articlecavern.com articlecavern.com
Search:    Main Page :> About Us :> Security & Privacy :> Terms of Use :> Add Url :> Add Article   
Get 3 way links
 

Medical Care

Culture & Art

Government & Politics

Internet & Computers

People & Communities

Technology & Science

Games & Play

Business & Services

Children

Eating & Drinking

Relationship & Lifestyle

Outdoor & Sports

Garden & Home

Shopping & Auction

Recreation & Entertainment

Issues & News

Hotels & Travel

Finance & Investment

Fitness & Health

Academics & Education

Jobs & Careers

Self Healing

Vehicles & Automotive

Estate & Realty


 

  Main Page › Business & Services › Change Management
   
 

A Successful Organizational Marriage: Cultural Integration is the Secret to a Successful M&A

   

Author: MB Page

Merger &Acquisition Overview

Mergers and acquisitions (M&As) are a significant activity for many organizations. Yet most mergers are not successful, primarily because the merger of two organizations is actually a merger of individuals and groups. Buono and Bowditch, authors of The Human Side of Mergers and Acquisitions: Managing Collisions Between People, Cultures, and Organizations.

A merger means that two previously separate organizations are combined into a third new entity. An acquisition involves the purchase of one organization by the new parent firm. M&A activity is characterized in the academic literature as an organizational marriage, complete with courtship. Cultural integration is often linked to a metaphor of a family where a parent who has departed is replaced by a step-parent. These relationship and familial metaphors illustrate the significant impact M&A activity can have on organizational life and its members.

Unfortunately, few M&As make any effort to integrate different cultures and workforces, even though M&A activities bring about significant change involving employees, organizational entities, systems, shareholders, customers, and many other stakeholders.

Companies initiate M&As for numerous business objectives, ranging from achieving market entry to gaining proprietary technology. Companies that want to expand strive to acquire businesses that enhance their product portfolio and secure additional employees with specialized skills. But too many enter into M&A activity without recognizing the impact on the organization and the overall impact on the human element within the two merging companies. M&A activities that are improperly managed can result in lost revenue, customer dissatisfaction, and employee attrition.

Honor is their Due

The traditional M&A approach has included financial and legal evaluations of the acquisition target with little attention paid to the people and culture. Successful M&A strategies acknowledge and honor the importance of organizational culture as a critical element in the long-term integration success.

Cultural compatibility can have significant impact on the ultimate success of M&A activity. A number of credible cultural assessment tools, such as culture surveys and facilitated focus groups, are available and should be utilized. As Dr. Edgar Schein points out, the challenge of assessing an organizations culture is more a matter of surfacing assumptions, which will be recognizable once they have been uncovered. Identifying cultural compatibility on such core values as corporate ethics and quality are important considerations in the assessment of the M&A. The impact of not assessing the degree of cultural similarity might have significant consequences for the combined firm, as cultural tensions and clashes between merging organizations are a common cause of combination related difficulties (Buono and Bowditch).

Cultural Integration is one aspect of the integration process that is often overlooked. Its necessary to initiate cultural assessment during due diligence This cultural due diligence assessment should be made before the deal is finalized, to avoid culture clashes that diminish the potential of the deal.

Placing Cultural Due Diligence on the M&A Agenda

Conducting culture due diligence allows the acquiring company to assess cultural compatibility with the target firm. Cultural compatibility and all of its ramifications need to be understood completely to ensure a successful M&A. The literature on M&A activity used familial metaphors to describe mergers and acquisitions. This is powerful language that further emphasized the significance of organizational members experience as a result of an M&A. One internal M&A expert encouraged companies to be capable of articulating the key facets of cultural compatibility to the acquiring company. Identifying the must haves of cultural compatibility is like assessing marital compatibility; some compatibility issues are negotiable, while others could be considered knockouts.

Executives who worked on a high-profile computer-technology merger participated in cultural due diligence activities. They made the results from their culture surveys available as the selection process for executives of the combined firm began, and the survey results became a component of the selection process. They also introduced fast-start workshops to welcome the thousands of new employees to the acquiring company, and articulated the approach to working together.

Unfortunately, because M&A practitioners often fail to link integration with pre-combination activities such as due diligence, they neglect questions of organizational fit in the early stages of acquisition analysis.

