List of acquisitions by Adobe

Adobe Inc. is an American computer software company headquartered in San Jose, California. In 1982, John Warnock and Charles Geschke left Xerox PARC and established Adobe to develop and sell the PostScript page description language.[1] Apple Computer licensed PostScript in 1985 for use in its LaserWriter printers, which helped spark the desktop publishing revolution.[2] The company has acquired 25 companies, purchased stakes in five, and divested six, most of which were software companies. Of the companies that Adobe has acquired, 18 were based in the United States. Adobe has not released the financial details for most of these mergers and acquisitions.

Adobe logo
Adobe headquarters in San Jose

Adobe's first acquisition was Emerald City Software in March 1990. In August 1994, the company acquired Aldus Corporation, a Seattle-based software company credited with creating the desktop publishing industry with its PageMaker software.[3] The company's products were integrated into Adobe's product line later in the year, and re-branded as Adobe PageMaker and Adobe After Effects;[4] Aldus also owned the TIFF file format, transferring ownership to Adobe.[5] In October 1995, Adobe acquired the desktop publishing software company Frame Technology for US$566 million, and re-branded its FrameMaker software to Adobe FrameMaker.[6] Adobe acquired GoLive Systems in January 1999 and obtained its CyberStudio HTML editor software, releasing it as Adobe GoLive.[7] In May 2003, Adobe acquired Syntrillium Software and its digital audio editor software Cool Edit Pro, and merged it into its product line, re-releasing it as Adobe Audition.[8]

In the 1990s, Adobe purchased a minority stake in four companies, and it purchased a stake in one company in the 2000s. Adobe has also divested six companies, in which parts of the company are sold to another company. All of its divestments were made in the 1990s, with its most recent divestment made in August 1999 when it sold Macromedia Pathware to Lotus Software.

Acquisitions

NumberCompanyCountryAcquired onAcquired for (USD)References
1Emerald City Software  United StatesMarch 19, 1990[9]
2BluePoint Technologies  United StatesJune 20, 1990[10]
3LaserTools-Language Tech[note 1]  United StatesJune 1, 1992[11]
4OCR Systems  United StatesJune 29, 1992[12]
5Nonlinear Technologies  United States1992[13]
6After Hours Software  United States1993[13]
7Compumation  United States1994[13]
8Aldus Corporation  United StatesAugust 31, 1994$437,676,000[14]
9LaserTools  United StatesSeptember 9, 1994[15]
10Photoshop  United States1995[16]
11Frame Technology  United StatesOctober 30, 1995$566,567,000[17]
12Ares Software  United StatesMay 20, 1996[18]
13Sandcastle  United StatesMarch 14, 1997$3,500,000[19]
14HyWay Ferranti  United KingdomSeptember 5, 1997[20]
15DigiDox  United StatesSeptember 16, 1997[21]
16GoLive Systems  United StatesJanuary 4, 1999[22]
17Fotiva  United StatesDecember 5, 2001[23]
18Accelio[note 2]  CanadaApril 15, 2002$72,000,000[24]
19Syntrillium Software  United StatesMay 2003[25]
20Yellow Dragon Software-Tech[note 3]  United StatesNovember 10, 2003[26]
21Q-Link Technologies, Inc.  United StatesMay 3, 2004[27]
22OKYZ  FranceDecember 7, 2004[28]
23Macromedia  United StatesDecember 3, 2005$3,573,000,000[29]
24Navisware  United StatesDecember 16, 2005[30]
25Trade and Technologies France  FranceApril 21, 2006[31]
26Pixmantec  DenmarkJune 26, 2006[32]
27InterAKT  RomaniaSeptember 5, 2006[33]
28Serious Magic Inc.  United StatesOctober 19, 2006[34]
29Scene7  United StatesMay 31, 2007[35]
30Virtual Ubiquity  United StatesOctober 1, 2007[36]
31YaWah  DenmarkSeptember 15, 2008[37]
32Business Catalyst  AustraliaAugust 31, 2009[38]
33Omniture  United StatesSeptember 15, 2009$1,800,000,000[39]
34Day Software  SwitzerlandJuly 28, 2010$240,000,000[40]
35Demdex  United StatesJanuary 18, 2011[41]
36EchoSign  United StatesJuly 18, 2011[42]
37Iridas Technology  GermanySeptember 8, 2011[43]
38Nitobi  CanadaOctober 3, 2011[44]
39Typekit  United StatesOctober 3, 2011[45]
40Auditude  United StatesNovember 1, 2011$120,000,000[46]
41Efficient Frontier Technology  United StatesNovember 30, 2011[47]
42Behance Inc.  United StatesDecember 21, 2012[48]
43Neolane  FranceJuly 23, 2013$600,000,000[49][50]
44Satellite  United StatesJuly 31, 2013
45Aviary  United StatesSeptember 22, 2014[51]
46Fotolia  United StatesJanuary 28, 2015$800,000,000[52]
47Mixamo  United StatesJune 1, 2015[53]
48Livefyre  United StatesMay 10, 2016[54]
49TubeMogul  United StatesNovember 10, 2016$540,000,000[55]
50Sayspring  United StatesApril 16, 2018[56]
51Uru  United StatesApril 29, 2018[57]
52Magento  United StatesMay 21, 2018$1,680,000,000[58]
53Marketo  United StatesSeptember 20, 2018$4,750,000,000[59]
54Allegorithmic  FranceJanuary 23, 2019[60]
55Workfront  United StatesNovember 9, 2020$1,500,000,000[61]
56Frame.io  United StatesOctober 7, 2021$1,275,000,000[62]
57ContentCal  United KingdomDecember 8, 2021[63]
58Abstract Notebooks  United StatesDecember 23, 2021[64]

Indirect acquisitions

Adobe also owns the assets of numerous companies, through less direct means, through the mergers or acquisitions of companies later acquired by Adobe.

Failed acquisitions

  • Figma - After 15 months of regulatory review, the acquisition of Figma for $20 billion was abandoned after no longer seeing a path toward regulatory approval.[65][66]

Stakes

DateCompanyBusinessCountryValue (USD)References
September 21, 1992VerityComputer consulting  United States[67]
March 1, 1994CrosswiseApplications software  United States[68]
April 19, 1995Siebel SystemsApplication services provider  United States[69]
August 8, 1995Fractal DesignGraphics software  United States$2,000,000[70]
March 23, 2007SkysoftOnline digital music services  Republic of China$1,000,000[71]

Divestitures

DateAcquirerTarget companyTarget businessAcquirer countryValue (USD)References
November 1, 1991ParacompMacroMindSoftware  United States[72]
March 28, 1996Luminous[note 4]Graphics software  United States[73]
February 5, 1997INSOMasterSoftPublishing software  United States$3,000,000[74]
March 24, 1999Creative Internet SolutionsChangeMediaInternet service provider  United States[75]
May 20, 1999Calian Technologies Ltd.Why InteractiveMulti-media company  Canada$4,360,000[76]
August 30, 1999Lotus DevelopmentMacromedia PathwareInternet software  United States[77]

Notes

See also

References

External links