An Excerpt from "The Employee Handbook for Navigating Mergers and Acquisitions"
by Mitchell Lee Marks
Editor’s Note: Several factors figure into the eventual success or failure of mergers and acquisitions—including the depth of due diligence, the financial details of the transaction, the process through which integration decisions are made and implemented, and even the timing of the deal. Our personal experience—and what we consistently hear from our seminar attendees—also points to the human and cultural dynamics impacting the achievement of a deal’s financial and strategic goals. That’s why we recently published “The Employee Handbook for Navigating Mergers and Acquisitions.”
Below is the second in a series of brief excerpts from the handbook. Learn more details about the book HERE. Request your FREE copy, learn more about pricing, or place your order through the M&A Leadership Council; please call our offices at 214-689-3800.
Navigating the Transition
- Why the deal is being done: Leadership can share the strategic intent of the partners and provide a clear rationale for why this combination makes good business sense.
- How the M&A process works: Leadership is not permitted—due to government regulations—to tell you many specifics or details early on, but can educate you on the M&A process (and that may be one reason you’ve received this book).
- What to expect going forward: Leadership cannot make promises about job security or what might happen to your work team—remember, they still have more questions than answers themselves—but they can tell you things like how they intend to manage the integration and how decisions affecting people will get made.
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About the Author: Mitchell Lee Marks is Professor of Leadership at the College of Business at San Francisco State University and leads the change management consulting firm JoiningForces.org. Over the past 25 years, he has been involved in over 100 mergers and acquisitions as a researcher or advisor. He is the author of seven books on organizational change—most recently the second edition of “Joining Forces: Making One Plus One Equal Three in Mergers, Acquisitions and Alliances”—and has published articles in the Harvard Business Review, MIT Sloan Management Review and other prominent practitioner and scholarly journals. Dr. Marks is a member of the Advisory Board of the M&A Leadership Council. He can be reached at [email protected]