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From Deal to Integration: Turning Theses into Objectives

Posted On : 06th June 2023

From deal to integration: Turning theses into objectives

by Sebastian Amieva

M&A isn’t easy, even if the deal parameters and synergy hypotheses appear superb. Most of us are familiar with the research from Harvard Business Review that stated that 70-90% of all transactions fail, or perhaps have read Robert Bruner’s excellent “Deals from Hell” (UVA shoutout!) on M&A failures; but fewer of us may know that even the rumor of a potential transaction can result in significant dips in measurable productivity metrics (sales to employees ratios, gross profit margins, etc.).

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One of the most common areas of failure and friction in any transaction occurs during post-merger integration (PMI) – the concrete opportunities to realize synergies and value creation initiatives. Often, we see fault points arise during the handover of a deal thesis from the deal team over to the integration team (if one even exists at a given firm). It is a period that can be fraught with miscommunication and insufficient clarity among stakeholders, resulting in siloed efforts. Usually, the immediate reaction of the functional leads who typically staff the integration team is to laser in on the potential impact on their particular function. It’s certainly understandable – the HR lead wants to know how HR can be successful, and the Corporate IT lead wants to know how IT can be successful, but what we often see as a result is a disjointed integration effort and plan to achieve the deal thesis.

Here are a few ideas and guidelines we suggest to better link the deal thesis with integration objectives:

Determine short-term vs. long-term objectives

After the deal thesis, leaders need to start thinking about short-term and long-term integration objectives. Some initiatives may require immediate attention, others are areas and efforts that you won’t be able to do within a short period of time and will need to be de-prioritized. This is where leadership decision-making during integration shines through.

Develop the governance structure

Any PMI leader is going to have a lot of disparate functions across their respective organizations, but too frequently we see that they remain siloed, and information is being pulled up from the functional teams to the integration management office (IMO) rather than pushing down guidance from the IMO to the functional teams.

To better link the deal thesis to integration objectives, we recommend an IMO that actively sets goals as related to wider objectives, participates in key project activities, resolves issues, and acts as senior management’s surrogates in leading the overall program.

Assign metrics to measure integration

At a basic understanding, we recommend integration leaders track three types of metrics:

  1. Synergy metrics – These are the deal thesis metrics around revenue and margins.
  2. Operational metrics – These are customer churn and retention.
  3. Milestones Metrics – These are system integration, product roadmap, and finalization.

Balance business-as-usual with integration

Any integration will require a daunting degree of effort and coordination across the newly combined companies, and far too frequently we see these complex activities siphon attention away from running the day-to-day business. Seasoned integration teams are well-aware of the importance of balancing the business-as-usual commitments with ongoing integration activities; and will frequently echo AlixPartners’ flagship PMI principle of “Continuity” as key to their ongoing success. It’s too easy to lose the forest for the trees during integration.

Source: AlixPartners

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Define the integration experience

Successful integration teams need to define how the populations of both companies are going to perceive the integration. Companies must consider cultural alignment in the PMI process, and they should capitalize on the natural inflection point that it creates to do so. In a sense, deals give management a window of opportunity to reset and reorient the soon-to-be combined organization around a new, unified purpose and narrative to ensure that the company emerges with a re-engaged workforce – provided leadership thinks through this process systematically and proactively.

Management teams will need to consider how the two organizations will mesh and how each population might see the integration roll out from their perspective (which can vary drastically). They will need to weigh such considerations as to whether the two companies are global or have workforces concentrated in a particular country (in which case organizational cultures can be more ingrained and specific). Management will also need to consider whether the companies involved in the deal have long legacies of operations or are in vastly different industries.

Conclusion

Value leakage occurs in deals all too frequently because integration planning often loses sight of the deal thesis. We hope some of these points can be used as guideposts to ensure that the deal thesis is always at the forefront of integration planning.

At SCD Advisory, we offer a range of services from deal preparation to transaction execution. Contact us at info@scdadvisory.com to find out more.

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Pierre Briand preview image
Written by: Pierre Briand, Founder & Managing Partner

Pierre brings 25 years of expertise in advising entrepreneurs, with a deep background in management and financial advisory across corporate finance, private banking, and wealth management. His extensive experience includes numerous sell-side and buy-side deals, IPOs, mergers, integrations, and consulting projects for both small businesses and large global corporations. As an established and highly regarded advisor, Pierre is known for his savvy, trusted guidance.

Pierre’s career began in Australia before he moved to France, where he worked with prominent business figures like billionaire François Pinault on M&A deals within the Artemis group. He then founded BC&D, an M&A small-cap firm in Paris, where he managed corporate advisory services across Europe, covering both origination and execution. His work extended beyond transactions, advising entrepreneurs on wealth management strategies to optimise the transition from business ownership.

In Paris, he held advisory roles at the Belgium Family Office (DeGroof) and as a senior private banker and head of the HNW segment for France at JP Morgan. Returning to Australia in 2015, Pierre established the ANZ subsidiary of a UK-headquartered M&A firm, executing 9 M&A transactions across Australia. In 2019, he launched SCD Advisory, where he has since completed 35+ transactions, earning multiple global awards in M&A advisory from 2021 to 2024. Notably, he was named ‘Deal Maker of the Year’ by Finance Monthly in 2022 for his sale of Hypothesis to McKinsey & Co.

Pierre graduated from the Business of Troyes in France and has a postgraduate in Corporate Finance from the University of Caen. He is also a certified Financial Analyst and a Graduate of the Australian Institute of Company Directors (GAICD). Pierre further enhanced his credentials by completing the “Leading Professional Services Firms” program at Harvard Business School. His track record and accolades highlight his dedication to excellence and his exceptional skill in delivering successful outcomes for his clients.

Pierre is French, Australian citizen, Overseas Citizen of India. He is married and has two children. He is passionate about international travel, gastronomy, sailing and golf. As an experienced sailor, his motto in business and life in general is: “We cannot direct the wind, but we can trim the sails”

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