Uberflip is acquiring SnapApp, bringing together two startups that promise to help marketers use their content more effectively.
President and Chief Marketing Officer Randy Frisch argued that Uberflip focuses on content experience, not content marketing. In other words, it’s not selling productivity and workflow tools for marketers to write blog posts and create videos. Instead, it helps them present their existing content in a smarter and more personalized way.
For example, it worked with data warehousing company Snowflake to create content streams highlighting the topics most likely to grab the attention of different sales prospects, then embedded those content streams in Snowflake’s marketing emails.
“Content marketing has gotten a bad rap in some ways,” Frisch said, noting that there’s been “a lot of consolidation in that space in the last number of years,” so Uberflip has been working to distance itself from that term. (To that end, Frisch recently published a book with the colorful title “F#ck Content Marketing.”)
As for SnapApp, I wrote about the company’s interactive content tools back in 2015, but Uberflip CEO Yoav Schwartz told me that the product has changed dramatically in the last 18 months — it now offers “a better, smarter way to understand a visitor” by “peppering them with questions” as they’re browsing a marketer’s website.
So Schwartz sees this acquisition — Uberflip’s first — as a way to help the company improve its personalized content recommendations.
“We’re going to let SnapApp continue to run as is,” he added. “We’re not going to attempt to integrate on day one. We’re going to allow time to understand how those two technologies can work together.”
Frisch and Schwartz said that 10 to 15 SnapApp team members will be joining Uberflip, bringing the total headcount to around 150. And SnapApp’s current headquarters will become the Boston office of Toronto-based Uberflip.
The financial terms of the acquisition were not disclosed. SnapApp previously raised $22 million in funding, while Uberflip has raised $36 million.
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