Mergers and acquisitions are integral to corporate growth strategies. However, the failure rate (a staggering 70% is an oft-cited statistic) casts a shadow. The key culprit? Incompatible corporate cultures. But despite the low rate of success, two facts are irrefutable:
Companies must beat the odds to succeed. While people are indeed an organization’s greatest asset, they can also be a significant liability (reflected in the financial statements as the overall employment cost, including the cost of all related benefit plans). If employees continue to perform well, they can drive future organizational performance; if they don’t, they can be barriers to such improvements.
Therefore, HR must be brought under the deal “tent” as soon as possible during the merger process.
Drawing on WTW’s involvement in over 2,000 M&A and private equity transactions annually, a blueprint emerges—HR must embrace three strategic directives:
In our work on more than 2,000 M&A and private equity transactions each year, we stress how critical it is for HR teams to focus on the following imperatives:
Early on, HR must meet with the leadership that put the deal together and get the answers to four big questions; the answers will enable HR to quickly understand the deal priorities and challenges and therefore determine the resources and expertise necessary to meet leadership’s expectations regarding HR’s contribution to the people, cultural and functional areas.
It’s important to remember that “people” refers to who does the work and “culture” refers to how the work gets done. HR must provide a framework for senior management to understand the people and cultural issues within a broader business context. This is essential for two reasons: it directly shows how the people issues affect the entire organization and immediately gets the cultural issues on the table.
We often see less experienced acquirers get confused and equate people and cultural issues as HR issues to be solved at the functional level rather than the leadership level. This is a huge mistake that, if not corrected, lays the foundation for many of the people and cultural problems that typically occur in deals. Since these are business-critical issues, the dialogue relating to them must start at the highest level in the organization — the leadership level — and remain there until there is a complete understanding of how all the major people and cultural issues will be handled.
Many mergers are time-constrained, as the demands of integrating the companies are set against the backdrop of basic business needs: to continue to win new business and to avoid losing either customers or talent, or both, to competitors that step up their activities in each of these areas. Added to this is another complication: Many issues need to be tackled, often simultaneously, but oftentimes without the breadth and depth of data that go into typical day-to-day decision-making.
Therefore, to be truly effective, it’s critical HR professionals prioritize issues quickly so that decisions can be made with the best information available, enabling the transaction to progress toward its goals.
The three categories of HR priorities in M&A
Immediate strategic priorities:
Immediate HR functional priorities:
Deferred HR issues:
With the right HR talent employed early in the process, long before the integration phase, many people and cultural problems evident in deal failures can be identified and mitigated or eliminated completely.
If people and cultural issues are addressed at the outset, acquirers increase the probability of both closing the deal and successfully integrating, thereby delivering the value that the combined business expects from doing the deal in the first place.
Reprinted with permission from the September 8, 2023 issue of BenefitsPro. Further duplication without permission is prohibited. All rights reserved