TC production company Tinopolis acquires Firecracker Films

tinopolisTinopolis, one of the UK’s largest independent TV production and distribution companies, has acquired Firecracker Films, a producer of factual and factual entertainment programming in the UK and US. The transaction follows quickly on the acquisition of Passion Distribution and further underpins Tinopolis’ strategy of widening its creative and geographical reach. Firecracker’s strengths in factual and popular factual programming are significant additions to Tinopolis’ portfolio of companies and programmes.

Firecracker was founded in 2002 by Mark Soldinger to focus on documentary programming with international sales potential and is firecracker-logonow one of the fastest growing factual and factual entertainment producers both in the UK and the US achieving organic revenue growth of over 150% in 2012. Firecracker works with all major broadcasters in the US and the UK and has created shows including Thelma’s Gypsy Girls (C4),The Daredevils (C4), Family Guns (Nat Geo), Unsafe Sex in the City (BBC3) and Last Chance Driving School (AETN) as well as one of Channel 4’s biggest rating hits of the last decade, Big Fat Gypsy Weddings and in the US, Big Fat American Gypsy Weddings (TLC). Firecracker is one of only a few UK Indies that has successfully organically expanded into the US and now generates as much turnover from the US as it does from the UK. Firecracker also has a valuable branded content division that produces innovative audio visual content directly for brands such as Diageo, Nissan, Heineken, Motorola and GSK.

Firecracker’s management and creative team will remain with the business and Mark Soldinger, CEO, Sue Oriel, Managing Director, Jes Wilkins, Head of Programmes, and Jeremy Groman, Creative Director will all become shareholders in the Tinopolis Group.

Tinopolis, which delisted from AIM in 2008 through a management buyout backed by private equity firm Vitruvian Partners, has grown its turnover from £50m in 2006 to over £130m today and developed into a global media company comprised of several leading independent businesses. The range of programmes produced extends to documentaries and factual, sport, comedy, flagship current affairs series, critically-acclaimed dramas and high rating entertainment formats, as well as human interest, history and science. Tinopolis is responsible for successful television shows such as Question Time, Traffic Cops, Hell’s Kitchen and the London Paralympic Games coverage.

Ron Jones, Executive Chairman of Tinopolis, commented: “In Firecracker we have acquired a company that is operating at the cutting edge of television on both sides of the Atlantic. Tinopolis continues to build a group of companies that has the range and financial strength to provide the best creative ideas to our customers around the world. Firecracker is an ideal partner for us. Its programmes are already sold in over 100 territories around the world and our distribution platform will help to support its continuing development.”

UK, Carmarthenshire & London

Related articles:

Expedia to acquire majority of trivago

expediaExpedia is to acquire a 61.6% equity position in trivago, a metasearch company headquartered in Germany, for  €477 million including €434 million in cash as well as €43 million in Expedia  stock.

“The trivago team built one of the largest, fastest growing and most well known travel sites in Europe conducting more than 100 million hotel searches annually through a culture focused on developing great products, building a strong brand and promoting partners’ businesses. These attributes closely align with our Expedia, Inc. strategy and values and we are thrilled to have them join our portfolio,” said Dara Khosrowshahi , Expedia, Inc. President and Chief Executive Officer.

Founded seven years ago, trivago quickly grew into a consumer champion for hotel accommodation featuring comprehensive search results from over 600,000 hotels across over 140 booking sites in over 30 countries in 23 languages. Through its primarily cost-per-click revenue model, trivago profitably doubled revenue each year since 2008 and currently expects to deliver approximately €100 million in net revenue for 2012.

The deal is anticipated to close during the first half of 2013. Post close, the trivago co-founders and management team will continue to operate independently based out of trivago’s headquarters in Dusseldorf, Germany.

USA, Bellevue, WA & Germany, Dusseldorf

Related articles:

 

Legal Wisdom in Technology Mergers and Acquisitions

Thomas Colmer3

GUEST FEATURE

It’s been said “lawyers are like rhinoceroses: thick skinned, short-sighted and always ready to charge”.

Avoid charging off into the wilderness or not seeing the wood for the trees.

Here’s an insider’s twelve point list of key pointers to make your life easier and get the outcome you deserve.

Focus on the Big Stuff

Start by using what time you have establishing: potential road blocks; workable alternative solutions; “nice but not critical” points; concessions; trade-offs; “red lines”; and “deal killers”. This helps you focus and avoid bear traps, even if more time is spent negotiating warranties and disclosure. “Follow the money”. Create options. Understand all obligations.

