Justin Monahan, Otak
In the December 2024 edition of this newsletter, Erich Merrill and I cowrote an article discussing considerations of buying and selling a business from the perspectives of the buyer and the seller. As a follow-up, this article takes a closer look at integration activities that follow an acquisition and merger to outline practices that have proven effective and those that have not.
This article addresses integration considerations regarding strategic alignment, cultural integration, organizational structure, human resources, technology systems, operations, marketing and communication, legal and compliance matters, and financial integration. These considerations do not necessarily apply to the parties until the integration occurs, hence their being labeled as “post-transaction” activities. However, if parties only try to deliberately address these integration considerations after a deal is struck, then that is too late for any meaningful action to occur. To achieve successful integration, the parties must think about what the end state of integration will look like from the start of the transaction. This can be difficult to fully appreciate because often there are only key leaders from each of the companies involved in critical pieces of the initial negotiations or even deal-making. After a deal is struck and the parties get into the weeds of integration in earnest, there will be additional input from all different corners of each company that will need to be managed. But intentionally structuring the end state of integration into the fabric of the deal itself will help keep everyone focused on the shared vision that excited the companies’ leaders in the first place.
Strategic alignment
When negotiating a deal, through-thinking—conceiving of the deal all the way through to the resulting performing merged entity—prompts the establishment of a clear vision: Why are we joining forces? What is the strategy driving each company? Is the shared goal to achieve economies of scale, geographic expansion, vertical integration, or diversification, or is the goal to capture specific innovations or intellectual property? Further, moving beyond visionary statements to developing critical success factors and key performance indicators (KPIs) can not only help the parties quantify transactional considerations such as earnouts but also provide a bright line for the full team to clearly understand future success. Without strategic alignment to provide the bedrock for the parties to weather all the ups and downs of integration and business, the integration process risks becoming fragmented and ineffective.
Cultural integration
A challenging and often underestimated aspect of post-merger integration is cultural integration. Cultural misalignment can lead to disengagement, turnover, and reduced productivity at the employee level and failure to achieve business objectives at an organizational level. As mentioned above, one hindrance to cultural integration is that often only need-to-know key leaders are involved in deal discussions. In target entities—those being acquired—these need-to-know leaders are often founders or principals who have defined the culture for many years. These leaders have built a team around them that appreciates this culture. If the acquisition serves as a retirement path or other exit for these key founders and principals, the resulting entity and culture can quickly take on a character that differs drastically from what the team is used to.
While the confidentiality of sensitive deal discussions is often necessary, the parties need to plan for rapid and deep engagement with tier-two and tier-three leaders in the target firm. This engagement may include identifying cultural similarities and differences between the parties and defining a desired culture for the resulting entity. To support these goals, training and change-management programs should also be discussed in advance. Mergers between companies with vastly different working styles, communication norms, and management philosophies require careful cultural due diligence and proactive measures to bridge gaps.
Organizational structure
Each integration process must establish a new organizational structure that reflects the needs of the merged entity. This includes redefining leadership roles, reporting relationships, and determining who has decision-making authority. It may also mean streamlining layers of management to eliminate redundancy. Although there can be pain points in doing that, a clear organizational structure helps ensure that employees understand both their roles in the merged entity and how decisions will be made.
Human resources and talent management
Successful integrations need to resolve uncertainties about human resources and talent management. Employees are the core assets of any organization, and managing human resources during a merger is critical to maintaining morale and retention. The key founders and principals know the fate of their roles if exit schedules or retention provisions are directly negotiated into the deal, which may be critical if they are tied to earnouts structured over a certain number of years. But the tier-two and tier-three leaders discussed earlier are going to be the future of the company, and the parties should think early and often about making these leaders not just culturally comfortable but also financially comfortable. Integrating parties may consider promptly introducing a new class of bonus, buy-in, or other compensation structures to immediately capture the attention and loyalty of these emerging leaders.
Each party will need to understand the impact that the resulting benefits, performance management systems, and policy and procedure changes will have on the resulting entity’s employees. Prompt and transparent communication, coupled with a deep functional understanding of how these changes will impact staff, will help mitigate the risk of losing valuable employees during the integration.
