Home Commerce Rokt Acquires mParticle For $300 Million

Rokt Acquires mParticle For $300 Million

SHARE:

Commerce media just went shopping.

On Thursday, ecommerce marketing company Rokt acquired customer data platform mParticle for $300 million.

Word to the wise, “Rokt” is pronounced “rocked,” not “rocket,” just FYI.

Although the press release frames the deal as a merger with Rokt investing in mParticle, Rokt is taking a 100% stake in the company, Bruce Buchanan, Rokt’s co-founder and CEO, told AdExchanger.

The wording of its deal structure aside, Rokt’s acquisition of mParticle comes somewhat out of left field, because why does it need a CDP?

Part and particle

Almost exactly one year ago, Rokt acquired AfterSell, a post-purchase customer experience and upselling service for Shopify merchants. That deal makes perfect sense, since Rokt serves ads and offers on retailer and media subscription post-purchase pages.

But the rationale in this case is more about merging two companies that serve a similar market and improve Rokt’s service in ecommerce marketing beyond advertising, which is actually a minority of the company’s revenue, according to Buchanan.

More than 90% of Rokt and mParticle’s respective client bases are made up of enterprise retailers and brands that spend more than $5 million per year on each business’s software. In cases where their clients overlap, Buchanan said Rokt’s performance went up by as much as 50% compared to other CDP or identity solutions.

One reason for the improved performance is better match rates, but there’s also more to it, said Michael Katz, co-founder and CEO of mParticle, who’ll remain in the role post-acquisition. Retailers who work with Rokt and mParticle also use them for retention marketing after a purchase and to grow their loyalty program or credit card program.

What’s attractive about mParticle is that it’s a live feed of data, Buchanan said. Rokt has only a moment – the time between when a purchase is made to when the confirmation or checkout page loads – to come to an understanding of who a person is and the potential deals or upsell offers they might consider.

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

Get our editors’ roundup delivered to your inbox every weekday.

RIP to the CDP?

The CDP category has undergone vast consolidation over the past few years.

Oracle, Salesforce, Twilio and other big players acquired point solutions. And in the past month alone, two other notable independent CDP vendors were acquired: ActionIQ was bought by Uniphore and Lytics went to Contentstack.

When mParticle first got started, the CDP moniker didn’t exist yet. “Nowadays, everybody’s a CDP,” Katz said.

To continue mParticle’s mission as a customer data platform, he added, the company has to get “closer to the value creation layer.”

One challenge for CDPs, according to Buchanan, is that investing in data services and integrations is hard to justify for a software solution that doesn’t directly involve itself in the ad targeting, attribution or bid decisioning. CDPs typically remain an impartial source at arm’s-length to those services.

“To fund the investment required,” he said, “you need to be close to the source of value and recognize what actually matters.”

And Rokt knows full well the value big brands attach to data that might convert customers in the moment.

“Let’s not get too hung up on the category name and whether people need to sign up for a category name,” Buchanan said. “What we do know is mParticle produces a unique outcome because of their real-time capabilities.”

This is the fourth ad tech acquisition this week. On Monday, T-Mobile acquired digital out-of-home company Vistar Media and on Wednesday The Trade Desk bought ad tech metadata startup Sincera. Also on Wednesday, DirecTV took a majority stake in addressable TV platform Invidi.

Must Read

Monopoly Man looks on at the DOJ vs. Google ad tech antitrust trial (comic).

2025: The Year Google Lost In Court And Won Anyway

From afar, it looks like Google had a rough year in antitrust court. But zoom in a bit and it becomes clear that the past year went about as well as Google could have hoped for.

Why 2025 Marked The End Of The Data Clean Room Era

A few years ago, “data clean rooms” were all the ad tech trades could talk about. Fast-forward to 2026, and maybe advertisers don’t need to know what a data clean room is after all.

The AI Search Reckoning Is Dismantling Open Web Traffic – And Publishers May Never Recover

Publishers have been losing 20%, 30% and in some cases even as much as 90% of their traffic and revenue over the past year due to the rise of zero-click AI search.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

No Waiting for May – CES Is Where The TV Upfront Season Starts 

If any single event can be considered the jumping-off point for TV upfronts, it’s the Consumer Electronics Showcase (CES), which kicks off this week in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Comic: This Is Our Year

Comic: This Is Our Year

It’s been 15 years since this comic first ran in January 2011, and there’s something both quaint and timeless about it. Here’s to more (and more) transparency in 2026, and happy New Year!

From AI To SPO: The Top 10 AdExchanger Guest Columns Of 2025

The generative AI trend generated endless hot takes this year, but the ad industry also had plenty to say about growing competition between DSPs and SSPs. Here are AdExchanger’s top 10 most popular guest columns of 2025 and why they resonated.