Front Load the Thinking

The earlier you get advice, the more use it will be. Like steering a tanker, your ability to influence the direction of a deal often reduces over time. Negotiating detailed term sheets at the outset can avoid expensive abort costs or the chances of being hijacked into unfavourable terms deep into a process (when bargaining positions may have changed) or worse.

Build on Sound Foundations

Obtaining the right sale price and terms requires early legal and tax involvement. Vendor due diligence can help identify and clean up issues. Pre-sale reorganisations may optimise risk mitigation. Deal structure often impacts upon liability and terms. Consider whether your counterparty has sufficient standing and whether a guarantee, earn out, staggered sale or escrow (holding back consideration) is appropriate.

Timing can be Everything

Time zone differences, remote completions and interrelated transactions present risks best addressed early and in writing. At each stage, “what happens if a bomb goes off?” Establish all internal or other requirements and conditions precedent early (e.g. competition/anti-trust approvals, change of control consents, credit committee sign off). Don’t underestimate the effects of “deal drag”. Budget for deals sucking up time, particularly with a business to run simultaneously.

Damn Due Diligence and Disclosure

Organising due diligence and disclosure materials (and rationally explaining issues, at the appropriate time) will reduce frustration, demonstrating credibility and professionalism and mitigating liability without “spooking” a buyer, particularly at the last minute. Electronic “virtual” data rooms with access control and audit trail are advisable. Scope your requirements to report effectively on due diligence so it is a useful tool rather than an expensive, out dated, paper-intensive disclaimer. Early sight of the size, content and order of a data room will help.

Think Before (and How) you Engage

Once past competitive tension of a beauty parade or auction, a prospective buyer looking “under the bonnet” of your business may not be as accommodating as in its initial flirtation. Carefully consider when and how to disclose (particularly sensitive) information (e.g. Intellectual Property, employees, customers). Data protection law and confidentiality considerations will be relevant. Conversely, a buyer should consider exclusivity (locking others out of the deal) and break fees (recouping a sum if the deal aborts). Make sure that unexpected legal obligations are not being incurred (e.g. financial promotions in teasers and information memoranda).

Be Organised and Prepared

Documents lists clarify requirements, assign responsibility and manage expectations. Splitting tasks can foster collaboration but decide “who holds the pen” on drafting documents in advance. Establish clear (realistic) deadlines (and the reasons for them), work-streams and a path to closure. Detailed issues lists and minutes of meetings reduce repetitive posturing and obfuscation of points. Be sure, however, that control of the agenda is not abused and accurately reflects your position.

Try Another’s Shoes

Consider sensitivity to cultural differences. Face saving may mean wasting time negotiating with people without the authority or influence to make decisions. Cutting to the chase (and cutting people out) can produce results but be wary of being bounced into meetings without representation. US buyers unfamiliar with The Code on Takeovers and Mergers in the UK need to be live to unexpected restrictions (e.g. market purchases, break fees, timing and disclosure of information).

Communication is Key

Establish your preferred means of communication and clear reporting lines to avoid “the tail wagging the dog”. Transaction process can drive terms or outcome, particularly when deal fatigue entrenches positions if left unconsidered. Consider meetings (with an agenda and chairman) instead of video-conferences and instant messenger on remote conference calls. Phone calls may achieve more than email overload. Try to control unnecessary iterations of documents or calls/meetings for their own sake. Track Changes facilitates collaborative drafting but ensure metadata is not inadvertently revealed and version control retained.

Choose the Right Law(yer)

Choice of governing law will be relevant to the selection of legal counsel but can affect the balance of power or provide arbitrage. Consider this separately from the location of a business or appropriate jurisdiction and procedure for disputes. Use deal excitement to explore real commercial drivers, objectives, timing, dynamics, personnel and sensitivities during sales pitches and test how attentive and hungry a lawyer is for your business. Honest, transparent and frank discussions on scope of work and imaginative fee proposals build mutual trust and pay dividends.

Are you Paying Attention?

Sell side lawyers often get appointed before the buy side, particularly when competitive tension is maximised. Key verbal and non-verbal deal information and nuance can be lost after initial stages. Similarly, initial interaction often sets the tone and terms. Adversarial counterparties may also easily spot and seek to exploit shortcomings.

Enjoy (All of) the Ride

Adviser relationships, feedback, patience and a sense of humo(u)r are essential. Make clear how much authority you give to your lawyer, let them know when you want them to take the lead and argue your corner. Lawyers are critical to getting an enjoyable deal done smoothly (or at all), what it looks like and, crucially, how it stands the test of time. In short, legal wisdom in Technology M&A can add value at each and every stage.

