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HR’s Role in Merger and
Acquisition
Prepared by:
Aakash Goswami
Chirag Kanani
Gurpreet Bhardwaj
Pratik Negi
Shalini Kaunshal
PGP/SS/IIPM/ISBE/09-11/HR
HR’s Role in Merger and Acquisition:
Issues and Concerns:
Mergers and acquisitions fail if they are not in conformance with the strategic objectives. A
study carried out by McKinsey & Co. concluded that some companies focus too much on cost
cutting while neglecting day-to-day business, and thereby profits suffer. A merger may also
have been done for just glory than confirming the strategic objectives. An executive’s ego gets
satisfied when he buys the competition, especially when he gets a big bonus for the deal.
Bankers, lawyers and other assorted advisers who can earn big fees from clients engaged in
mergers are biggest motivators for these deals.
Economies of scale thought of at the time of deciding the merger can become elusive. The
organization may become too fuzzy and unmanageable. Mergers may also be driven by the fear
of Globalization. The step may be defensive when the management thinks that it is better to
acquire before getting acquired.
Some mergers and acquisitions have also failed because of differences in the top management.
It is a result of lack of clarity, at the time of decision of merger or acquisition, of the future
strategic steps to be taken. It is most important that mergers and acquisitions are backed with
strategic objectives and not driven by the hype or selfish motives of the management. It needs
proper corporate governance on the part of management. Talent retention becomes very
important in the wake of merger or acquisition. The company needs to ensure that the best
talent remains in the company. For that it needs to have proper plan at the time making
decision of merger or acquisition.
It also needs to ensure that the culture does not change drastically or if it needs to be changed
there is proper change management in place. Also, the top management needs to form a clear
common vision at the time of making the decision for merger or acquisition.
Introduction:
Mergers and acquisitions have gained importance in recent times. Business consolidation by
large industrial houses, consolidation of business by multinationals operating in India,
increasing competition amongst domestic companies and competition against imports have all
combined to spur mergers and acquisitions activities in India.
Mergers and acquisitions take the form of
�Open offers
�Substantial sale of equity
�Sale of distressed assets by financial intermediaries
�Schemes of arrangement by companies, etc.
The last 2 years have seen a spur in the number of merger deals and also the average size of the
deal has been increasing year after year. To give a perspective, the month of August saw 41
deals worth $ 2.17 billion.
The historical data shows that roughly two-third of the big mergers and acquisitions fail as the
value of stock declines in the stock market. The value may increase immediately after the
announcement of merger; it starts declining soon after the market comes to realize that the
assumptions behind the merger were flawed.
We will have a look at few of the live examples from the industry and look at the reasons as to
why do the mergers fail.
Importance of Valuation
A valuation of a target company or business in needed to decide the maximum price that a
purchaser should be willing to pay for control. The seller responds to the offer that a bidder
makes, based on the bidder’s valuation. However, a seller also could make his own valuation of
a shareholding or business unit, as the minimum cash price that would be acceptable or as the
target price to achieve.
There are many mergers that have failed due to difference in the Valuation techniques used by
different companies. A recent case in the Indian context is the HLL-TOMCO merger that took
place in the 1992.
A reason why there was large hue and cry was raised:
a) The swap ratio that was derived and finally agreed upon was that for 2 shares of HLL, the HLL
shareholders will get 15 shares of TOMCO. This was deduced on the basis of three valuation
methods. Weightings were given and then a value was derived at. The valuation methods that
were used were the yield method, the asset value method, the market value method.
b) And, an independent committee arrived at a value of 5:15 swap ratio as against 2:15 as was
agreed upon by the parties in merger. This was the reason behind the deal falling out.
The Matrix-Stride merger plan was also called off due to non agreement on the valuation front
of the company.
