A merger involves two companies coming together and creating a new entity, ideally composed of the best elements of each of the individual companies. The literature on mergers and acquisitions often overlooks the features which are specific to mergers. This is an unwise oversight. Mergers offer a way for companies which aren’t cash rich to join with other companies and create entities which automatically have far more potential. And that should ultimately be the goal of any merger-based transaction.
Tens of thousands of mergers and acquisitions take place each year globally. Planning and brokering a merger deal is, relatively speaking, the easy part. It’s after the ink is dry that the real work begins. If you can’t integrate the disparate businesses, cultures, and logistical interests of the two entities, all the fancy deal-making, expert legal advice, and high-minded strategic thinking is for naught. Failing to properly execute a merger or acquisition can come with significant risks.
1. Set expectations
Ensure that employees, the press, and investors perceive the merger as successful. If you don’t set appropriate expectations of what constitutes success – and how it will be measured – employees, investors, and the business press will make up their own metrics and then hold you accountable for them.
It’s entirely possible for a merger to actually be successful and yet not be perceived as successful, simply because the marketplace set an unrealistic expectation. Once the merger is public, immediately be clear, through public announcements and briefings, about what the merger is to accomplish and how success will be measured. This creates a sense of momentum and gives a company enough time to absorb new employees and products.
Where to set expectations
If your strategic reasoning is: | Then your metric should be: |
---|---|
Improve revenue and profitability | Percentage of improvement in revenue and profit |
Obtain new products or services | Time to market for the delivery of those new offerings |
Get hard-to-find trained personnel | Percentage of key personnel retained for at least one year |
Expand into a new market | Market share and size compared to other firms in the target market |
2. Resolve differences in management style
Understand the business culture of the acquired company and allow it to coexist with your company culture. If you’ve done your due diligence prior to the merger, you should be reasonably assured that the acquired firm will blend with your existing organization. Even so, there are likely to be some lingering differences of management style inside the acquiring firm that may seem confusing or hostile to the new employees.
If such differences fester, it can cause an exodus of talent. To nip such problems in the bud, resist the urge to immediately cram two organizations together simply because they’re in the same general market. Acquiring a small company demands tighter and faster integration than a major acquisition of an entire suite of products and infrastructure.
3. Assessing cultural compatibility
Organizations must be sensitive to the culture of the company they’re acquiring. Organizations also are impacted by the culture of the country in which they operate. Leaders at acquiring companies need to ask themselves whether they have to change the culture or if they can live with a collection of cultures. If the aim is to merge the cultures, leaders need to remember that cultural change doesn’t happen overnight. Culture change is not a one-time event; it’s a process. Most businesses today follow one of two cultural models: the traditional top-down organization or the more flexible, collaborative model pioneered in the tech industry.
While neither way is more “correct,” conflict is inevitable if there’s a major disparity between two merged organizations. If the merging firms are at least somewhat compatible, you may want to keep the acquisition organizationally separate for a while until the new group can acclimate. If the firms look to be highly incompatible, a mass departure of talent may be inevitable. Consider sectioning off the acquired firm as an independent business and limiting contact between the two firms. Assess your company and your new acquisition on the following four aspects:
a. Competitive worldview
A traditional company views markets as battlefields and business as warfare, while a collaborative firm uses metaphors like sports or ecosystems. Traditional firms are slower to adapt to opportunities; highly collaborative firms are first to invent or adopt new practices.
b. Management style
Managers in a traditional firm think of their basic job as “command and control”; collaborative firms see management as a service function that helps employees (and the company) be more successful. At a traditional firm, managers are often MBAs, while collaborative firms can tend to embrace more non-traditional leaders.
c. Organizational vision
Traditional managers view the company as a well-run machine, whereas collaborators see it as a community of individuals working together. The most traditional executives dine separately from lower-level employees; collaborative execs know employees on a first-name basis.
d. Motivational tone
Traditional management uses fear to motivate people, threatening to fire underperformers or referring to the competition as “the enemy.” Collaborative managers develop a shared sense of vision and talk about how the firm will change the world.
