds, Xiam and others I have high on my radar is crucial. (It’s all about relevancy here, but frequent exchanges with Ogilvy’s mobile advertising evangelist Jonathan MacDonald have broken me of the habit of using the term too loosely. Read his rant and you’ll understand why.)

Connect the dots and Amdocs’ acquisition, coming on the heels of a strategic decision to bundle its search and advertising capabilities in one division, is on the money.

By way of background, ChangingWorlds, an Irish provider of personalization technology, is best known for its ClixSmart platform. Designed to provide individual consumers with “proactive recommendation of content based on their preferences and context,” the platform has been deployed by 50+ mobile operators around the world.

(In a nutshell, ChangingWorlds’ ClixSmart platform includes a variety of solutions in areas such as content recommendation, mobile search and mobile advertising. Sitting at the core of this platform – and taking center stage in all ChangingWorlds does – is a profiling and personalization engine that is capable of capturing subscriber intelligence by automatically monitoring the implicit behavior of how users use and navigate the mobile Web.)

As Barry explained it to me a while back, the combination allows ChangingWorlds to create richer preference profiles and combine this profile information with external sources of complementary data – ranging from user demographics to mobile billing records. (Little wonder billing giant Amdocs snapped it up.)

And let’s not forget the recent tie-up with Sprint Nextel in the U.S., which sees the mobile operator launching ChangingWorlds’ ClixSmart technology both on the carrier’s own portal, Sprint Web, as well as providing advanced personalization solutions for a number of Sprint’s cable partners and wireless wholesale customers. (I was scheduled for a podcast with Sprint and ChangingWorlds’ CEO David Moran to get the inside track on this deal, but I can imagine this project is on hold indefinitely.)

Nonetheless, we get an idea of the use case from Kevin Packingham, senior vice president of product and technology development for Sprint, in a recent press statement. In his view, the aim of the deal is to “automatically learn what content the customer likes and put it on their homepage,” thus enabling Sprint customers to access genuinely useful content they will most likely appreciate. In this scenario, ChangingWorlds’ ClixSmart solution automatically generates personalized, dynamic content teasers that enrich the user experience of Sprint Web and stimulate increased click-through. ClixSmart teasers, which include text and images, are rotated dynamically and personalized according to the ClixSmart user profile to provide a compelling and relevant user experience designed to encourage Sprint Web users into using more mobile data.

ChangingWorlds and Amdocs share several customers including Sprint, the Vodafone Group and Telefonica O2.

During a recent industry event, David told me the company was preparing to broaden its focus beyond mobile operators and content companies to address the wider opportunities around content discovery such as voice-activated content portals, online destinations and electronic program guides for digital television. This is no doubt attractive to Amdocs, which has its eye on the bigger prize: Personalized and converged services.

I just this minute saw an email from Jessica Francisco, Account Executive, Weber Shandwick, with the news that James Patmore, Vice President of Amdocs Advertising, Content and Entertainment division, is available to speak with me later today and discuss the growing importance of mobile personalization. I’m excited about the opportunity and will have more after the call. Thanks for the prompt response Jessica!

BTW: MSG is still setting up a few features including a search box – so apologies that you can’t find the reports on Xiam and others easily. But be patient – we’re on it.

November 6, 2008

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