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Fundraising

A Technology Company’s Acquisitions Change an Industry

September 16, 2004 | Read Time: 4 minutes

In the past 18 months, Kintera, a San Diego company that helps charities raise money online, has gone on a buying

binge — swallowing up more than a dozen other companies and organizations that offer technology services to nonprofit groups.

The acquisitions, which have helped Kintera inch closer to profitability on expected sales of $23-million to $27-million this year, represent part of the ambitious plans of the company’s founder, Harry E. Gruber, a medical doctor who started Kintera four years ago after helping to create five other companies.

Dr. Gruber’s aggressive moves in the nonprofit field — which he describes as the first wave of acquisitions he plans to make — have left some observers and at least one of his competitors wondering how he will integrate so many varying interests into his young company’s culture.

“I don’t believe you can integrate all the technologies and products and people that Harry is trying to put together,” says Gene Austin, president of Convio, an Austin, Tex., software company that helps charities use the Internet to improve their fund-raising efforts. “I’ve been in the technology business long enough to know that what he’s trying to do is a very tough thing.”


Buying Expertise

Dr. Gruber, however, thinks his approach is the right one. He says he is not just acquiring companies and their clients — but adding employees who, in some cases, have far more experience in the nonprofit industry than he or some of the employees who helped found Kintera. And rather than dissolving the companies he acquires, he says, he allows many of them to continue offering their services to the nonprofit field.

But every acquisition is different, he says. Kintera drops the names of some businesses it acquires, absorbing the products and services they offered — but in many cases, keeping the employees from the previous companies. The table below shows the acquisitions Kintera has announced in the past two years.

The companies that Kintera has acquired have provided a range of online, consulting, and other services to hundreds of nonprofit organizations, including arts and cultural institutions, colleges and universities, environmental organizations, foundations, and local United Ways.

Company
Date purchased
Amount paid
2003 revenue
What company does
Sampling of current and former clients
Kamtech Information Systems
August 2004
$310,000 and 102,619 shares of restricted common stock
Approximately $1.8-million
Produces a computer tool to help nonprofit groups identify prospective wealthy donors and still operates under its own name
Museum of Contemporary Art, in Los Angeles; Nature Conservancy; Purdue University
KindMark
August 2004
$139,000 and 57,691 shares of restricted common stock
$500,000
Develops technology products to help nonprofit groups and corporations run on-the-job campaigns and will change its name to Kintera Directed Giving
Charles Schwab Corporation Foundation, Electronic Data Systems
BNW Software
August 2004
$281,000 and 22,000 shares of restricted common stock
Approximately $500,000
Develops facility-management software for colleges, universities, and community centers and still operates under its own name
University of California at Los Angeles, Johns Hopkins University
Carol/Trevelyan Strategy Group
March 2004
About $5-million in restricted Kintera stock and $250,000 cash
Approximately $5.2-million
Provides online advocacy consulting and other services for more than 200 clients and still operates under its own name
Amnesty International USA, Natural Resources Defense Council, Rock the Vote
Prospect Information Network
March 2004
$3.4-million in restricted stock, and assumed approximately $230,000 in lender debt
Approximately $4.5-million
Produces a computer tool designed to help charities identify wealthy donors and still operates under its own name
American Red Cross, Proctor Academy
Virtual Sprockets
October 2003
Not disclosed
Not disclosed
Helps organizations use their Web sites to communicate with donors; no longer operates under its own name
American Civil Liberties Union, America’s Second Harvest
Little Tornadoes
October 2003
Not disclosed
Not disclosed
Develops Web sites and provides consulting services to nonprofit organizations but no longer operates under its former name
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, March of Dimes
Donation Depot
May 2003
Not disclosed
Not disclosed
Provides computer tools to help more than 100 customers raise money online but no longer operates under its former name
Southeast Missouri State University, United Way of Santa Barbara County (Calif.)
Involve Inc.
February 2003
Not disclosed
Not disclosed
Offers software services to help charities improve their marketing efforts and organizational efficiency but no longer operates under its former name
International Fund for Animal Welfare, People For the American Way

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