“The deal was also attractive to Verbit as it expands our corporate service portfolio with Take Note’s note-taking and meeting minutes services, furthering our goal of becoming a one-stop-shop for all voice AI needs.” “Take Note’s niche, high-end audience appeal through its market research dialect and subject matter expertise made the company a natural fit to join the Verbit Group as we continue to grow our specialized teams and technologies,” Livne told TechCrunch. Since 2006, Take Note has offered efficient, accurate and general data protection regulation (GDPR) compliance service. With the acquisition of Take Note, Verbit will now serve more than 2,500 customers, Livne noted. Also, Take Note’s 28 employees will join the team. Tom Livne, founder and chief executive officer of Verbit, said in an email interview with TechCrunch that Take Note’s current CEO David Abbott will remain in his position to lead the company and support continued growth and integration efforts. ![]() ![]() Last year, it acquired captioning product and solution provider VITAC for $50 million and education and government transcription company Automatic Sync Technologies for an undisclosed amount. Verbit told TechCrunch at the time of its most recent $250 million Series E funding in November that it would double down on its acquisition strategy with the proceeds to consolidate the fragmented $30 billion transcription industry. The company did not disclose the terms of the deal. This acquisition marks Verbit’s entrance into the market research space and increases its presence in Europe. ![]() Verbit, a Tel Aviv- and New York-based AI-powered transcription and captioning service platform, has acquired Take Note - the U.K.-based company that provides transcription, captioning and note-taking services for the market research sector.
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