Friday, August 20, 2010

From This Day Forward

As in a marriage, successful coupling has far less to do with the excitement and mechanics that lead to happily-ever-after and more to do with people themselves. Each brings utensils, habits, personal issues, dreams and expectations to the union. By the time both parties say, “I do”, the idea is to ride off into the sunset to begin a long, loving life together--or as the analogy lends itself, integrated as a profitable company equipped for the challenges that lie ahead.

The importance of human due diligence is vastly underestimated in pre and post-acquisition activity. Failure to thoroughly do so is the primary contributor to two-thirds of newly-blended companies losing market share in the first quarter after the deal. Culture clashes, misaligned processes, confused employees and lost productivity are common occurrences that weaken the structure, brand, customer relationships, ability to innovate and morale of employees, offsetting or eliminating anticipated gains. Even the best organizations can get stuck in neutral when executing new company standards, or miscalculate the stamina required to bring about quick, effective and sustainable change.

All reasons not to try going it alone. Very talented and capable executives are caught off-guard by the many human complexities of integration, but a focused contracted expert not hindered by the demands of running the business can be one of the acquisition's greatest assets. As a neutral third party, the expert can change the "we" and "they" to "us" quickly and beyond the rhetoric, help navigate through the pain of hard decisions with clear-eyed rationale, provide objective insight and feedback on where the organization is stuck, and diplomatically work through difficult political and interpersonal issues from a base of industry knowledge that aligns the new company with the needs of the market.

Assuming business integration mechanics are in place or scheduled, Blueberry’s experience suggests a few additional key steps:
  • Priority #1 is to protect business. Competitors are aware of acquisition turmoil and may be quick to swoop in to leverage their relatively-stable position with your accounts, so make sure customers are contacted (by a neutral party, not someone on the payroll) to gain insight into how the acquisition is perceived and whether any business is at risk.
  • A clear understanding of the purpose and implication of the acquisition helps define the new organizational culture and its goals, which is an important factor in communicating to employees and customers. Caution: Over-statements and commitments are common during deal-heat; back up what you claim to be, right now.
  • A false assumption is that the adopted culture is always the one of the acquiring company, but the financial acquirer may not necessarily be the one setting the tone for the new organization. Again, the purpose of the deal points the way here and in other business considerations.
  • Management from both entities will fight to retain their position. Individual styles, skills gaps, business philosophies, ideas about organizational structure and other business issues should be assessed carefully but quickly and efficiently in order to make decisions that prevent a ground swell of misunderstanding. If not, the pattern will be repeated in the ranks and the business will suffer.
  • Skills must be separate from personality and tenure when considering the future needs of the company. While an obvious statement, its surprising how often these personal factors blur decisions.
  • Don’t assume the acquirer’s resources are better or more advantageous than those of the acquired company. Tread carefully when discarding long-standing processes that may be outdated and no longer valuable in the new model—expecting people to discard and replace what they have spent years creating can generate negative undercurrents and opposing camps that can linger for years and disrupt business.
  • Finally—and very importantly—dig deep and objectively into human issues at the top and throughout the ranks to uncover reaction patterns to change: Areas of friction or conflict, rumors, trust levels, resistance, bottlenecks that slow down workflow, how communication and direction is received and carried out, decision-making methods, perceived authority thresholds and who’s in the dark. These are the messy areas that derail progress in bringing the two entities together and should not be overlooked.  
There are no shortcuts to making one company out of two. The question is whether to extend confusion, slow progress and even losses over a longer period of time or assign priority status to resolving the people issues that lead to acquisition success.


 

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

So What Happens If...

Today's tweet from Nouriel Roubini, professor of economics at New York University’s Stern School of Business:

“V shape recovery is dead; anemic U growth is baseline; probability of a double dip is now 40%; and a L shaped near depression is possible in US/Eurozone/Japan.”

If 2008 taught the food industry anything, it was that leaders must not wait for conclusive evidence before incorporating critical dimensions of preparation and urgency into their business. It taught us to be ready to discard plans, behaviors and processes that are outliving their purpose, replacing them with a contingency designed for a new economic scenario. And by all means, execute flawlessly -- tolerance for shooting and missing is extremely low.

Blueberry believes that the success with which organizations change to cycle through the current turmoil and uncertainty will distinguish the winners from the losers in 12-18 months from today, tops. Our advice to c-leaders:

• Develop plans that work with the flow of the tide rather than against it. Avoid denial.
• Maintain a close eye on economic tailwinds and headwinds that impact our industry -- specifically, your business. React quicker.
• Find the new white spaces of customer and cost saving opportunities. They are probably not where they once were.
• Keep three contingency plans at your fingertips. Design them now.

2008 caught our industry unprepared. Applying what was learned, leaders do not have to be caught again.