Technology systems
Always an interesting challenge is combining two technology infrastructures. Two approaches are to leave the target firm alone or to transition them over to the acquiring firm’s systems over time. After all, the target firm built the business using their own familiar enterprise resource planning (ERP), customer relationship management (CRM), and other core platforms. It could be disruptive to the staff to change the way they do their jobs. I have seen this disruption when target firms take the immediate “phase in” approach; the process gets messy, territorial, confusing, and ultimately inefficient.
On the other hand, the parties will need to deliberately evaluate what works best given the scale of the transaction. While prompt and thorough technology transitions can be technically complex and costly, they may be ideal for ensuring business continuity and enabling long-term synergies. Another consideration is, of course, cybersecurity. A clear technology, data, and user onboarding process for the target entity could be the clearest path to ensuring there are no gaps in the resulting entity’s cybersecurity platform.
Operations
Operational integration focuses on combining the day-to-day functions of the two companies to improve efficiency and customer service. Depending on the nature of the businesses involved, this requires leaders in each firm to identify overlapping processes and design streamlined workflows; harmonize supply chains, logistics, and procurement functions; consolidate manufacturing or service delivery operations where feasible; align quality assurance and control standards; and implement joint customer service models. These analyses will be impacted by a number of external considerations as well, such as the terms of supplier contracts with ongoing engagements, the nature of their work with each firm, and the expectations of customers. This is often a longer-term project that fits in with ongoing efforts to consistently review policies, procedures, and workflows to provide the best experience for staff and clients or customers alike.
Marketing and communication
Depending on the nature of the transaction, tremendous effort may go into marketing and communication. How the merged entity presents itself to the market and communicates with stakeholders can significantly impact its reputation and market position. The market and stakeholders will wonder: Did the target entity just supply the acquiring entity with a significant new capability, services line, or market position? How are the target’s key founders or principals going to function as ambassadors of the resulting brand going forward, capitalizing on the personal brand they have built in the industry under the new flag? Similar to the IT and systems integration described above, we have seen both gradual and prompt integration strategies in this regard. Which option is best for a given transaction will depend on the depth and breadth of the target firm’s brand. It is crucial for the parties to align early and consistently on branding decisions to keep the flow of the branding tied to their strategic evolution. In addition, clear and consistent internal communication helps reduce uncertainty and foster employee engagement throughout the integration process.
Customers, suppliers, investors, and other stakeholders need assurance that the merger will bring added value rather than disruption. External branding, marketing, and communication in regard to market presence is important, but you cannot beat picking up the phone or making time to meet key clients, customers, and industry partners to describe the enhanced capabilities of the resulting firm. And every effort should be made to ensure continuity of service and fulfillment during the transition. If clients are already spooked just by the news of a transaction, the parties certainly do not want to validate their fears with a dropped delivery.
Legal and compliance matters
Legal and regulatory considerations must be carefully addressed during integration to avoid liability and ensure compliance with laws in all operating jurisdictions. A robust due diligence process can reduce the future burdens for the merged entity in administering contracts, liabilities, and obligations. If the transaction has strong intellectual property components, or is contingent on regulatory approvals, these threshold considerations must be tirelessly documented, confirmed, and indemnified in the deal process. There are always plenty of administrative details to attend to, such as updating legal entities, licenses, and registrations.
Financial integration
Combining financial operations is vital for reporting accurately, budgeting effectively, and realizing cost synergies. This may translate into integrating accounting systems and financial reporting frameworks and agreeing on the accounting treatment of each aspect of the resulting business. Financial integration becomes particularly important if key earnouts are staked to the KPIs established as part of the negotiations. It will not do the parties any service to haggle through detailed KPIs and a multi-part earnout strategy if they immediately walk into a stumbling block over a detail of revenue recognition or cost allocations among parts of the firm. Sound financial integration will provide the foundation for measuring merger success and ensuring clean deal administration.
Conclusion
Integrating two companies after a merger or acquisition is a delicate and intricate process that requires attention to strategic, operational, human, technological, legal, and financial dimensions. Each area discussed must be thoroughly addressed for the integration to succeed. Effective post-merger integration is not just about merging assets but about building a cohesive, unified organization that is greater than the sum of its parts. Companies that approach integration with a structured, strategic, and people-centric mindset are more likely to unlock the full value of the deal and position themselves for long-term success, and limit distractions, hiccups, and mishaps along the way. ♦