Oracle Builds Cloud Challenge With £536m Eloqua Deal

Oracle continues in its efforts to confront Salesforce.com in the cloud-based sales and marketing services sector.

On 20 December Larry Ellison’s company re-emphasised this strategy by acquiring Eloqua, a provider of cloud-based marketing automation and revenue performance management software.

Big Spending

When the deal is completed, Oracle will own Eloqua for $23.50 (£14.46) per share, or approximately $871 million (£536m), net of Eloqua’s cash.

Oracle revealed plans for its public cloud offering in June this year.

Oracle’s cloud platform and Eloqua will combine to create a new Customer Experience Cloud offering to help companies improve the way they market, sell, support and serve their customers, Oracle said.

The combined offering is designed to enable organisations to provide a highly personalised and unified experience across channels, create brand loyalty through social and online interactions, grow revenue by driving more qualified leads to sales teams and provide superior service at every touchpoint.

Eloqua has two software packages namely Eloqua 9 and Eloqua 10 – the latter built on SproutCore. Eloqua is used by more than 50,000 marketers, more than any other cloud marketing automation vendor.

Eloqua, which went public last August, has competed in a shark tank of giants, such as Salesforce, Hewlett-Packard, IBM and Oracle. New companies, such as Pardot and Marketo, are also competitors.

Cloud Push

The transaction is expected to close in the first half of 2013, subject to Eloqua stockholder approval, regulatory approvals and other closing conditions.

“Eloqua’s leading marketing automation cloud will become the centerpiece of the Oracle Marketing Cloud,” said Thomas Kurian, executive vice president of Oracle development. “This is an important addition to the Oracle Customer Experience offering, which includes the Oracle Sales Cloud, Oracle Commerce Cloud, Oracle Service Cloud, Oracle Content Cloud and Oracle Social Cloud.”

Eloqua Chairman and CEO Joe Payne is expected to stay on at Oracle in an executive position.

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Originally published on eWeek.

Chris Preimesberger

Editor of eWEEK and repository of knowledge on storage, amongst other things

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