All Of Accenture’s Acquisitions In 2025
From cybersecurity to AI and digital transformation, Accenture’s acquisitions in 2025 signal a wave of enterprise transformation for the modern workforce.
Accenture’s 2025 acquisition spree paints a clear picture of where the global IT services giant believes the next decade of enterprise transformation is headed. Across markets, industries and technologies, the company has spent this year stitching together a portfolio that leans heavily into AI, digital engineering, cybersecurity, cloud modernization and large-scale talent development.
Whether it’s cybersecurity powerhouses, engineering boutiques or public-sector advisory firms, Accenture, No. 1 on CRN’s Solution Provider 500 list, is positioning itself as the partner of choice for organizations navigating simultaneous technological disruption and operational reinvention.
The Dublin-based behemoth, which made a total of 39 acquisitions in 2024, has in 2025 deepened its AI and generative AI capabilities via acquisitions such as Halfspace, NeuraFlash and Decho, signaling a deliberate strategy to bring in highly specialized firms that can design, deploy and operationalize enterprise-grade AI at pace.
[Related: Accenture’s $3B AI Bet Is Paying Off: Inside A Massive Transformation Fueled By Advanced AI]
These moves also give Accenture sharper tools, and more engineering muscle, to help clients adopt agentic AI, transform service operations, modernize data platforms and scale intelligent systems across entire organizations.
Accenture did not respond to CRN’s request for comment on the 2025 acquisitions.
Security also emerged as another major priority in 2025, particularly in markets where threat levels and regulatory requirements are intensifying. The acquisition of CyberCX—one of the largest cybersecurity providers in Australia and New Zealand—was a watershed moment, bringing more than 1,400 experts specializing in defense, threat detection, AI-enhanced SOCs and critical infrastructure protection. Coupled with the acquisition of IAMConcepts in Canada, Accenture has expanded its ability to deliver identity, zero-trust and cyber-resilience solutions at a time when global demand for specialized expertise continues to surge.
Workforce transformation as well as data and digital transformation within the financial-services sector were also big themes in 2025. Together, these acquisitions reflect a strategy that is both sharply focused and broad in impact.
Here are all 23 acquisitions Accenture made in 2025. Terms of the deals were not disclosed.
23. Percipient
In January, Accenture acquired Percipient, a Singapore-based FinTech company specializing in a digital twin platform designed for banking core systems. The technology enables banks to unify and simulate data from both legacy and modern systems in real time, allowing innovation without destabilizing mission-critical infrastructure.
Incorporating Percipient’s digital-twin capabilities enhanced Accenture’s ability to help banks shift away from legacy cores and adopt cloud-based, AI-driven services. That approach enabled financial institutions to modernize at a lower cost and risk, accelerating transformation across Asia-Pacific and other markets, Accenture said.
22. Staufen AG
Accenture in February acquired Staufen AG, a German management consulting firm known for its work in manufacturing and supply chains. The acquisition strengthened Accenture’s capabilities in discrete manufacturing industries such as automotive, aerospace and defense, industrial goods and medical equipment. By integrating Staufen’s hands-on approach with its own suite of advanced digital technologies including AI, digital twins and manufacturing software platforms, Accenture said it aimed to transform clients’ core value chains, enhancing efficiency, sustainability and resilience.
With a team of more than 200 professionals across six countries, Staufen has three decades of operational experience to complement Accenture’s global supply chain and operations practice. Together the companies help clients overcome disruptions, reduce inefficiencies and build future-ready manufacturing ecosystems.
21. Halfspace
In March, Accenture acquired Halfspace, a Denmark-based AI consultancy known for its expertise in generative AI, data science, and advanced analytics across the Nordic region. Halfspace brings specialized capabilities in building and scaling enterprise-grade AI solutions.
With this acquisition, Accenture deepened its AI innovation footprint in Europe and expanded its Center for Advanced AI. The firm now has additional talent and tools to help clients design, deploy, and operationalize responsible, high-impact AI models. About 80 AI professionals came over in the acquisition.
In March, Accenture completed its acquisition of Altus Consulting, a U.K.-based advisory and technology firm serving the insurance, pensions and investment sectors. Altus is known for its deep domain expertise and data-driven modeling capabilities tailored to financial services.
The acquisition strengthens Accenture’s consulting and transformation capabilities in the U.K. financial services market, enabling clients to modernize operations, improve regulatory alignment, and accelerate digital transformation with industry-specific tools and frameworks, Accenture said.
19. Soben
Accenture also acquired Glasgow-based Soben in March, a construction consultancy specializing in data-center development and capital-project delivery. The deal added advanced project-management, digital design, and engineering capabilities to strengthen Accenture’s Industry X and cloud-first offerings in the U.K. market, Accenture said.
