HR Solutions on the Deluxe People Platform was soft launched in the first quarter and is now widely available. Deluxe also said it would bring its HR and payroll tools for small businesses to Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central. On the surface, Deluxe’s launch highlights how the COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the digitization of SMBs. If you zoom out, however, there’s a digital transformation story and more than 2 years of work. I’ve been tracking Deluxe for a few months since it highlights how a company that epitomizes paper-based processes (checks and check clearing) can go digital and expand into new markets. HR Solutions on the Deluxe People Platform is the product of a focus on payments, collaboration with GoCo.io Inc. and digital transformation. Coupled with the $960 million purchase of First American Payment systems, a deal that closed June 1, and Deluxe has revamped its business in a hurry. Deluxe Payments will now represent 29% of the company’s revenue. Barry McCarthy, CEO of Deluxe, said the First American acquisition is a big step toward becoming a “trusted payments and business technology company.” McCarthy added that Deluxe will take First American and expand into government, non-profit and retail verticals to complement its core SMB customer base. The First American deal is the largest acquisition in Deluxe’s 106-year history. When announcing the First American deal, Deluxe noted that its digital transformation in advance set the stage for the purchase. Deluxe has built a technology platform that can integrate purchases, a sales organization to cross-sell the portfolio and the ability to build products.
The digital transformation plan
While the HR product launch and First American deal are two big moves, they’re only possible due to a digital transformation plan laid out previously. Deluxe CEO McCarthy’s plan was called One Deluxe. In a nutshell, One Deluxe aimed to turn the company away from being a rollup of acquisitions to an enterprise focused on building products, organic growth and more strategic acquisitions. Over the last two years, Deluxe set out to break down silos in its business as well as become a customer and product driven company. In the first quarter, Deluxe was able to close 1,600 deals and sell its software as a service and cloud platforms as well as land business for payments, promotions and its core checks business. The financial results are still a work in progress. Deluxe reported first quarter sales of $441.3 million, down 9.3% from a year ago, with net income of $24.3 million, or 57 cents a share. The company is projecting 2021 sales to be flat to up 2%. Deluxe is targeting a small and medium sized business market as well as core financial institutions. Here are a few lessons from Deluxe’s transformation:
Deluxe had to get its own IT house in order to be nimble enough to acquire and transform to launch new product extensions. As outlined in a 2020 investor day, Deluxe moved to a modern technology stack as it implemented Workday, Salesforce, MuleSoft and a bevy of other tools.
View transformation through the customer and business lifecycle. Those IT operations were designed to enable a business lifecycle that walked SMBs from the startup to branding to growth and optimization phases.
Once phases of the lifecycle are clear, develop customer-centric products for pain points. Deluxe is now focused on payments, cloud products including everything from web hosting to marketing to digital engagement as well as promotional tools and checks.
McCarthy said on Deluxe’s first quarter earnings conference call May 6: Going forward, McCarthy said that the economy’s reopening should accelerate Deluxe’s sales as SMBs recover. He said: Wall Street is modeling Deluxe to report 2021 sales of $1.86 billion with $1.96 billion in 2022. Shares of Deluxe have recovered from $18.90 a share to $44.33 in the last year but are down from nearly $80 in 2018. We think small business formation continues and that we’re especially pleased to see small business to start recovering as well.
ZDNET’S MONDAY MORNING OPENER
The Monday Morning Opener is our opening salvo for the week in tech. Since we run a global site, this editorial publishes on Monday at 8:00am AEST in Sydney, Australia, which is 6:00pm Eastern Time on Sunday in the US. It is written by a member of ZDNet’s global editorial board, which is comprised of our lead editors across Asia, Australia, Europe, and North America.
PREVIOUSLY ON MONDAY MORNING OPENER:
Work from home is here to stay: Companies must adjust to succeed says ServiceNow’s Chief Customer and Partner OfficerHybrid cloud, on-premises workloads get their day in the sun, but forecast still cloudyInnovation Oz Style: Take a world-leading secure kernel and kick it to the kerbThe future of the office will surprise you. And if it doesn’t, something has gone wrongCorporate offices need to change in one major way says ServiceNow CEOBootstrapping and microservices: How Blavity scaled and now mentors other Black-led startupsRansomware just got very real. And it’s likely to get worseFrom Lenovo to Apple, laptops in 2021 need USB-C ports on both sidesStop using your work laptop or phone for personal stuff, because I know you areCan OnePlus be more than a challenger brand?Ransomware: The internet’s biggest security crisis is getting worse. We need a way out