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NICE
Founded in 1986 in Ra'anana, Israel, NICE built its early reputation on voice recording and quality management systems for contact centers.
NICE
Founded in 1986 in Ra'anana, Israel, NICE built its early reputation on voice recording and quality management systems for contact centers. Barak Eilam took over as CEO a decade ago after a long tenure in product leadership, and the firm has since migrated its entire portfolio to the cloud. Today, the company operates from Hoboken, New Jersey, and trades on the Nasdaq and Tel Aviv Stock Exchange, deriving the majority of its revenue from recurring software subscriptions. NICE divides its operations into two principal segments: Customer Engagement, which provides cloud-native CX analytics and workforce optimization tools, and Financial Crime & Compliance, which supplies anti-money laundering and fraud detection systems to global banks. The platform processes billions of interactions annually, using proprietary AI models to surface risk and automate compliance workflows. Strategic acquisitions have shaped the product line, including the 2016 purchase of inContact for cloud contact center infrastructure and the 2021 acquisition ofMindTouch for knowledge management. In financial services, the Actimize suite monitors transactions for firms such as JPMorgan Chase and HSBC. Geographies span North America, EMEA, and Asia-Pacific, with large-scale deployments in the United Kingdom, Japan, and India. NICE employs roughly 7,500 people across more than 30 countries. In 2023, the firm generated $2.38 billion in total revenue, a 9% increase year-over-year, with cloud revenue growing over 20%. February 2024: NICE announced a 10% workforce reduction affecting roughly 750 employees, reallocating resources toward AI development — a restructuring the company described as a strategic realignment rather than a cost-cutting exercise. Unlike legacy hardware competitors tethered to on-premise maintenance contracts, NICE operates as a consolidated, cloud-only compliance and analytics layer that spans both commercial customer service and regulated financial surveillance. Its governance as a publicly traded corporation subjects it quarterly earnings cycles, but also provides the liquidity to acquire early-stage AI capabilities that family offices or private-equity-backed PE firms could not easily replicate.
General information
Firm type
Asset Manager
Year founded
1986
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Hoboken
Corporate office
Hoboken, NJ, United States
Principals
Barak Eilam
Chief Executive Officer
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment decisions at NICE?
NICE does not operate as a fund or family office — it is a publicly traded enterprise software firm. Capital allocation decisions, including acquisitions, are made by CEO Barak Eilam and the executive management team, under board supervision. As a Nasdaq-listed company, its investment activity is disclosed via public filings and earnings calls.
Is NICE structured as a single family office or does it operate more like a venture firm?
NICE is neither. It is a publicly traded global enterprise software company listed on the Nasdaq and Tel Aviv Stock Exchange. It deploys capital primarily through targeted acquisitions of smaller technology firms to bolt onto its CX and financial crime platforms, not through a fund structure.
Which sectors does NICE explicitly avoid?
NICE focuses narrowly on customer experience analytics and financial crime compliance. It has avoided expansion into general-purpose CRM, IT service management, or horizontal ERP markets where its real-time interaction-specialist AI has no distinct advantage. It also does not operate physical security or defense contracting businesses, despite its work with public safety agencies on digital evidence.
How does NICE source proprietary deal flow for acquisitions?
As a large strategic buyer, NICE sources acquisitions through its operating segments' product leaders, who identify gaps in the cloud platform. It does not rely on a traditional blind-pool fund model. The firm has publicly stated it targets companies with complementary AI and cloud capabilities that can be integrated into the single NICE CXone or Actimize platforms, typically acquiring firms generating less than $100M in annual revenue.
What is NICE's posture on co-investments alongside external GPs?
NICE buys whole companies for strategic integration — it does not co-invest alongside external private equity or venture capital general partners. Corporate development reports to the CFO, and every acquisition is run as a consolidation, not a passive or minority stake. There is no vehicle for external allocators to participate in its M&A pipeline.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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