Want to know more? Please get in touch.

Thomas Colmer is a corporate finance lawyer at Osborne Clarke specialising in domestic and cross-border private and public mergers and acquisitions. You can contact him at:

T: + 44 20 7105 7276 logo-osborne-clarke.ashx
M: + 44 7887 691 541
E: thomas.colmer@osborneclarke.com
LinkedIn 
Osborne Clarke – about Thomas Colmer

© Copyright 2012. The author reserves all rights.

Tribal Group acquires International Graduate Insight Group

TribalTribal Group, a provider of technology systems and solutions to the education, learning and training markets, is to acquire International Graduate Insight Group Limited (“i-graduate”), an education benchmarking and student experience research business.  The acquisition is expected to complete on 2 January 2013.

Tribal Group will pay n initial amount of £2.86 million on completion and up to a maximum of £7.5 million based on an earn out structure for the 3 year period ending 31 December 2015.  The unaudited profit before tax of International Graduate Insight Group Limited for the year ended 31 March 2012 was £423k and the value of gross assets at that time was £1,799k.

i-graduate is an independent benchmarking and analytics group, working in partnership with institutions and education organisations to provide evidence-based information on education experience and outcomes across higher education, further education and schools markets.  The business works with over 1,200 education institutions in 24 countries, receiving and analysing feedback from more than 1.3 million students of over 190 nationalities.  i-graduate will join Tribal’s Services business and will strengthen the Group’s evidence-based analytics offering.

i-graduate was founded in 2005 by Will and Lindsay Archer.  Will Archer will continue to lead the i-graduate business and will head up the integration of i-graduate’s offerings with Tribal’s existing financial benchmarking and analytic capabilities.

Tribal’s Chief Executive Officer, Keith Evans, commented: “Our strategic priority is to provide our customers with evidence based systems and solutions that will support the on-going improvement of educational outcomes.  Quantitative and qualitative technology based benchmarking and analytics is a cornerstone of the evidence base.  This acquisition will enable us to strengthen our capabilities in this exciting and emerging area, expands our product offering to our existing customers and provides increased access for our existing products to the i-graduate customer base, both in the UK and in our targeted international markets.”

UK, London

Publicis Groupe acquires US digital agency Rokkan

PublicisPublicis Groupe has acquired Rokkan Media LLC, a full-service digital agency in New York that works with top global brands.

Founded in 2000, Rokkan – which borrows its name from the Japanese word for intuition or “sixth sense” – focuses its expertise on creating innovative campaigns with strong cross-platform appeal in e-commerce, loyalty programs, digital marketing, mobile and social media. Rokkan’s core services include Strategy & Planning, User Experience, Visual Design, Technology, 3D and Motion Graphics, Marketing, Game/App Development and Emerging Media.

Rokkan will operate as an autonomous unit within Publicis Groupe, and its co-founders – CEO John Noe , Chief Experience Officer Chung Ng , and Chief Creative Officer Charles Bae – will continue to lead the agency.

France, Paris & USA, New York

Related articles:

Publicis Groupe acquires mobile agency Monterosa

PublicisPublicis Groupe has acquired global mobile agency Monterosa. The agency will report into Bartle Bogle Hegarty.

The move follows Publicis Groupe’s expansion into the mobile advertising market with its acquisition of Phonevalley in 2007. Like Phonevalley, Monterosa is exclusively committed to mobile marketing and communications.

Founded in 2009 by four Swedes – Johan Hemminger , Johan Ståhle, Anton Holmquist and Carl Norberg – Monterosa has offices in New York, Singapore and is headquartered in Stockholm. The agency’s 30-strong team works with some of the world’s biggest brands, including Carlsberg, Google, Mercedes Benz , Samsung and Vodafone. Award-winning work has included Mini Cooper’s ‘Getaway’ campaign (2011) and a number of global apps such as Buick Encore’s ‘Hide and Seek’ in China,  Lufthansa’s ‘Anywake’ in Scandinavia, AT&T’s ‘Daybreak’ in the US and the Pan-Asian Axe ‘Dare’ app for Unilever.

Monterosa will keep its name and the agency will work with its own clients as well as other advertising agency partners throughout BBH and Publicis Groupe. Carl Norberg , a co-founder of Monterosa, will continue to manage the agency and will report to BBH Group’s CEO, Gwyn Jones .