The Jet-Sahara Fallout (absence of strategic planning)
The major reasons due to which the much talked about aviation industry felt flat on its face
were:
a) The policy related to mergers and acquisition in the aircraft industry did not clearly specify
the terms of transfer for airport infrastructure. The guidelines though clear on parking bays and
landing slots, did not specify the status of aircraft hangars, check-in counters, cargo
warehouses, passenger lounges and other such airport facilities.
b) Also, Jet Airways enthusiastically overvalued Air Sahara, and later wanted a discount on the
original price (20 to 25 percent). This is typically a case of overvaluing a company whose
business model was not robust.
Glaxo-Wellcome-Burroughs (HR issues)
Glaxo and Wellcome-Burroughs decided to merge in 1996. The Indian arms however couldn’t
merge in the last seven years because of high pay differential between workers of Glaxo and
Wellcome in India. The workers of Wellcome were offered a one time compensation of Rs. 2
lakhs in 1998, which they refused. Further the VRS scheme launched by the firm evoked very
tepid response. Since 1997 the firms have been working as independent subsidiaries in India.
ABB-Flakt Merger in India
This is a case of a domestic acquisition of Flakt by ABB in India pursuant to the cross-border
(Swiss-Swedish) merger that happened at their parent level. Analyses reveal that valuations of
both the companies were not done meticulously and corresponding swap ratio was biased.
Synergy perceived was hardly achieved. The gain on merger was less than the capital market
(BSE SENSEX) growth. Shareholders of erstwhile Flakt India lost heavily. Some of the reasons
why Mergers & Acquisitions have failed in recent times are as follows :-
1. No Guiding principle
As rudimentary as this sounds, we often see merging companies fail to develop a set of guiding
principles linked to the merger's strategic intent. These principles should get at the very logic of
the transaction—is the merger absorption of one company into another or a combination
designed to take the best of both? Perfection may not be possible, but these principles will
ensure that all decisions drive the combined entity in the same direction. In a best-of-both-
companies transaction, for example, one principle might be: "Combine IT organizations by
selecting the most up-to-date systems and deploying them across the combined entity."
2. No ground rules
While this sounds similar to point number one, ground rules for planning provide nuts-and-
bolts guidance for how the planning teams should act as they begin to put the face of the
merged entity on paper. These rules should include processes for how decisions are to be made
and how conflicts should be resolved.
3. Not sweating the details It's hard to believe, but detailed post-close transition plans can be
lacking even when two companies are working hard and have top-level leadership closely
engaged. Why? To some extent, this reflects the daunting complexity of any integration. It can
also, however, reflect the culture of the companies and a resistance to detail and top-down
accountability. The acquirer may be suffering from acquisition fatigue, management distraction,
and reluctance to share information, or a simple unwillingness to follow a methodical decision
timeline.
4. Poor stakeholder outreach All relevant stakeholder groups—both internal and external—
must receive communication about the transaction, early and often. While employees (see sin
number eight), customers, and regulators get the bulk of the attention, there is a long list of
additional stakeholders such as communities, suppliers, and the like who also need care and
feeding. Management must strive to understand how these groups view the deal and how they
might react to changes such as new pricing, the elimination of vendors, and adjustments in
service and personnel.
5. Overly conservative targets Management must set aggressive targets from the start. This
helps reinforce and clarify the transaction's guiding principles and strategic intent, specifically,
how hard the integration teams need to push for cost savings and revenue growth. Most
companies tend to focus on one or the other—but neglect to place adequate emphasis on both.
Experience demonstrates that management never gets more in synergies than it requests. So,
build your targets with some stretch and expect that your people will find a way to get there.
6. Integration plan not explicitly in the financials We have seen merging companies build
detailed integration plans only to stop short of driving them into the combined entity's
operating financials in a clearly identifiable manner. Institutional memory is short and the plans
are often redone on the fly (see sin number nine). While the integration plan will evolve, you
need to create financial benchmarks that can be tracked.