4. Orient new employees
If employees are distracted or unhappy, the company may lose both its employees and its customers, who become dissatisfied with the service they receive. Competitors could take an aggressive stance against you and poach your employees and poach your business. The end result may be that a company has paid a lot of money for nothing. A lot of what you’re acquiring is the talent itself. If you don’t address human resources well, you’ll lose the intellectual capital you’ve acquired.
Quell rumors, forestall an exodus, and build enthusiasm for the new organization. Every day into a merger that you leave newly acquired employees in a state of limbo leeches value from the deal. Work grinds to a halt while everyone, predictably, updates their resume. People are irrational when it comes to their perceived value to the company and the implications of change on their career. There are three dimensions to every change: emotional, political, and rational.
A management-sponsored orientation for all employees within two weeks of the deal close should take place. The orientation should provide a thorough introduction to the new corporate entity. The political dimension will play out over time through internal meetings, but getting started on the right foot can answer most of the rational questions that people have and help them cope with the inevitable emotional challenges.
Setting a tone at the orientation that reflects the flavor and essence of what the company is all about, as well as using the event to set expectations about the corporate relationship. For example, if the new company is less formal than the old, the orientation might include opportunities for employees to talk directly to top management, either one-on-one or in small groups. In general, it’s a good idea to keep the obligatory speeches short and end with some kind of celebration that mirrors the culture of the acquiring company.
Post-merger employee orientation checklist
- [ ] Strategic reasoning behind the merger.
- [ ] Company history, goals, and culture.
- [ ] Corporate challenges and goals.
- [ ] Expectations and measurements of success.
- [ ] Organizational challenges and goals.
- [ ] Current organizational structure.
- [ ] Direct reports and lines of authority.
- [ ] Current “unknowns” and what remains to be done.
- [ ] Likely opportunities to assist the organization.
- [ ] Likely opportunities for career improvement.
- [ ] Corporate policies and procedures.
- [ ] Where to go to get questions answered.
- [ ] Location of the “welcome to the company” party.
5. Realign and restructure
Quickly shed duplicate overhead and position for future growth. Except in rare cases, a merger always results in redundancies, which mean (at best) reassigning people, and (at worst) laying off employees. Even if the acquired firm will be operating as a separate entity and staffing is to remain at pre-merger levels, there will be changes in reporting structure, internal operations, job roles, and probably job titles.
It’s generally impossible to make such decisions without getting to know and understand the details of what’s working (and what’s not) inside the existing organizations. The new management should quickly analyze the new organization, and any other organization that is affected by the merger, and devise a restructuring plan that at least looks likely to deliver on the promise of the merger. What’s important here is speed rather than perfection.
Any time there’s a layoff, you need to put some structure around that very quickly and get it stabilized. The best way to do this is to publish an organization chart, with roles and responsibilities framed as clearly as possible – even though that structure is likely to change over time. The worst thing you can do is to restructure a little at a time. You really need to make your cuts, get them behind you, and then get some stability in the organization so that it can function again.
Key questions for merger execution
Areas to cover when shaping the mission and structure of a newly merged organization:
- Business structure:
- What business are we in?
- How will we make money?
- How will we generate growth?
- Where are we headed as a company?
- Business systems:
- What’s our supply chain?
- What’s our sales process?
- What’s our manufacturing process?
- How will we bring products to market?
- Organizational structure:
- How will we make those systems work?
- What kind of people do we need?
- What are their goals?
- How will they work together?
6. Integrate the computing infrastructure
Make certain the entire organization can communicate and collaborate. Every organization comes with technical baggage that must be adapted to fit the new corporation. This means spending money to get the computing infrastructures working together. Integration can be a major hidden expense that’s seldom included in the cost-analysis for the merger. Even when fully funded, such projects can take time, especially if they involve significant back-end programming and the retraining of an entire staff.
The trick to merging infrastructures is to move the project forward in logical steps. Start with the email system and office automation because that’s relatively simple and standards-based. Then move to either the sales or manufacturing automation systems, depending upon which function is the most mission-critical. Warn employees that technical glitches may occur. It’s going to take time and there’s going to be some frustration. Don’t let your IT workers become the whipping boys for the merger by failing to fund and schedule the necessary technical work.