With Soben, Accenture said it further expanded its global and European capabilities in infrastructure and capital-project transformation.
18. TalentSprint
In April, Accenture acquired TalentSprint, a leading provider of deep-tech education programs, including AI, data science, cybersecurity and emerging technology bootcamps. Based in India, TalentSprint delivers academic-grade upskilling programs for enterprises and government institutions around the globe.
TalentSprint joined Accenture’s LearnVantage division, significantly expanding its ability to develop AI-ready workforces. The acquisition enhanced Accenture’s role in large-scale reskilling initiatives, a critical need as enterprises shift toward AI-enabled operating models, Accenture said. About 210 professionals came over in the deal.
In May, Accenture acquired Ascendient Learning, a North American IT-training provider formed from the merger of Accelebrate, ExitCertified and Web Age Solutions. With roughly 75 professionals and a catalog of more than 850 courses, the acquisition strengthens Accenture’s LearnVantage business by expanding its instructor-led training, certification pathways and customized enterprise upskilling programs, Accenture said. The move underscored Accenture’s ongoing commitment to growing its learning and development capabilities, according to the company. It also followed the March 2024 launch of LearnVantage, part of a $1 billion investment designed to help clients accelerate workforce reskilling and upskilling at scale.
16. Yumemi
In May, Accenture acquired Yumemi, a Japanese design-engineering firm recognized for its expertise in digital product development. The move brought more than 400 UX, design and engineering professionals into Accenture Song, strengthening its ability to help clients accelerate product innovation using generative AI and user-centric insights.
Yumemi now forms part of Accenture Song’s growing design and digital products practice, which works with global clients to create intuitive, high-impact products and services.
15. Sipal’s IPS Business
In June, Accenture acquired Sipal’s integrated product support (IPS) business in Italy, bringing in about 250 engineers with deep expertise in aerospace and defense life-cycle engineering. The addition of the IPS team expanded Accenture’s Industry X capabilities in Europe by strengthening its product and service engineering, manufacturing support, training and sustainment offerings.
The move underscored Accenture’s commitment to helping organizations reimagine how they design, engineer and deliver products and services through advanced technology, specialized talent and intelligent processes, Accenture said. It aligned with the company’s long-term strategy to enhance its engineering and technology innovation footprint in Italy and accelerate the digital transformation of critical national industries.
In July, Accenture acquired Systema, a Germany-based software and consulting firm specializing in manufacturing automation for the semiconductor and electronic components sectors. Integrated into Accenture’s Industry X practice, Systema strengthened the company’s ability to deliver advanced automation and smart-factory solutions across its European manufacturing portfolio.
More than 240 Systema professionals joined Industry X, bringing deep expertise in manufacturing execution system solutions and supporting clients in industries such as aerospace and defense, medical devices, electronics, food and beverage, automotive, industrial machinery, metals and steel, and specialty chemicals, according to Accenture.
13. Aristal
In July, Accenture doubled down on its financial-services muscle in Southeast Asia with the acquisition of Malaysia-based Aristal, a consulting and digital transformation specialist known for steering some of the region’s biggest core-banking overhauls. The move, which was Accenture’s first banking-focused deal in Malaysia, added a team of 30 experts who have spent years executing major IT and business transformation programs for top institutions across Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore and Thailand.
With this acquisition, Accenture said it will further help banks navigate large-scale change, bringing Aristal’s regional banking expertise into Accenture’s Financial Services practice. It also gives Accenture more power to deliver end-to-end transformation projects, the company said.
In July, Accenture acquired Maryville Consulting Group, a St. Louis-based consultancy known for helping enterprises turn their tech organizations into product-driven powerhouses. More than 100 Maryville professionals joined Accenture, adding muscle to help clients tie technology spend directly to business outcomes.
Maryville’s proprietary Product Model framework is known for transforming how companies organize, fund, govern and measure technology, helping them shift from project thinking to product-centric operations. The company folded into Accenture’s North America business, bolstering the company’s technology-enabled reinvention and product operations capabilities.
11. CyberCX
In August, Accenture made its largest acquisition to date with CyberCX, a major cybersecurity services provider headquartered in Australia and New Zealand. CyberCX employs more than 1,400 experts specializing in cyber defense, threat detection, incident response and AI-enhanced security operations.
By acquiring CyberCX, Accenture expanded its security footprint across Asia-Pacific. The deal also strengthened Accenture’s ability to protect critical infrastructure sectors including energy, financial services, government and telecommunications against increasingly sophisticated cyber threats.
10. The Highlands Consulting Group
In August, Accenture acquired The Highlands Consulting Group, a California-based management consulting firm with expertise in public-sector modernization. The firm specializes in organizational strategy, large-scale IT transformation and regulatory program support for state agencies.
