RESEARCH REPORT
M&A: Does your talent approach fit your deal?
5-MINUTE READ
May 14, 2021
RESEARCH REPORT
5-MINUTE READ
May 14, 2021
The M&A landscape has changed. Beyond market share and cost synergies, the value of M&A increasingly lies in transformation and growth.
Companies can’t afford to delay transformation for the sake of integration, as it freezes their ability to innovate while competitors surge ahead. Deal approaches need to change, allowing organizations to transform, and talent to flourish during integration.
Using deal intent as a guide, C-suite leaders can move beyond the one-size-fits-all approach that no longer works. We see three major deal intents requiring different approaches to talent, with advanced analytics technologies bringing out more value in each of these deal types.
These “in with the new” deals are meant to expand a company’s portfolio—from new products and brands, to new capabilities, to new geographies and markets.
Company leaders generally integrate support functions but take a light hand in coordinating innovation and go-to-market capabilities. Usually, the acquired entity brings something special to the table in these areas and leaders want to preserve it.
The acquired company’s structure, reporting lines and governance are largely kept the same to minimize change and preserve the target’s culture.
In designing new teams, employees are not separated from their roles. This allows for swift business stabilization, with less focus on comprehensive transformation.
In pure consolidation deals, wholesale transformation is not the end goal. Instead, the focus is on achieving greater scale and the benefits that come with it—for example, cost reduction.
But some deals are a hybrid, where certain aspects of a deal will be treated as consolidation while other parts of the business might be viewed with a transformational lens.
At the leadership level, talent selection occurs across both companies. For all other levels, the organization is designed with incumbents in their roles. This provides quick stabilization while enabling transformation at the top of the organization.
Transformation deals are created for wholesale change—from positioning, to growth, to new capabilities.
A global consumer goods company made a major acquisition of a high-growth, leading beverage business.
While 58% of executives in an Accenture Strategy survey reported that technology is already allowing them to achieve targets and capture value faster, many leaders don’t use their digital tools to full advantage. A mindset shift—gravitating toward purposeful experimentation and scenario testing—is necessary.
We’ve seen companies design combined organizations in half the time it used to take, leveraging a suite of analytics techniques. And the additional insight and flexibility these tools provide can be invaluable in an uncertain world.
People analytics tools allow for real-time, central management of a complex organization design and selection process, increasing speed to value while providing pinpoint accuracy.
In addition, the use of analytics enables insight-driven decisions at every major step of the organization design process, from a better understanding of costs to addressing organizational agility.
In our experience, companies that use M&A analytics technologies to their full advantage, designing a new organization to maximize transformation, give themselves a speed and accuracy advantage versus organizations that don’t.
We’ve seen companies design combined organizations in half the time it used to take, leveraging a suite of analytics techniques.
Create a roadmap as part of your integration planning. With the intent of the deal in mind, prioritize tasks by business value and complexity. Drive the talent agenda from your next-generation operating and organization model.
In bringing together two cultures, seek to understand the barriers and enablers for both companies, then leverage the enablers. Engage leadership with a pragmatic, quantifiable culture change roadmap to institutionalize the process.
Be data driven and leverage analytics techniques and AI not just to come more prepared for Day One, but also as the integration progresses. Doing so will give you a pulse on the sentiment of your people or can help diagnose where transformation gets stuck, providing both greater speed and certainty.
Talent can’t be an afterthought in M&A. It’s an essential part of any new combined organization. Leaders who know its value are determined to use a tailored approach—and in the process, enable a better organization.