
Herringbone Digital Acquires Hennessey Digital, Expanding Platform into Legal Marketing Vertical
LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Trinity Hunt Partners-backed Herringbone Digital, a digital marketing platform partnering with best-in-class local digital marketing agencies, service providers, and tech-enabled solutions, today announced the acquisition of Hennessey Digital, a leading digital marketing agency serving law firms nationwide. This strategic acquisition marks Herringbone Digital's first investment in the legal marketing vertical and expands upon its multi-industry strategy to build a leading digital marketing platform with best-in-class functions across the dental, legal, healthcare, and home services sectors.
Founded in 2015 by Jason Hennessey, Hennessey Digital has established a reputation as a white-glove service provider specializing in SEO and other complementary digital marketing solutions for law firms, with a particular focus on personal injury practices. The Valencia, California-based agency operates with a fully remote team of 125 professionals and has been recognized as one of Fortune's 50 Best Workplaces in Advertising & Marketing. The company will continue to operate under its established brand, and all members of Hennessey Digital's executive team will continue in their current roles, ensuring continuity of service and company culture.
"This partnership represents a transformative new chapter for Hennessey Digital and our team," said Jason Hennessey, Founder and CEO of Hennessey Digital. "In a highly-fragmented industry with many strong players, we are fortunate to join forces with partners who understand our vision and will work alongside us to become the undisputed leader in legal marketing, offering the most comprehensive suite of solutions for law firms looking to grow. With Herringbone's support, we can preserve the brand identity and business structure we've worked hard to build while gaining the resources to expand our capabilities. We are proud to be part of an innovative movement alongside Raj and his team to better serve our client base and create new opportunities for Hennessey."
The acquisition reflects the evolving legal marketing landscape, where law firms seek comprehensive digital solutions. Hennessey Digital serves clients nationwide, providing SEO, digital PR, PPC management, and web design services. Joining the platform enables Hennessey Digital to better leverage AI advancements and integrated capabilities across Herringbone Digital's multi-vertical strategy, providing enhanced value to its clients.
"Jason and the Hennessey Digital team have built one of the most respected and results-driven agencies in the legal marketing space," said Raj Ramanan, CEO of Herringbone Digital. "Their unparalleled expertise in helping personal injury law firms scale, combined with their drive for innovation and client-first mindset, makes them the perfect cornerstone for our legal vertical. This partnership represents a significant milestone in our mission to bring together visionary founders and build a category-defining, fully comprehensive marketing platform in the industry. We're excited to work together to redefine what's possible for legal marketing."
For more information about Herringbone Digital's strategy and M&A opportunities, visit www.herringbonedigital.com.
ABOUT HENNESSEY DIGITAL
Hennessey Digital is a leading digital marketing agency providing white-glove services to law firms nationwide. Founded in 2015 by Jason Hennessey, the company delivers SEO, digital PR, PPC management, and web design services primarily to personal injury law firms. With a fully remote team of 125 professionals, Hennessey Digital has built a reputation for excellence in the legal marketing industry and has been recognized as one of Fortune's 50 Best Workplaces in Advertising & Marketing. For more information, visit www.hennessey.com.
ABOUT HERRINGBONE DIGITAL
Herringbone Digital partners with best-in-class local digital marketing agencies, service providers, and tech-enabled solutions run by experienced leaders. Founded in 2024, the platform focuses on serving businesses in the dental, legal, home services, and healthcare sectors. Backed by Trinity Hunt Partners, Herringbone Digital is building a leading platform through strategic acquisitions and organic growth initiatives. For more information, visit www.herringbonedigital.com.