Accenture said the acquisition strengthened Accenture’s public-service capabilities, particularly across California’s health, transportation, environmental and social-services agencies. Highlands’ advisory expertise also complemented Accenture’s technology delivery strengths, enabling more seamless, end-to-end modernization programs.
9. Superdigital
In August, Accenture acquired Superdigital, a U.S.-based agency that will plug into Accenture Song, giving clients a boost in end-to-end social strategy, from audience building and creator partnerships to content, commerce and real-time measurement.
Superdigital brought more than 40 creators, strategists and social-native professionals along in the deal. The team is known for crafting culturally-tuned brand narratives, building communities and creating agile campaigns backed by sharp data analytics.
8. SI&C Co., Ltd.
In August, Accenture acquired SI&C, a Tokyo-based digital transformation company specializing in cloud, data and AI consulting. The acquisition reflected strategic urgency in the Japanese market’s accelerating demand for data-driven enterprise transformation.
With SI&C, Accenture improved its ability to support Japanese clients in modernizing their digital cores, adopting cloud platforms and deploying AI across business functions. All SI&C’s employees, a team of about 1,500, came over in the deal.
Also in August, Accenture acquired NeuraFlash, a leading Salesforce and generative AI consultancy known for its work in conversational AI, digital customer support and field-service automation. The deal closed later that month.
Burlington, Mass.-based NeuraFlash strengthened Accenture’s Salesforce and AI capabilities, particularly through its expertise in building agentic AI solutions. The acquisition additionally enhanced Accenture’s ability to deliver AI-powered customer experience transformation to mid-market and enterprise clients, Accenture said.
6. MomentumABM
In September, Accenture acquired MomentumABM, a U.K.-based growth consultancy specializing in account-based marketing strategy. The move plugged MomentumABM into Accenture Song, giving Accenture even more muscle to help B2B marketing leaders cut through rising complexity, competition and customer expectations.
MomentumABM brought along end-to-end B2B marketing expertise from customer growth strategy and operating-model design to capability building and full program execution. With about 90 MomentumABM professionals, Accenture Song gained a deeper edge in delivering high-impact B2B marketing to its clients.
5. IAMConcepts
In September, Accenture acquired IAMConcepts, a Canadian identity and access management (IAM) consulting firm specializing in identity governance, privileged access management and customer identity solutions. The company serves sectors with heightened security requirements, including financial services, utilities and transportation.
The acquisition expanded Accenture’s cybersecurity footprint in Canada and positions the company to deliver more robust IAM, zero-trust and digital-identity solutions across highly regulated industries.
4. Orlade Group
In September, Accenture acquired Orlade Group, a French consultancy firm specializing in capital-project advisory and execution. Orlade and its subsidiaries support mega-projects across energy, rail, utilities, aerospace and defense.
Integrating Orlade’s 200-person team strengthened Accenture’s Industry X practice by enhancing capabilities in project controls, risk modeling, cost forecasting and data-driven capital-project execution, critical for clients managing complex industrial investments.
3. Aidemy Inc.
In September, Accenture acquired Aidemy, a Japan-based provider of AI learning programs, digital transformation training and AI system-development services. Aidemy’s offerings are designed for workforce reskilling and enterprise AI adoption.
Aidemy now operates within Accenture LearnVantage, giving Accenture expanded capacity to deliver AI skill-building at scale. The acquisition aligned with global demand for rapid workforce modernization as organizations integrate AI into daily operations. About 130 employees came over in the deal.
2. Decho
In October, Accenture acquired Decho, a U.K.-based AI consultancy known for helping organizations design, deliver and scale Palantir-powered transformations. Palantir products include data integration and analysis platforms. The deal amped up Accenture’s strategic advisory and engineering capabilities around Palantir solutions across health, government, defense and commercial markets in the U.K. and beyond.
Decho specializes in taking AI initiatives from whiteboard to production and brought a deep skillset in platform deployment, data-model architecture, application engineering and capability building, plus training programs that equip client teams for long-term adoption and sustained value. The acquisition reinforced Accenture’s push to help enterprises harness Palantir’s software to scale generative AI. About 40 professionals came over in the deal.
1. Rangr Data
In November, Accenture said it acquired Rangr Data, a U.S.-based Palantir partner known for building real-time analytics and AI solutions using Palantir Foundry and AIP (AI platform). The company specializes in supply-chain decision systems and mission-critical operational analytics.
The acquisition expanded Accenture’s North American Palantir engineering talent, enabling clients to adopt AI-powered operational platforms more quickly and efficiently across industries including manufacturing, defense, logistics and consumer goods. About 40 professionals came over in the deal.