7. Cultural disconnect Bringing disparate groups of people together as one company takes real
work and represents an effort that is often largely overlooked. Culture change management is
not indulgent; it is a critical aspect of any transaction. However, simply acknowledging the issue
or handing it off to specialists is not enough. Management must set a vision, align leadership
around it, and hold substantive events to give employees a chance to participate. Detailed
actions and well articulated expectations of behavior connect the culture plan to the business
goals.
8. Keeping information too close There is a natural hesitancy to share information, and current
regulations put pressure on what management can tell the organization without going to public
disclosure. However, absent real facts, the rumor mill will fill the void. Tell employees what you
can. Also, tell them what you can't tell them at the moment, why, and when you will be able to
do so.
9. Allowing the wrong changes to the plan
All the hard work and despite meticulously avoiding sins one through eight, some companies
still miss the mark. The popular trend toward empowered line managers and decentralization
carries the risk of handing off carefully designed plans to new decision makers who are not
steeped in the balances and considerations that made the plan viable in the first place.
Following handoff, every company needs clear decision rights about who can change the
agreed-upon plans, under what circumstances, and with what approvals.
The Formation of M&A &Hr Challenge:
HR Issues in M&A:
 Retention of Key employees
 Compliance with applicable laws
 Alignment of compensation & benefit plans
 Cultural fit
 Employee communication
Different Phases of M & A in HR:
 Pre- M & A phase : assessment of differences, role clarity, management styles
 Post-M&A phase: designation for employees, compensation & PMS, relation between
management & trade unions
HR Activities in the Phases of M & A:
Successful Examples of M&A:
In an ideal merger, the newly created entity pools the best features of the two merging
organizations. A well planned process built on the foundations of an open, honest and
consistent communication strategy can pave the way.
Mergers and acquisitions have become a common phenomenon in recent times. A merger of
the size like HP-Compaq has implications for the workforce of these companies across the
globe. Although the merging entities give a great deal of importance to financial matters and
the outcomes, HR issues are the most neglected ones. Ironically studies show that most of the
mergers fail to bring out the desired outcomes due to people related issues. The uncertainty
brought out by poorly managed HR issues in mergers and acquisitions have been the major
reason for these failures.
The human resource issues in the mergers and acquisitions (M&A) can be classified in two
phases the pre-merger phase and the post merger phase. Literature provides ample evidence of
difference in between the human resource activities in the two stages: the pre-acquisition and
post acquisition period. Due diligence is important in the first phase while integration issues
take the front seat in the later. The pre acquisition period involves an assessment of the cultural
and organizational differences, which will include the organizational cultures, role of leaders in
the organization, life cycle of the organization, and the management styles. The mergers often
prove to be traumatic for the employees of acquired firms; the impact can range from anger to
depression. The usual impact is high turnover, decrease in the morale, motivation, productivity
leading to merger failure. The other issues in the M&A activity are the changes in the HR
policies, downsizing, layoffs, survivor syndromes, stress on the workers, information system
issues etc. The human resource system issues that become important in M&A activity are
human resource planning, compensation selection and turnover, performance appraisal
system, employee development and employee relations.
M&A activity presents a different set of challenge for the human resource managers in both
acquiring and acquired organizations. The M&A activity is found to have serious impact on the
performance of the employees during the period of transition. The M&A leads to stress on the
employee, which is caused by the differences in human resource practices, uncertainty in the
environment, cultural differences, and differences in organizational structure and changes in
the managerial styles.
The organizational culture plays an important role during mergers and acquisitions as the
organizational practices, managerial styles and structures to a large extent are determined by
the organizational culture. Each organization has a different set of beliefs and value systems,
which may clash owing to the M&A activity. The exposure to a new culture during the M&A
leads to a psychological state called culture shock. The employees not only need to abandon
their own culture, values and belief but also have to accept an entirely different culture. This
exposure challenges the old organizational value system and practices leading to stress among
the employees. Research has found that dissimilar cultures can produce feeling of hostility and
significant discomfort which can lower the commitment and cooperation on the part of the
employees. In case of cultural clash, one of the cultures that is dominant culture may get
preference in the organization causing frustration and feelings of loss for the other set of
employees. The employees of non-dominating culture may also get feelings of loss of identity
associated with the acquired firm. In certain cases like acquisition of a lesser known or less
profitable organization by a better one can lead to feelings of superiority complex among the
employees of the acquiring organization. In case of hostility in the environment the employees
of two organizations may develop “us” versus “them” attitude which may be detrimental to the
organizational growth.
