Goodstone Group's coaches have in-depth experience in mergers and acquisitions.
Our coaches have provided coaching to leaders operating in pre- and
post-M&A environments. We have provided one-on-one coaching to key leaders
of acquiring organizations and highly valued leaders of acquired companies;
leaders in pre- M&A planning stages and leaders working on building trust
in post-acquisition settings. We have also worked with leaders in turning
around flawed PMI strategy. Many of our coaches have worked with senior teams
or multiple leaders collectively responsible for all elements of M&A and
PMI.
Additionally,
several of our coaches have hands-on experience as senior leaders managing
through post-merger integration. Some of the roles our coaches have filled
include:
- COO, later made CEO, of
healthcare management firm that grew rapidly through multiple acquisitions
- President
of North American division of a global oil company and member of UK-based
global management team which acquired several smaller companies in North
America and Europe
- Global VP of Organizational
Effectiveness for a Fortune 50 financial services firm that sold its IT division to global IT
company
- SVP of Human Resources for
a large natural resource company that acquired several smaller companies
- Partner in IT services firm
acquired by global staffing company
- Director of IT Technical Support
at a large financial services firm that acquired a technology startup and a
‘white shoe’ investment firm
Below are select examples of our coaching work.
►
Key leaders within acquiring organizations
CEO of the Northwest Region
of large non-profit hospital system
This
healthcare system had recently acquired and integrated several independent
non-profit hospitals. The newly appointed Regional CEO relocated to the
hospital system’s corporate office. While a successful hospital administrator,
he had not faced the challenges of assuming a much larger executive job. In
addition, several presidents of the smaller integrated hospitals now reported
to him.
Coaching
focused on helping the leader understand the role of a senior executive and
help him develop new skills to manage and lead sophisticated leaders. The coach
also supported the leader to effectively integrate these new leaders into the
larger hospital, with particular attention to cultural issues.
General Manager of Fortune
50 global technology company
When the company acquired two smaller start-ups in Europe to build a new line of business, the GM became
responsible for running the two acquired companies as subsidiaries. The leader
wanted to maintain a ‘start-up’ culture while simultaneously implementing
corporate programs.
Coaching supported the leader to retain key talent as
well as have difficult conversations with staff that had competing views of the
integration of technology platforms. This was the company’s second attempt to
create this product line, so coaching also focused on managing CEO expectations
with respect to profit growth, and working on influence and persuasion skills
to secure support for the new strategy around the product offering. Meanwhile, the leader continued to manage key
clients and create a ‘seamless client service’ offering across multiple
regions, languages and technology platforms.
COO and potential successor
to the CEO of large retail clothing company
Having
just completed a major acquisition, the company brought in this COO to transform
the combined culture. Within days of being hired, the executive was asked to
assume direct responsibility for the nationwide sales and retail store
operation, without the opportunity to assess the organization, its structure,
and the potential for the COO role.
Although he increased sales over a two-year period, he alienated peers
on the executive committee and developed a reputation for high turnover.
With
coaching, he developed and strengthened supportive relationships and alliances
with key people in other areas of the company.
While he had already developed a committed and loyal team within his
organization, he developed awareness of his impact in senior team meetings and
strengthened existing relationships. He
became a better observer of his behavior in public settings outside of his own areas,
and was able to influence how his leadership persona was regarded in the
organization.
► Highly valued leaders of acquired organizations
General Manager and board members of global FMCG company
The
coach supported the GM & board members of the acquired company in handling
human due diligence and communicating the acquisition to the organization. The executive
team needed to create a framework for announcing the acquisition managing the
emotional response.
Coaching
supported the development of a strategic vision for a ‘family’ type culture to help
people better integrate. The executive team learned how to manage team leaders
in order to motivate and select valued employees to preserve the ‘functioning’
teams despite anticipated downsizing and layoffs.
Senior Marketing / Product
Development executive of Fortune 100 financial services company
During
the course of the coaching engagement, the leader’s organization acquired
another financial services company. The leader’s
boss moved from the parent company to the acquired company, and the leader’s
responsibilities were evaluated for continued fit in the combined entity.
The
coaching touched on issues of dealing with fear and concern among his team
about continued employment and relevance in the combined entity as well as
leading effectively during a time of tumult and ambiguity. The coach worked
with the leader to develop a rapid rapport with the new boss, demonstrating
ability to provide assistance (including help with cultural integration into the
parent company), reevaluate responsibilities and priorities, and develop
recommendations for “what is needed” in the new structure.
► Leaders in pre-M&A planning
stagesDivisional VP Sales and US
VP Human Resources of large multinational financial services firm
During
the coaching engagement, the new CEO of this firm began evaluating acquisition
candidates larger than the company, looking for a potential talent infusion
from the target company. The coach supported these two leaders as they embarked
on aligning the acquisition strategy to their respective functions.
Coaching
supported the leaders in thinking through communications and initiative
prioritization as well as how to position the talent within their teams
(including themselves) for appropriate roles in the new entity. The coach also helped the leaders improve
their influencing skills so they would have the tools to strengthen
relationships across the new organization and with new leadership.
VPs & Directors of large regional bank
The
company was set on a growth/acquisition strategy and had acquired and integrated
many companies. These leaders were responsible
for executing the acquisition strategy, including identifying targets and
planning the integration of acquired firms. Later the company was acquired by a
larger international banking company.