ABOUT TRINITY HUNT PARTNERS
Trinity Hunt Partners is a growth-oriented private equity firm with over $2 billion of assets under management focused on building leading B2B and B2C services companies. Trinity Hunt's mission is to provide the talent and strategic, operational, and financial capabilities needed to build entrepreneurial services companies into market leaders. Trinity Hunt was ranked tenth amongst all firms worldwide on HEC-Dow Jones' most recent Top Small-Cap Buyout Firms List (2024), which ranks firms based on their performance for investors across funds raised over a 10-year period i. For more information, visit www.trinityhunt.com.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
22 minutes ago
- Yahoo
ConceptVines and Neovera Partner to Accelerate Secure AI Adoption for Organizations in Highly Regulated Industries
Joint offering delivers enterprise-grade cybersecurity with an AI-first foundation NEW YORK, June 12, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--As Artificial Intelligence (AI) adoption accelerates across industries, enterprises are under mounting pressure to innovate faster, without exposing themselves to new forms of cyber and regulatory risk. For highly regulated sectors like banking and healthcare, the stakes are especially high: fragmented infrastructure, evolving compliance demands, and vulnerable data pipelines can derail even the most promising digital initiatives. To address these challenges, ConceptVines, an AI-first innovation and transformation platform, has partnered with Neovera, the trusted advisor providing full cybersecurity and cloud services to enterprises. Together, the companies are bridging innovation and cyber risk management, delivering secure, compliant, and scalable AI deployments for clients across banking, healthcare, and complex enterprise environments. "At ConceptVines, we believe security must be foundational, not an afterthought," said Jim Francis, CEO of ConceptVines. "This partnership brings together our AI-led innovations, including our SpeedX platform, with Neovera's deep cybersecurity expertise to ensure that every layer of our clients' AI infrastructure is secure by design. Together, we're setting a new standard for enterprise-grade AI deployments." At the heart of the partnership is a four-stage cybersecurity flywheel that mirrors a clinical model: starting with vulnerability assessments, moving into advisory and design, followed by integration of next-gen security solutions such as Palo Alto Networks, SentinelOne, CrowdStrike and others, and ultimately evolving into managed SecOps for long-term resilience. From automated threat detection to digital identity, data privacy, and AI governance frameworks, the partnership offers clients access to a unified approach for securing tomorrow's digital infrastructure. "As AI transforms every corner of business, the risks are too great to leave to generalists," said Scott Weinberg, CEO and founder of Neovera. "This partnership combines deep domain expertise in both cybersecurity and AI risk management, giving our clients the specialist support they need to move fast without compromising safety, trust, or compliance. The margin for error is zero, and together, we're helping organizations get it right the first time." ConceptVines is a trusted partner for industry-leading enterprises, delivering advanced Generative AI platforms and shaping the business models of the future. Businesses globally rely on Neovera for its advanced cloud and cybersecurity services, including identity and access management, vulnerability assessment and management, penetration testing, and more. Together, the two organizations are bringing end-to-end security into every layer of AI deployments. To learn more about the partnership, visit About ConceptVines ConceptVines is an AI-first innovation partner specializing in the design and deployment of secure, production-grade AI systems for complex enterprise environments. Through its SpeedX platform, ConceptVines enables organizations to operationalize generative AI, enterprise knowledge graphs, agent-based automation, and intelligent data orchestration across critical workflows. Combining strategic insight with deep technical execution, ConceptVines helps global enterprises move beyond pilots to fully embedded AI systems that drive measurable operational outcomes. With an AI-first foundation, ConceptVines provides the platforms, architectures, and applied AI expertise enterprises need to scale innovation securely and responsibly. To learn more about ConceptVines, visit or follow us on LinkedIn. About Neovera Neovera is the trusted advisor that provides full cybersecurity and cloud services to enterprises with complex challenges and demanding regulatory requirements. Businesses globally rely on Neovera to expertly design, build, secure, and manage their mission-critical business infrastructure backed by its deep expertise in cybersecurity and cloud domains. To learn more about Neovera, visit or follow us on LinkedIn. View source version on Contacts Media Contact Jason VancuraMarketbridge PR for NeoveraNeovera@ Error while retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Getting the construction industry ‘Sublime ready' with or without the federal government