“The ubiquity and intimacy of smartphones make mobile campaigns an entirely new way to communicate with consumers,” said Gwyn Jones , CEO of BBH Group. “Mobile ads can be uniquely useful and pertinent – but they can also be perceived by consumers as disruptive. It’s vital that we help our clients develop campaigns that are not just technically seamless, but also friendly and relevant. We’ve been working with Monterosa for 18 months now. They have a great team, and a culture and approach that fit well with ours. We’re very excited about the potential for this strategically important move.”

France, Paris & Sweden, Stockholm

Related articles:

WPP to acquire a majority stake in Filmworks China

wppWPP’s global media investment management arm, GroupM, is to acquire Filmworks China, a leading entertainment marketing agency in China, subject to regulatory approval.

Founded in 2010, Filmworks’ service offering includes marketing of entertainment media properties, merchandise licensing, tie-in promotion, product placement and celebrity endorsements. It has a blue-chip client list that includes Electronics Arts, DreamWorks, TCL Television, Li Ning and Yili Group.

Filmworks’ unaudited revenues for the year ended 31 December 2011 were approximately RMB 12 million, with gross assets at the same date of approximately RMB 11 million.

London, UK &  China

Related articles:

Dods to acquire Biteback Media Limited and Holyrood Communications Limited

imagesDods Group is to acquire Biteback Media Limited, (excluding its publishing subsidiary), and Holyrood Communications Limited from Political Holdings Limited.

The consideration payable for Biteback is £795,000 in cash. The Holyrood acquisition is to be settled by £416,806 in cash plus a further potential payment of £250,000 if certain gross profit targets are met. Biteback Media Limited publishes Total Politics, a monthly political magazine, and organises associated events. Biteback generated an EBITDA loss of £0.35 million for year to 31 December 2011 on revenues of £0.47 million. Based on the management accounts for the ten-month period to 31 October 2012 Biteback generated revenues of £0.7 million, an EBITDA loss of £0.1 million and had net assets of £0.2 million after an adjustment for intercompany loans. Holyrood is a publishing and events business based in Edinburgh, with particular focus on Scottish politics and current affairs. The acquisition of Holyrood will enable Dods to benefit from the increase in political activity in Scotland over the next two years. In the year ended 31 March 2012 Holyrood achieved revenues of £1.9 million and generated EBITDA of £0.1m.

UK, London

Related articles:

Elsevier Announces its Acquisition of the Journal of Choice Modelling

elsevierElsevier has acquired the Journal of Choice Modelling (JOCM). Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

JOCM was founded in 2008 by its editors, Stephane Hess and John Rose, who will remain in charge after the transfer to Elsevier.

The Journal of Choice Modelling publishes theoretical and applied papers in the field of choice modelling. The journal covers topics such as transport and marketing where the analysis of choice behaviour is a topic of interest. While it mainly focuses on the use of discrete choice models, other methods and survey design are also discussed.

Chris Pringle , Executive Publisher at Elsevier said, “Since the Journal of Choice Modelling‘s interests extend from transport into marketing, finance, environmental economics and beyond, its focus on choice modelling nicely complements our existing journals in both economics and transport, in a growth area which we wanted to represent more strongly in our list. JOCM and its editors have a track record of demonstrated success, and we are very happy to have the opportunity to add such a high quality journal to the Elsevier family.”

UK, Oxford & UK, Leeds

Related articles

TechTarget acquires LeMagIT

TechTarget_Logo-TaglineTechTarget has acquired the websites and product offerings of LeMagIT, a strategic partner with TechTarget since 2010.

Since its launch in 2008, LeMagIT’s network of sites has offered French-language news and analysis for IT decision makers on core enterprise IT topics such as cloud computing, virtualization, security, and storage and attracts over 250,000 visits per month. The existing management and editorial team of LeMagIT, led by Chairman Eric Ochs, and Founder and Chief Operating Officer David Castaneira, will be remaining with the company and working with TechTarget to continue to grow its French business. Ochs was formerly CEO at IDG France, and Castaneira, formerly the Online Director at IDG France.

LeMagIT’s network includes LeMagIT.fr, StratégiesCloud.fr, as well as an IT white paper and webcast library, LesSourcesIT.fr.

“Our EMEA-based business continues to see very strong growth, and this acquisition is a further investment in our capabilities there,” said Greg Strakosch, CEO, TechTarget. “It is also a continuation of our strategy of having direct operations in the major markets across the world, giving our advertisers the ability to run integrated campaigns across multiple geographies.”

USA, Newton, MA & France, Paris