Coaching
helped the leaders build successful relationships within the shifting culture
as well as communicate and lead through the change. The coach supported leaders
on identifying, engaging and motivating valued employees in the acquired
companies, realizing financial synergies – including layoffs and plant closures
– and communicating with various contingencies in familiar and the unfamiliar
parts of the new organization. The leaders were able to maintain customer
relationships, while continuing to direct a strategic vision and shape the
culture of the newly integrated company.
► Leaders turning around flawed
PMI strategy
CEO and senior executive
staff of publicly traded hospital system
This
hospital chain, one of the largest in the US, had grown rapidly through
acquisitions. The CEO & senior staff needed to address a flawed process of
integrating new physicians into its local hospitals. The coaching focused on helping them
understand and realize the ramifications of the flawed strategy, as well as supporting
them, as a team, to devise a new strategy to reign in uncontrolled spending.
This needed to be balanced with not alienating physicians or causing significant
turbulence in the market.
The
senior leaders were able to gain a new perspective on the unpleasant reality of
the situation and were encouraged to address the issue rather than ignore it,
ultimately moving forward with the new approach to physician integration and management.
CEO of regional software
development company
The
company had been acquired by a larger firm. At the onset of the acquisition the
two entities had not been well integrated, then several years later the parent
company wanted to remedy that by realigning the subsidiary within the corporate
configuration. It shifted the reporting
structure so that the CEO was reporting to a new boss.
Much
of the coaching focused on better integrating the company with the parent
firm’s strategy and goals, including onboarding, interfacing with his new boss,
and enhancing his visibility within the parent company. Coaching also supported the leader in addressing
cultural differences between the parent company and the acquired firm by
developing and executing a communication strategy to pull teams together and
reorganize resources. This enabled the
CEO to rebrand and retool the product set to reflect a more contemporary and
aligned approach to the parent company’s marketplace.
► Leaders working to build
trust, bridge culture & overcome resistance in PMI environmentsSVP Operations of diversified
mining company
This
large public company had grown both organically and through acquisitions. The leader was a well-respected
geologist who had been promoted to an SVP-level operating role and was expected
to oversee the line managers in the various mines who had come from smaller
independent producers. The leader needed to repair relationships with a major
customer with whom the leader had a particularly bad encounter.
The
engagement largely centered on building honest and productive interpersonal relationships
with highly independent people who tended to respond negatively to a blatant
display of authority. Through coaching, the leader discovered they responded
well to a business partner model that was built on collaboration, influence and
problem solving.
Senior executive in the US
Division of global pharmaceutical firm
A
Japanese pharmaceutical firm decided it needed to integrate its previously
autonomous Japanese, US, and European divisions. This executive had been the
previous head of the US
division, and was now chosen to lead the integration effort.
Coaching
focused on overcoming strong distrust among the three international divisions
and eliminating the leader’s own bias toward autonomy of the three operations. Ultimately, the leader was able to help the US
employees understand the vision and benefits of the integration and diminish their
resistance to change.
► Leaders with increased
responsibility & visibility due to M&A
Senior Executive of a global
private equity firm acting as Interim CEO of acquired company
After
the private equity firm acquired another company, this senior executive took on
the role of interim CEO until an external hire could be made. The leader needed
to juggle the competing demands of an operational role during a time of great
uncertainty and economic challenge with his existing role in Portfolio
Management.
The
coach worked with him to communicate more effectively and exert a greater
executive presence. With coaching the leader learned to take a stance with leadership,
set direction, and challenge and discipline people while motivating them. Additionally,
the coach supported the executive in handling a smooth transition to the new
CEO.
Division President of
Fortune 100 electronics company
This
leader transitioned from being the CEO of a medical technology company to serving
as the Division President of a much larger international electronics company
that acquired the medical technology company.
Coaching
focused on developing and building relationships and alliances with other areas
of the company. The leader learned to
manage the polarity of being supportive to his unit and also supporting
corporate goals—two dimensions that were often at odds. For example, in the fight for profitability
and market share, the larger organization focused more on standardization. The
leader gradually developed trusting relationships in the larger organization
and was able to communicate more effectively.
Not only was he able to get support for the uniqueness of his unit, but
he also heightened awareness of the importance of his smaller unit’s
maintaining dominance in its niche and for its impact on the overall medical
technology offering for the entire group.
►
Teams & multiple leaders
responsible for PMICEO and Board of Directors of
major Japanese glass manufacturer
The
Japanese glass company acquired a larger European glass manufacturer. The company wanted to keep the European
management team in place and shift the focus of its operations from Japan to Europe.
The
challenge was to create a hybrid corporate culture which would combine the strengths
of both companies and cultures. Coaching focused on how to instill a more
Western outlook among the CEO and Board of Directors, focusing on enhanced communication
between Japanese and non-Japanese employees. The company was able to integrate
all levels of operations and introduce western business practices in the
Japanese work place.
Management team & CEO
of European bank
This
bank sought acquisition in order to satisfy regulatory requirements, gain new skill
sets, attain necessary knowledge to maintain market positions in core markets
and enter into new products areas.
To
support the integration effort, the coach helped the team to identify and
develop key relationships and effectively utilize the new power structure and
operational systems. The coach worked
with the CEO as he became CEO of the new company, and coached the management
team around integration issues and opportunities. The coach also worked with analysts to
capture operational synergies and roll out new products and programs.