HOLYOKE — With contractors — including Holyoke-based DOC and its supplier Chicopee Concrete — interested in using Sublime Systems' cement, the Massachusetts-born company wants to move up the 'gold shovel' groundbreaking for the $150-million plant it plans on Water Street. 'Our company is doing everything we can to accelerate our time to market to give builders everything they are asking for,' said Joe Hicken, senior vice president at Sublime. This is despite the Donald Trump administration's decision to yank an $87 million Department of Energy grant. It's money Hicken says Sublime has not given up on despite Christopher Wright, U.S. secretary of energy, saying that Sublime was part of a $3.7 billion raft of grants approved under President Joe Biden were not furthering American interests. Sublime always expressed plans to start production in 2027 or 2028. It expects to employ 70 to 90 people in addition to the 250-or-so who will work in construction The supply chain partners announced last week include DOC along with Turner Construction Company, STO Building Group, DPR Construction, Suffolk, Holder Construction, Consigli Construction Co. Inc., Samet Corp. and Methuen Construction have signed on to be part of Sublime's distribution network. 'They are getting the market Sublime ready to get this product out and deploy it at scale,' Hicken said. 'It sends the message, if you are a courthouse builder or a hospital builder, you can come to Sublime systems.' DOC, formerly known as Daniel O'Connell Sons, is a large-scale contractor of major public works. Company representatives visited Sublime's small-scale laboratory cement plant over the past few months with concrete supplier Chicopee Concrete, Hicken said. Jit Kee Chin, executive vice president and chief technology officer of Suffolk, said what the supply chain companies are doing is obtaining for themselves a piece of the future production of the Holyoke plant. 'You have to line up the supply chain to actually take this product to market,' she said. 'But we've known Sublime Systems for a long time,' Suffolk is also making an unspecified equity investment in Sublime. There were announced rounds of fundraising which garnered $40 million and $75 million. Sublime retains, according to Hicken, $47 million in federal tax credits, $1.05 million in state tax credits and $351,000 in property tax incentives from the city. Sublime — through work at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology — developed a method of creating cement through an electrochemical process instead of using heat. The high temperatures needed in cement making mean it accounts for as much as 5% of worldwide manmade emissions of carbon dioxide. Most of the CO2 comes from the limestone instead of from the fuel burned to heat that limestone. There is already a small demonstration system set up and test pours, both indoor and outdoor. Chin said the results are good. It's chemically no different than standard cement, but is whiter and cleaner. '(Sublime's) vision is no less than to really impact one of the foundational materials for construction, with cement and subsequently concrete,' Chin said. Sublime already had a deal to sell 623,000 tons of cement products to Microsoft over six to nine years. The company also recently announced a program to encourage general contractors to use Sublime's cement. Even just the Microsoft deal will require a second, larger plant, Hicken said. Holyoke is the first commercial facility designed to make 30,000 tons a year. That's enough cement each year to make enough concrete to build 17 three-floor parking garages. While all this is happening, Hicken said the company is still working on getting that $87 million grant back. Sublime Systems benefited, Hicken said, from the meticulous process of securing a federal grant. Now the company needs to make its case again. 'We haven't met with anyone yet. We'd love an opportunity to sit down,' he said. Sublime aligns with Trump's goals of building American manufacturing and ending reliance on imported products. Canada and Mexico account for 27% of U.S. cement imports. 'Our sense is there is an opportunity to show up as an asset,' Hicken said. 'The next step is to sit down with a human being.' With a makeover, Uncle Sam rises again for East Longmeadow's 4th of July Bankruptcy protection ends for ESG Clean Energy, Holyoke generating plant linked to Scuderi engine Big Y plans changes to its Tower Square store Read the original article on MassLive. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
The UK, Germany and Canada have slashed foreign aid this year, deepening damage done by US cuts, analysis shows