When the management of a company decides to merge with or acquire another company, it checks the financial strength, market position, management strength, and other health indicators of the other company. Rarely checked, however, are the cultural aspects: the companys philosophy or style, its technological origins which might provide clues to its basic assumptions, and its beliefs about its mission and future. (Schein, 1997, pp. 268-269)

The greatest barrier to successful integration is cultural incompatibility. According to Edgar Schein, The poor performance of many mergers, acquisitions, and joint ventures can often be explained by the failure to understand the depth of cultural misunderstanding that may be present. Research on cultural factors is the least likely to be undertaken as part of due diligence.

Integration planning, which takes cultural factors into account, should coincide with the initiation of due diligence. When these two are strongly linked, new corporate knowledge can facilitate consolidation.

Four-Step Approach to Cultural Due Diligence

Researchers have identified the following steps for conducting cultural due diligence:
1.Integrate cultural criteria early in the merger discussions.
2.Prepare due diligence teams with cultural criteria.
3.Have the due diligence teams collect data on culture.
4.Use tools to assess potential culture fit and issues.

How companies choose to deploy this model depends on their own structure and culture. Acquirers are encouraged to operate under the assumption that cultural differences exist, and they must actively work to manage these differences throughout the integration process. Companies are also encouraged to create joint projects that allow the teams to build success together. One large telecom company that actively engaged in M&A activity, tasked one of its HR professionals with strengthening the companys acquisition process by educating executives and due diligence teams on culture.

Exploring Cultural Integration

According to academic and business thought-leader John Kotter, The biggest chore associated with an acquisition of any size is to merge the two (or perhaps more) different cultures. If this part of the transformation is ignored or handled poorly, problems will surface for years, maybe decades. The importance of an organizations culture, particularly as a risk factor in M&A integration, cannot be underestimated. Researchers at Harvard Business School found that firms that managed their culture realized a nearly seven-fold increase in revenue, compared with a 166% increase for firms that did not manage culture.

Yet specific, focused efforts to integrate different cultures and workforces remain the exception rather than the norm in M&A activity. Poor cultural compatibility continues to be cited as a factor in M&A failure. Cultural signs of the so-called merger syndrome include a we versus they relationship, with a natural tendency for people to exaggerate the differences rather than the similarities between the two companies. (Marks & Mirvis, 1998)

The key to a successful Done Deal, is selecting a culturally appropriate model of integration.

An organizations culture consists of the underlying values, beliefs, and principles that define an organizations management system, as well as the firms management practices and behaviors that reinforce those principles. (Denison, 1990)

A more detailed definition of organizational culture comes from Dr. Edgar Schein, who defines it as the pattern of basic assumptions a given group has invented, discovered, or developed while learning to cope with external adaptation and internal integration challenges. The assumptions, says Schein, should be taught to new members as the correct way to perceive, think, and feel in relation to those problems.

Keys for Successful Cultural Integration

Successful cultural integration begins with an early understanding of the cultural differences and processes that exist between the acquiring and target companies. Stages of culture clash include employees reevaluating the way they do things, followed by viewing their way of doing things as superior to the other company. This is followed by attacking the others way of doing things while defending their own. For a successful cultural integration to occur, each company should be coached to look at how the practices of the other company might be beneficial in the new entity.

Conducting cultural due diligence early in the M&A process helps prepare the integration team as well as the companies leadership for the efforts that are required to join together two distinct organizations.

M&As emerge from a managerial approach that values process, structure, formal roles, and indirect communication over people, ideas, and feelings. (Buono & Nurick, 1992). Despite the importance of successfully integrating an organizations people and culture into a new entity, the published literature is filled with reports pointing to limited involvement from HR professionals in the early stages. This restricted involvement, in turn, limits HR professionals ability to effectively influence the process. Unfortunately, legal and financial issues are given precedence over the possible traumas that might be experienced by organizational members impacted by M&A activity.

Another strategy for facilitating cultural integration is through the use of transition teams. Transition teams (internal practitioners prefer the term integration teams) that involve employees from both the target and the acquiring company ensure a successful deal completion. Consider the transition team a lever to share cultural intelligence between the two companies.

