By Shira Ovide 

Oracle Corp. on Monday agreed to buy startup Datalogix Holdings Inc., an important advertising partner to Google Inc. and Facebook Inc. The deal shows how big software companies are refashioning themselves into marketing powerhouses.

Datalogix is working with Facebook, Google and Twitter Inc. to prove that ads bought on their websites propel people to buy the advertised products in brick-and-mortar stores. Datalogix does this by matching information about Facebook or Google users with retailers' email databases and in-store purchase histories. Datalogix said it has 650 customers, including Ford Motor Co. and Kraft Foods Group Inc.

The deal spotlights the billions of dollars of acquisitions struck by Oracle, Salesforce.com Inc. and Adobe Systems Inc. as they increasingly target corporate marketers. The software titans are motivated by the growing role of technology in crafting personalized sales pitches for consumer products such as soda, cars or movies.

"Marketing services increasingly depend upon the integration of technology and data. Oracle and Datalogix bring each what the other most needs to thrive," said Jon Elvekrog, chief executive of advertising-targeting firm 140 Proof.

Oracle has acquired four major marketing-tech companies in the last two years. This year, Oracle closed its purchase of BlueKai, a startup that lets marketers track Web-surfing habits to target ads, and a $1.6 billion purchase of Responsys, which tailors email marketing. Last year, Oracle bought marketing-services firm Eloqua for about $935 million.

Oracle didn't disclose what it agreed to pay for Datalogix.

Bryan Wiener, chairman of digital-ad agency 360i, said the software giants have promised to do a better job of showing that Web ads influence in-store sales, but the promise hasn't panned out in many cases. "It's an open question: Can these large providers make these acquisitions and not stifle innovation?"

Marketing executives say Datalogix, known in the industry as a data broker, has a valuable trove of information about people's shopping habits, gleaned from loyalty cards and other marketing programs. The purchasing data helped attract the attention of Facebook and Google, which have started working with Datalogix and others data brokers to allow advertisers to target users based on the data brokers' information.

Marketing executives say there isn't much potential for conflict between Datalogix's new owner and Web giants such as Google and Facebook, in part because those companies already work with the marketing-services arms of Oracle and Salesforce.

As Oracle and others assemble troves of marketing data, their offerings could serve as a counterweight to the power of Facebook and Google. Marketers say they worry about the duo's control over both growing stockpiles of information on consumer Web-surfing habits and their growing share of online ad spending.

"It might be interesting how [Oracle] could put a check to Google and Facebook attempts to dominate the ad space with data," said Matt Ackley, chief marketing officer of advertising software firm Marin Software Inc.

But the acquisition has the potential to draw Oracle into increasing regulatory scrutiny of how Datalogix and its peers collect and use consumer data. Earlier this year, the Federal Trade Commission said Congress should consider legislation to require data brokers to provide better information to consumers on what data they have, and to give consumers the option to exclude their personal details from use by marketers. "Lack of transparency and choice remain a significant source of concern about this industry," the FTC said in May after examining nine data brokers, including Datalogix.

Privacy-advocacy group Center for Digital Democracy on Monday said the FTC should review the proposed Datalogix deal for its potential impact on consumer privacy and competition for consumer information.

The proposed acquisition also means Google will be working more closely with Oracle on advertising, even as the two companies are in a legal fight over Google's Android mobile-operating system. The Supreme Court is weighing whether to hear a case involving a copyright dispute over computer code owned by Oracle and used in Android.

Oracle declined to comment, and Datalogix referred inquiries to Oracle.

The acquisition also is a turn of strategy for Datalogix, which earlier this year began working with investment bankers to decide whether to conduct an initial public offering of its stock. This year, however, was a rocky one for many public marketing-technology companies. Share prices of Rocket Fuel Inc. and Datalogix competitor Acxiom Corp. have fallen sharply in 2014, for example.

Rolfe Winkler, Mike Shields and Elizabeth Dwoskin contributed to this article.

Write to Shira Ovide at shira.ovide@wsj.com

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