The uncertainty during the M&A activity divert the focus of employees from productive work to
issues like job security, changes in designation, career path, working in new departments and
fear of working with new teams. The M&A activity leads to duplication of certain departments,
hence the excess manpower at times needs to be downsized hence the first set of thoughts
that occur in the minds of employees are related to security of their jobs. The M&A activity also
causes changes in their well defined career paths and future opportunities in the organization.
Some employees also have to be relocated or assigned new jobs; hence the employees find
themselves in a completely different situation with changes in job profiles and work teams. This
may have an impact on the performance of the employees. Research has found that at least
two hours of productive work per employee per man day is lost during the M&A activity in the
organizations. The increased political processes that may be underway in the organizations to
sustain the importance of the various individuals and departments will add to the confusion.
The human resource systems vary across organizations owing to the differences in the
organizational culture, sectoral differences and national cultural differences. For example if the
compensation in the acquired firm is lesser compared to the acquiring firm, the acquisition will
raise employee expectations (for the employees of acquired firm) of a possible hike in
compensation which may not be realistic. On the other hand if the compensation level of
employees in acquiring firm is lower the employees may press to have equal compensation
across all the divisions of the firm. The pay differential can act as a de-motivator for the
employees of acquiring firm and may have long term consequences. The compensation issues
may also involve legal angle. Two cases in the Indian context are important which underline the
importance of legal issues related to compensation in M&A activity.
The first case involving Hindustan Lever Limited acquiring TOMCO, the employees in TOMCO
enjoyed better terms and services compared to the HLL employees. The HLL employees argued
that if TOMCO employees are allowed to work on their original terms and conditions, two
classes of employees will come in existence. Since both the set of employees now belong to
same firm, a case of discrimination will arise against the employees of HLL. However the court
supported TOMCO employees in the process. The second case involves merger of Glaxo and
Wellcome-Burroughs who decided to merge in 1996. The Indian arms however couldn’t merge
in the last seven years because of high pay differential between workers of Glaxo and Wellcome
in India. The workers of Wellcome were offered a one time compensation of Rs. 2 lakhs in 1998,
which they refused. Further the VRS scheme launched by the firm evoked very tepid response.
Since 1997 the firms have been working as independent subsidiaries in India. Compensation
differences need to be rectified by the acquiring firm so as to maintain the morale of acquired
firm employees and to retain them. The compensation structure among the organizations may
also differ creating troubles, for example one of the firms may have performance based pay
while other may have higher component of fixed pay. Hence the differences in compensation
structure and performance appraisal systems also need to be rectified so as to bring equity in
the human resource systems and to treat employees at the equal level.
Another practical problem is differences in the grading or organizational structures in the
systems. Since the organizational structures are different designations for the employees are
used, during the integration of acquired organization the acquiring organizations need to
develop a mechanism to remove the differences in the grading systems bring them at equal
level, as many a times the compensation is related to the grade of employee in the
organization.
The employee relations issues gain more importance in the acquisitions of manufacturing units
in India. The power equation between management and trade unions is bound to change with
the acquisition. The acquiring management also needs to keep track of number of unions in the
workplace and equations between them as many Indian manufacturing units have multiple
unions. Hence comprehensive analysis of trade unions operating in the plant should be done.
This will require study of management-union equation, employee contracts, political linkages of
the unions, compensation related clauses, number of trade union and dynamics between the
unions.
