Transformation - Before, During and After the Merger ...
Mark Lindley (CAHRI. MCIPD)
?? C-Suite Human Resources & People Leader ?? Organisational Transformer & Designer
The merger and acquisition (M&A) environment involve strategy, negotiation and valuation; it’s the integration of assets with the primary objective of stabilising the current business and then building up future firm value. At its basics, a successful M&A process entails achieving progress with as much velocity as can be tolerated to maximise strategic value, whilst also minimising as much as possible any distractions or disruptions to the existing operations of all involved businesses. Strong leadership is needed at all stages of the merger to achieve this balance.
M&A Preparation
A successful M&A involves asking key questions and developing an integration plan early in the process. The questions that need to be asked, discussed, and answered, through the due diligence and review stage of an M&A include:
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What the above questions highlight include multiple HR implications. Collectively, these translate to the overarching question, “Does the HR leadership and their teams possess the capacity, support, experience, or at times gravitas, to be heard and lead the change process?” Furthermore, can they focus on the drive for change while at the same time have a ready mechanism secured to deal with any future unforeseen challenges in the implementation - post deal?
Saying this, as within all M&A activity, one can plan process and operations down to an (almost)fail-safe detail; however, the one area which at times can delay, distract or divert the activity of those trying to achieve the targeted objectives are the people!
People and the M&A Process
Throughout the M&A process listening to what people are saying and not assuming all is known is a fundamental early adoption. The change management environment needs to be promoted and embedded into the integration and transformation at very early days - ideally seconds after the “ink is dry” on the agreement.
One of the constant themes in the merger process is managing the behavior and emotion of the people who are experiencing the transformation and usually this is at the senior manager to leadership level. This can exhaust and strain the planning as there is an absolute need to carefully manage these behaviors and emotions so such leaders can do what they need to do, which is to Lead. This can be difficult when both must happen in synchronisation, i.e. the merger process needs to hit timelines and in parallel, leaders need to be full engaged.
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Often, investment and resourcing are made within the ‘structural’ aspects of M&A and the associated transformation the organisation will under-go; however, investment in the support and resources that managers and leaders need as they set up their new teams for success, prior, during, and post-merger is also essential.
Post M&A
Leaders traditionally execute the plan for post-merger very well, with great enthusiasm and all the actions and activities required. Often though, once the process commences, they simply fail to deliver the cadence required for sustainable and ongoing success. Shortfalls in expectations and ‘performance failure’ in the post-merger environment are often related to the absence of strict monitoring of the post-implementation strategy. Thus, as time progresses, it is critical for leaders to continually evaluate progress towards meeting specific goals and objectives.
Conclusion
Managing change during an integration must be designed and targeted as to the specific organisation’s culture. Knowing that change always starts at the top tier, each leader must be personally involved in defining the many facets of what the new company will look and feel like prior, during and post M&A. Such actions will ultimately define the future success of the merger.
About Mark Lindley
An accomplished C-suite Human Resources Leader with extensive local, regional and international experience; progressive and innovative, a true developer of People & Culture. Having led large scale organisational transformations and HR blueprint implementation across the Middle East, Asia Pacific and North America; successfully delivering results within high impact environments.
Bringing demonstrated strategic and operational skills, combined with a strong capability to cultivate, manage and lead local and geographically dispersed teams. Setting clear vision and at the same time having a very hands-on ‘role up the sleeves’ approach. Operating within complex matrix and diverse cultural structures across top tier multi-nationals, established homegrown, through to new market starts.
Has a highly commercial focus on sustainable growth of an organisation and their people; a proven leader, trusted advisor, respected coach, mentor and HR entrepreneur.
M&A Integration Expert | 46 Integrations | Trained 1,700+ Executives | Human-Centric Integration Strategies | Advisor to Global Leaders
1 年Thanks for sharing Mark Lindley (CAHRI. MCIPD).
Thank you for sharing - very insightful! Even the best M&A strategy and planning can be great but if not all involved understand the 'why' of the deal, if they do not know what is expected of them, if they do not feel understood and supported ... then there is a high risk of engagement slipping and massive delays or missed opportunities to create shared value. Managing change and culture in mergers and acquisitions is not separate from other topics to be addressed, but is also part of all the decisions you make, the symbols you project and the issues or challenges you focus on throughout the process (even in the very early exploratory phase, long before the deal is signed). Fascinating and challenging subject!