One of the companies that I work with closely, ProSavvy,
announced this week that it merged with eWork (the combined company will keep
the eWork name). The merger creates
perhaps the largest private company in the
In layman terms, the combined business offers products
that allow businesses to manage various aspects of procuring, managing and payrolling
temporary employees (contract laborers) and what are called fixed project
deliverables (consulting projects). The
combined business has three main products:
eWork Enterprise - a enterprise
software platform for managing contract work (whether that be contract labor,
consultants, etc.)
eWork
Markets - a platform for procuring contract labor with a bunch of tools for
managing that process (whether it be a formal RFP,
eWork
Services - outsourced payroll and HR services
This deal makes sense for a bunch of reasons. We've been investors in ProSavvy for over 5
years (along with Park Corporation and Pequot). It's been an interesting road
to get here as the business has done a great job of lasting through the tech
bust and emerging on the other side. About 3 years ago the company started focusing more on its marketplace
(the on-line market it created where companies can request consulting services
and member consultants can bid on these projects) and less on delivering an
installed software platform. We were
So, ProSavvy focused on refining its service and the tools
that it built around procuring and managing consultants and built its network
of consultants. We've had the view for a
while that the markets for fixed project deliverable procurement and contract
labor procurement were going to converge - fundamentally we're talking about a very
similar problem to manage. Companies
started coming to this conclusion as well as more and more RFPs in the space
were asking for a combined solution. ProSavvy found itself being asked to team up with companies that
provided contingent labor software in bidding on these contracts - and they did
so with a number of the firms in the contingent labor software world. Eventually it became clear that the company
would benefit greatly from being a part of one of these businesses, rather than
positioning itself as an add-on to their solutions (or them as an
I'm pretty excited about the prospects for the combined
business. Certainly there has been a lot of money that has gone into this space
and a number of large VCs have made pretty decent bets on companies that
compete with eWork (venture-backed companies in the space include eLance; IQ
Navigator and FieldGlass). Ultimately I
think eWork will benefit from competition in this market - these firms are all
hungry, well run and have good product offerings. I think the addition of the ProSavvy
marketplace to the eWork product offering brings something different to the mix
that will help eWork stay ahead of the competition.
On a personal note, while this isn't an exit (we didn't
cash out in the deal), I'm satisfied to see the hard work that we've put into
ProSavvy over the past years pay off in the form of a company changing event.
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