The impact on the employees can be divided into categories of psychological trauma, increased
workload, survivor guilt and stress. The reaction of the employees can vary from anger to
dejection and depression. The process of merger can have inbuilt psychological and social
threats which should be identified like exodus of managers due to the perceived job insecurity.
There is also fall in the morale, commitment and loyalty. The merger can lead to depression and
impaired performance. The dissimilarity in the cultures can produce the feelings of hostility and
significant discomfort, which impact on the commitment and cooperation on the part of
employees. The cultural difference also leads to counterculture feelings where employees tend
to completely reject the dominant culture of the organization. The impact of cultural shock is
significant and long lasting on the employees. The initial shock is followed by employees making
their own perceptions based on values and past experiences. The more dissimilar the culture is
higher will be the cultural shock. The likely reactions as noted by studies are anger fear, denial
frustration and depression which leads to altered behavior, reduced productivity, stress, illness,
accidents , conflicts and a total lack of commitment to make merger work. The feeling of
political back stabbing adds to the psychological trauma.
Managing M & A
Clearly defined communication strategy during M&A plays an important role in removing the
employee fears and kill rumors floating around in the organization. The organizations need to
reach their employees before the press as the employees will have feelings of getting cheated.
Studies show that communication strategy that involves senior managers of the acquired
organizations work well. Involving other employees who are trusted by the employees for
instance trade union leaders are also helpful. The employees meeting in small groups so as to
discuss their concerns, fears and positive feelings also helps to lessen the stress on employees
of acquired firm. The group meetings seem to help because many-a-times employees are
reluctant to come out and speak their concerns, whereas in groups where everyone shares
same set of feelings to an extent, it becomes easier to come out with the common set of
concerns and fears. This also provides confidence to employees that the new management is
willing to listen to their concerns and feelings, building an atmosphere of mutual trust.
The transition period also becomes crucial from communication point of view. In case of
lengthy transition period the employee stress increases, the best strategy in this period is to
convince the employees that they are part of new organization and their concerns will be taken
care of. The transition period can also be used to improve communication with the employees
of acquired firm. Improved communication will help to better understand each other’s cultures
and practices. Firms can also use this period to analyze the human capital of the acquired firm
and define their possible roles in the new organizations. The transition period provides ample
opportunity to design the new organization, explain the new roles to the employees, plan
synergies and train the employees as the new role. This will make the integration process easier
for the acquiring organization.
The communication aspect being very important should be handled carefully by the human
resource department. The communication should provide precise information to the
employees, providing any piece of information which is unreal can lead to rumors and
counteract. The communication should be sufficient enough to answer the queries and worries
of the employees. The first set of information should be related to their future jobs, this will
help to lessen their worries related to job security. The communication shouldn’t involve false
promises which may counteract later. The communication can be through trusted and credible
employees of the acquired company and trade unions can be involved in the process too.
Acquisition strategy of GE Capital
The GE Capital uses a successful model called “Pathfinder” for acquiring firms. The model
disintegrates the process of M&A into four categories which are further divided into
subcategories. The four stages incorporate some of the best practices for optimum results. The
pre-aquisition phase of the model involves due diligence, negotiations and closing of deals. This
involves the cultural assessments, devising communication strategies and evaluation of
strengths and weaknesses of the business leaders. An integration manager is also chosen at this
stage. The second phase is the foundation building. At this phase the integration plan is
prepared. A team of executives from the GE Capital and the acquiring company is formed. Also
a 100 day communication strategy is evolved and the senior management involvement and
support is made clear. The needed resources are pooled and accountability is ensured. The
third is the integration phase. Here the actual implementation and correction measures are
taken. The processes like assessing the work flow, assignment of roles etc are done at this
stage. This stage also involves continuous feedbacks and making necessary corrections in the
implementation. The last phase involves assimilation process where integration efforts are
reassessed. This stage involves long term adjustment and looking for avenues for improving the
integration. This is also the period when the organization actual starts reaping the benefits of
the acquisition. The model is dynamic in the sense that company constantly improves it through
internal discussions between the teams that share their experiences, effective tools and refine
best practices.
