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M&A Courses - What's Missing

Guest post by: Robert Whipple

Article Overview: Some famous courses on Mergers and Acquisitions are seriously flawed because they cover only the mechanical parts of the process: such as due diligence, negotiation, legal aspects, asset disposition, etc. They fail to include the cultural aspects and the people issues in the course. I was astonished today to review the guts of a high-priced multi-day course that did not contain any references to the very things that cause many M&A efforts to fail. This article explains the details.

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M&A Courses - What's Missing

Many educational institutions run courses on Mergers and Acquisitions. Typically these training events run several days and cost thousands of dollars to attend. I was looking at a catalog of courses by one prestigious training group today and read about a course offering. It was striking how all the technical and financial details of the process were dealt with in the course, but the people side of the equation was essentially ignored, at least in the description of the program.

Let's take a look at the items listed in the catalog for this course on Mergers and Acquisitions:

Benefits of the course



1. Learn how to evaluate prospects

2. Find out what the other company is worth

3. Set the starting offer for the negotiation

4. Learn the legal, tax, and accounting implications of a merger

5. Find out how to structure the deal and negotiate to the best advantage

Items you will learn



1. How to conduct due diligence

2. Anti-trust, legal, and accounting conventions

3. Why select a diversification strategy in the first place

4. Understanding the contracting process

5. How to negotiate

6. Screening candidate organizations for acquisition

7. Financial evaluation

On paper, this sounds like a good course, but wait a minute. Where is the culture mentioned? Where are the PEOPLE? Getting disparate organizational cultures to work well together is the single biggest hurdle in any M&A situation. This is not a "soft" topic. Lost productivity during a M&A process can, and often does, cripple the merged entity.

There have been numerous studies on the failure rates of mergers. For example a 2005 study by Caxton Growth Partners came up with a range of 50% to 80% failures. Most historical studies peg the failure rate in excess of 50%. The common reason given for failure is the inability of the two cultures to form a seamless entity, thereby undermining the viability of the merged unit. Yet in this expensive multi-day course by a highly respected training organization, the issue of culture does not even make it onto the agenda. It baffles me.

The disconnect between what is needed for successful M&A efforts versus what organizations focus their time and energy on is the reason for the low success rate. How about revising the course line up to read something like this?

1. Legal, analytical, and financial elements of M&As

2. Valuation and due diligence processes

3. The negotiation process and confidentiality issues

4. Identifying cultural differences and creating strategies to unify the groups

5. Dealing with the human trauma of M&As so that the best people do not walk

6. Having a realistic integration plan that takes human acceptance into account

7. Evaluating the progress of cultural integration

8. Leadership issues in managing a joined entity

A course like that would be getting at the true success factors for a merger or acquisition. I suppose there are some courses that do have a balanced view, but I think the omissions in this one high-profile course are indicative of a blind spot some respected training organizations have on the nature of merged groups.

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Home > Leadership > Robert Whipple > MA Courses Whats Missing >
Article Tags: acquisition, blind spot, culture, Merger, missing piece, myopic

About the Author: Robert Whipple
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Robert Whipple is CEO of Leadergrow Incorporated, an organization dedicated to development of leaders. He has spoken on leadership topics and the development of trust in numerous venues across the country. He is author of three leadership books: The Trust Factor: Advanced Leadership for ProfessionalsUnderstanding E-Body Language: Building Trust Online, and Leading with Trust is Like Sailing Downwind.  His ability to communicate pragmatic approaches to building Trust in an entertaining and motivational format has won him top ranking wherever he speaks. Audiences relate to his material enthusiastically because it is simple, yet profound. His work has earned him the popular title of The TRUST Ambassador.  Mr. Whipple has been published in several Leadership and Training journals including Leadership Excellence Magazine and T+D Training + Development Journal. He is a frequent contributor to The Rochester Business Journal. He has been named one of the top 50 thought leaders on the topic of leadership development by Leadership Excellence Magazine and one of the top 100 Thought Leaders on Trustworthy Business Practices by Trust Across America.  Mr. Whipple has a BSME, MSChE, MBA and is a Certified Professional in Learning and Performance (CPLP). Contact at www.leadergrow.com  or 585-392-7763

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