Western countries have slashed foreign aid budgets this year and reductions will steepen in 2026, with the United States, United Kingdom, Germany and Canada cutting the most, according to a new analysis from the Center for Global Development (CGD). The aid cuts will mean 'significant losses' for many developing nations, according to the analysis from the DC-based think tank, shared exclusively with CNN. Ethiopia is projected to lose the most aid in nominal terms, with Jordan, Afghanistan and the Democratic Republic of Congo also hit particularly hard. Smaller nations will also be hammered by the reduction in foreign aid, with Lesotho, Micronesia and Eswatini each losing around 50% of their aid. 'It's setting fire to the bold ambitions to solve poverty and transform developing countries,' Lee Crawfurd, one of the authors of the report, told CNN. 'It's some of the poorest, most fragile places in the world that are going to be hardest hit.' The analysis looked at projections of bilateral aid – money provided directly to another country rather than routed through multilateral organizations such as United Nations agencies or the World Bank – for 2025 and 2026. The US is projected to cut the most, with a projected 56% reduction compared to levels two years ago. The Trump administration's gutting of the US Agency for International Development (USAID) earlier this year has already left a hole in many international aid budgets, and several other Western nations are following suit rather than filling the void. 'A big, big chunk of overall cuts in the next couple of years are going to be from the US pulling out, rather than other countries. But these other countries are making things worse,' said Crawfurd, a senior research fellow at the CGD. The UK aid cuts are estimated to represent a roughly 39% reduction compared to 2023 levels of spending. Meanwhile, Germany is cutting about 27%, Canada 25% and France 19% of their international aid budgets. The true level of aid cuts remains unclear, as the Trump administration's proposed budget and other government proposals are still making their way through legislatures. But some funding cuts are almost guaranteed. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced in February that his government would increase the UK's defense spending by cutting its aid budget to 0.3% of gross national income in 2027, its lowest level since 1999. Many organizations and aid workers have raised alarm about European governments pitting aid budgets against defense spending. 'Cutting the already lean aid budget is a false economy and will only increase division and amounts to a betrayal of the world's most vulnerable people,' said Halima Begum, head of Oxfam GB. 'It is a false dichotomy to pit international cooperation to tackle poverty against national security interests in order to avoid tax increases.' Crawfurd said that bilateral aid is a 'really small part of government budgets' and the money for defense or security could be found elsewhere. 'It's a choice… it's a political choice,' he added. The think tank wrote in its analysis that 'one striking takeaway is that some countries are projected to lose large amounts of ODA (official development assistance) simply because of who their main donors are – while others are projected to lose very little' – a game of chance, with losses not matching up to the recipient country's needs. Yemen, for example, is projected to experience a 19% fall in its bilateral funding compared to 2023, while its 'comparable' neighbor country Somalia is projected to lose about 39%. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) has also warned that multilateral aid cuts are threatening efforts to tackle 44 of the highest-priority, protracted humanitarian crises. As of April, only 11.9% of the funding for UN response plans had been covered. 'Every year, the UN has been helping more than 100 million people in the world as they go through the worst time of their lives in wars and disasters. But let's be clear: we won't reach the level of funding in 2025 that we've seen in previous years,' Anja Nitzsche, OCHA's chief of partnerships and resource mobilization told CNN in a statement. 'Vulnerable families are being left without food, clean water, healthcare, shelter or protection in places such as Sudan, Yemen, Ukraine, Myanmar and Afghanistan.' The CGD is urging Western donors to reallocate aid to the poorest countries to try to 'ensure that resources are directed to populations in greatest need.' Western countries also need to improve coordination to mitigate further damage, especially as they are withdrawing from countries receiving aid, the think tank said. In some countries, the cuts will change who the largest donor is, which 'can lead to major shifts in what gets funded and how,' according to the CGD. For example, Portugal will likely overtake the US in aid to Angola, and Japan is projected to overtake France in Egypt. 'A new lead donor may not continue the same programs' or may take time to get up and running, according to the analysis. Giving a larger share of aid to multilateral organizations can also help improve international cooperation and cut down on duplication of aid efforts. 'Coordination is an ongoing challenge,' Crawfurd told CNN. 'The easiest way to do that is just to fund big multilateral funds like the World Bank.'