To improve M&A cultural integration efforts, the following action steps must be taken.

Conduct extensive due diligence surveys; look at the cultural values of potential leaders being retained from the target company; evaluate the underlying cultural factors and values that determine long-term success for the M&A; and determine the key facets of cultural compatibility important to your company.

Conclusion

Business leaders and M&A practitioners have rich opportunities to humanize what is often treated by companies as merely a business and financial transaction. Organization development practitioners have the tools and resources necessary for the successful navigation of all kinds of change management projects, including M&A activity. Any M&A should be viewed as an activity good for both the organization and for the employees rather than as a time of employee uncertainty and insecurity. The focus on the human dimension of M&A will significantly impact the bottom-line success. It will also result in less organizational turmoil, and ultimately determine the overall success of the M&A transaction. All practitioners working on the M&A have the opportunity to serve as role models by working collaboratively from the outset to realize the possibilities of a successful M&A.

Author Bio:

MB Page

Beth Page, owner of Dream Catcher Consulting, is a published author, international consultant and speaker who is dedicated to reintroducing people to their greatness. Through her work coaching, consulting, and speaking, she is an advocate, leading the revolution of alive people who are connected to their essential self.

Background Beth founded Dream Catcher Consulting in 2004. Previously, she held Organization Development and Human Resources positions with such firms as JDS Uniphase, Export Development Canada, and OmniMark Technologies Corporation. Beth also worked at Carleton University, Texas Tech University and Western Illinois University.

Education Beth has a Master of Science in Organization Development from Pepperdine University, as well as a Master of Science Degree from Western Illinois University in College Student Personnel. She is a licensed consultant in the Hogan Personality Assessment, and is certified as an Emotional Intelligence Coach (EQ). She also completed the Advanced Human Resources Management program at the University of Toronto, a Certificate in Management Development from the School of Business at Carleton University, and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology from Carleton University.

Professional Affiliations and Accomplishments A Canadian Human Resources Professional (CHRP), Beth holds memberships in the British Columbia Human Resources Management Association, the British Columbia OD Network, and the Organization Development Network of Ottawa. She also serves on the Board of Directors of the Canadian Association of Professional Speakers. In 2005, Beth was the keynote speaker at the HR and Capital Management Conference in Cyprus. She also has been a featured speaker at a number of venues in Canada. As an author, Beth wrote Done Deal: Your Guide to Merger and Acquisition Integration, which was based on her personal experience in post-merger integration of a number of high technology acquisitions as well as two years of academic research with top M&A experts in the field. She is a contributing expert author to Awakening the Workplace, and is co-authoring a book on personal authenticity and workplace leadership, also scheduled for publication in 2006.

You can also reach this article by using: change process business management, business change management process
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Have you Ever Thought of Becoming a Work-at-Home-Mum (WAHM)?
 
Cross Cultural Presentations
 
Digital Printing Company
 
More Change Demands More Leadership
 
Web Developers?Sell More Websites in the Next Week Than You Have in The Last Year?
 
Why Tormenting your Prospects and Customers Works
 
Making Home Business - Scam or Gimmick?
 
What to Look for in a Watch Wholesaler
 
How to Turn Your Promotional Products Expense Into a Profit Center
 
Preparing A Solid And Useful Car Wash Business Plan
 
 
 
 
 

CEOs of Life

Embrace your ADD qualities and don't be afraid to be different! - Jennifer Koretsky
 

Network Marketing in One Easy Step

Network marketing, also known as multi-level marketing (MLM), can be a very successful way to build ... - Charles Fuchs
 

Real Estate Marketing - 10 Ways to Improve Your Marketing This Year

In the spirit of New Year's, I've put together this guide to help you prepare for a new year of mark ... - Brandon Cornett
 
 

How To Find The Crowd In Your Niche Market

The largest problem with getting leads involves working the hardest way possible Vs. working the eas ... - Abe Cherian
 

How Is the LEGAL SYSTEM Dishing Out JUSTICE in Your Town?

Cheap LEGAL Counsel can be your most expensive investment as a business owner. It's imperative that ... - Don Monteith
 
 
Main Page :> Security & Privacy :> Terms of Use
© 2008 www.articlecavern.com All Rights Reserved.