Acquisition strategy of Cisco
The acquisition strategy of Cisco is an excellent example of how thorough planning can help in
successful acquisitions. After experiencing some failures in acquiring companies, Cisco devised a
three step process of acquisition. This involved, analyzing the benefits of acquiring,
understanding how the two organizations will fit together – how the employees from the
organization can match with Cisco culture and then the integration process. In the evaluation
process, Cisco looked whether there is compatibility in terms of long term goals of the
organization, work culture, geographical proximity etc. For example Cisco believes in an
organizational culture which is risk taking and adventurous. If this is lacking in the working style
of the target company, Cisco is not convinced about the acquisition. No forced acquisitions are
done and the critical element is in convincing the various stakeholders of the target company
about the future benefits. The company insists on no layoffs and job security is guaranteed to
all the employees of the acquired company. The acquisition team of Cisco evaluates the
working style of the management of the target company, the caliber of the employees, the
technology systems and the relationship style with the employees. Once the acquisition team is
convinced, an integration strategy is rolled out. A top level integration team visits the target
company and gives clear cut information regarding Cisco and the future roles of the employees
of the acquired firm. After the acquisition, employees of the acquired firm are given 30 days
orientation training to fit into the new organizational environment. The planned process of
communication and integration has resulted in high rate of success in acquisitions for Cisco.
HR’s control:
• Train managers on the nature of change
• Technical retraining
• Family assistance programs
• Stress reduction program
• Meeting between the counter parts
• Orientation programs
• Explaining new roles
• Helping people who lost jobs
• Post merger team building
• Anonymous feedback helpline for employees
Conclusion:
 HR role both tactical & strategic in M&A
 Open mindset what works well
 Maintain synergy with merged or acquired firms
 Remove “us vs them”
 Managing grapevine by effective communication strategy
 Ensuring confidentiality & Knowledge
 Proper counseling and career assistance

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Shrm report ( hr role in m&a)

  • 1. HR’s Role in Merger and Acquisition Prepared by: Aakash Goswami Chirag Kanani Gurpreet Bhardwaj Pratik Negi Shalini Kaunshal PGP/SS/IIPM/ISBE/09-11/HR
  • 2. HR’s Role in Merger and Acquisition: Issues and Concerns: Mergers and acquisitions fail if they are not in conformance with the strategic objectives. A study carried out by McKinsey & Co. concluded that some companies focus too much on cost cutting while neglecting day-to-day business, and thereby profits suffer. A merger may also have been done for just glory than confirming the strategic objectives. An executive’s ego gets satisfied when he buys the competition, especially when he gets a big bonus for the deal. Bankers, lawyers and other assorted advisers who can earn big fees from clients engaged in mergers are biggest motivators for these deals. Economies of scale thought of at the time of deciding the merger can become elusive. The organization may become too fuzzy and unmanageable. Mergers may also be driven by the fear of Globalization. The step may be defensive when the management thinks that it is better to acquire before getting acquired. Some mergers and acquisitions have also failed because of differences in the top management. It is a result of lack of clarity, at the time of decision of merger or acquisition, of the future strategic steps to be taken. It is most important that mergers and acquisitions are backed with strategic objectives and not driven by the hype or selfish motives of the management. It needs proper corporate governance on the part of management. Talent retention becomes very important in the wake of merger or acquisition. The company needs to ensure that the best talent remains in the company. For that it needs to have proper plan at the time making decision of merger or acquisition. It also needs to ensure that the culture does not change drastically or if it needs to be changed there is proper change management in place. Also, the top management needs to form a clear common vision at the time of making the decision for merger or acquisition. Introduction: Mergers and acquisitions have gained importance in recent times. Business consolidation by large industrial houses, consolidation of business by multinationals operating in India, increasing competition amongst domestic companies and competition against imports have all combined to spur mergers and acquisitions activities in India. Mergers and acquisitions take the form of �Open offers �Substantial sale of equity �Sale of distressed assets by financial intermediaries �Schemes of arrangement by companies, etc.
