Potential Pitfalls with Mergers & Acquisitions
Mergers & acquisitions are a viable way for the company
to grow faster. But by no way is this route foolproof. Some of the things that
can go materially wrong with M&A are below, so do your homework and prepare
to avoid these established pitfalls accordingly.
The
skills needed to build a small stand-alone company are somewhat different from
the skills needed to develop a larger company through M&A operations. You
want to make sure that everyone has prior experience in dealing with
M&A-related problems such as integrating firms, teams, financing, etc.
within "Newco" and someone who knows how to run a much larger
business, usually with more scalability procedures and controls. Note, the position
of the CEO must shift as the organization scales.
2. MERGING TEAMS & CULTURES
Let's
face it, mergers are very much like marriages.
You are merging people, personalities and cultures. You are individuals, personalities and
cultures mixing together. And, marriages, sometimes resulting in divorce, do
not always go as expected. But in the M&A context, "divorce" is
usually much more difficult to do, meaning you are stuck with these problems,
whether you like it or not. So it's vital that you do your homework to ensure
that senior management has specific responsibilities and can gel together as a
new team. "we"us"us"them,"them “we
3. BIG COMPANY LETDOWN
Sometimes,
entrepreneurs believe that selling to and working for a large company would fix
all their issues, because big corporations have larger budgets, etc But big
businesses offer as many headaches as they do solutions, having lived through
two sales to billion-dollar businesses. Compared to the light pace of
start-ups, with many levels of bureaucracy and policy makers, large
corporations run like a snail. And, usually, the forces that are at the top
concentrate on much larger fish to fry" Which implies that your start-up
would most likely get "lost" within a large corporation, unless you
have a well-documented agreement outlining their promised help in advance.
4. MISSING FINANCIAL TARGETS
Let's say
you have two $5MM businesses coming together.
It is reasonable to estimate that the combined business could do $10MM
in revenues together, if not more from the cross-selling of the respective
products. But, the reality is, you have
a higher chance that revenues are only $7-$8MM when the dust settles. Why?
Because key employees may become disgruntled by the merger and leave the
company. Or, the target was overly
optimistic on the health of their sales pipeline, etc. So, build in a cushion for situations like
these, and make sure the pro forma economics still work for you.
5. EARNOUTS NOT PAYING OUT
Earn outs
are payments made at some point down the line to selling buyers, long after the
transaction is closed, after the selling company meets some negotiated
financial or output target. If you are a buyer, earn outs can work well, as
most buyers realize, earn outs very seldom pay out to sellers as much as the
sellers hope for. Sellers commit to terms that assume that the earnings will be
reached, and when it is not a bleak reality sets in. So if you're a seller, no
matter how well written you think your earnings are as you expect things will
most certainly not pay out. So, take more cash in hand upfront, where you can.
And even though a zero earn-out is reached, be satisfied with the deal
Conclusion
This is
not meant to be a catch-all list of potential pitfalls, but it's simply some
high-level stuff to keep in mind when going down the M&A path to protect
yourself. Get a good advisor to help you with your negotiations and a good
lawyer to make sure it is properly documented.
Reference
DEEB, G. (2018). Potential Pitfalls With Mergers
and Acquisitions. Retrieved from Alley Watch: Potential Pitfalls With
Mergers and Acquisitions

Mergers and acquisitions pose great scope for growth of companies through expansion and diversification. The company can mitigate the risks associated with it by prudent planning and compliance management.
ReplyDeleteCosts of merging can be overwhelming but suitable measures can help reduce it.
Well researched blog with perfect analysis 👍👍
ReplyDeleteGood topic with proper analysis. As per the article what i learned potential pitfalls stemming from their optimistic inflation assumptions.
ReplyDeleteIts a different topic as well as the good article. Please follow the words limitation and if conclusion part is be simple is better
ReplyDeleteWhen combining two companies into one it should be matched and fit the organization culture if not organization couldn't reach to the goals.
ReplyDelete