  • 3. The last 2 years have seen a spur in the number of merger deals and also the average size of the deal has been increasing year after year. To give a perspective, the month of August saw 41 deals worth $ 2.17 billion. The historical data shows that roughly two-third of the big mergers and acquisitions fail as the value of stock declines in the stock market. The value may increase immediately after the announcement of merger; it starts declining soon after the market comes to realize that the assumptions behind the merger were flawed. We will have a look at few of the live examples from the industry and look at the reasons as to why do the mergers fail. Importance of Valuation A valuation of a target company or business in needed to decide the maximum price that a purchaser should be willing to pay for control. The seller responds to the offer that a bidder makes, based on the bidder’s valuation. However, a seller also could make his own valuation of a shareholding or business unit, as the minimum cash price that would be acceptable or as the target price to achieve. There are many mergers that have failed due to difference in the Valuation techniques used by different companies. A recent case in the Indian context is the HLL-TOMCO merger that took place in the 1992. A reason why there was large hue and cry was raised: a) The swap ratio that was derived and finally agreed upon was that for 2 shares of HLL, the HLL shareholders will get 15 shares of TOMCO. This was deduced on the basis of three valuation methods. Weightings were given and then a value was derived at. The valuation methods that were used were the yield method, the asset value method, the market value method. b) And, an independent committee arrived at a value of 5:15 swap ratio as against 2:15 as was agreed upon by the parties in merger. This was the reason behind the deal falling out. The Matrix-Stride merger plan was also called off due to non agreement on the valuation front of the company. The Jet-Sahara Fallout (absence of strategic planning) The major reasons due to which the much talked about aviation industry felt flat on its face were: a) The policy related to mergers and acquisition in the aircraft industry did not clearly specify the terms of transfer for airport infrastructure. The guidelines though clear on parking bays and landing slots, did not specify the status of aircraft hangars, check-in counters, cargo warehouses, passenger lounges and other such airport facilities. b) Also, Jet Airways enthusiastically overvalued Air Sahara, and later wanted a discount on the original price (20 to 25 percent). This is typically a case of overvaluing a company whose business model was not robust.
  • 4. Glaxo-Wellcome-Burroughs (HR issues) Glaxo and Wellcome-Burroughs decided to merge in 1996. The Indian arms however couldn’t merge in the last seven years because of high pay differential between workers of Glaxo and Wellcome in India. The workers of Wellcome were offered a one time compensation of Rs. 2 lakhs in 1998, which they refused. Further the VRS scheme launched by the firm evoked very tepid response. Since 1997 the firms have been working as independent subsidiaries in India. ABB-Flakt Merger in India This is a case of a domestic acquisition of Flakt by ABB in India pursuant to the cross-border (Swiss-Swedish) merger that happened at their parent level. Analyses reveal that valuations of both the companies were not done meticulously and corresponding swap ratio was biased. Synergy perceived was hardly achieved. The gain on merger was less than the capital market (BSE SENSEX) growth. Shareholders of erstwhile Flakt India lost heavily. Some of the reasons why Mergers & Acquisitions have failed in recent times are as follows :- 1. No Guiding principle As rudimentary as this sounds, we often see merging companies fail to develop a set of guiding principles linked to the merger's strategic intent. These principles should get at the very logic of the transaction—is the merger absorption of one company into another or a combination designed to take the best of both? Perfection may not be possible, but these principles will ensure that all decisions drive the combined entity in the same direction. In a best-of-both- companies transaction, for example, one principle might be: "Combine IT organizations by selecting the most up-to-date systems and deploying them across the combined entity." 2. No ground rules While this sounds similar to point number one, ground rules for planning provide nuts-and- bolts guidance for how the planning teams should act as they begin to put the face of the merged entity on paper. These rules should include processes for how decisions are to be made and how conflicts should be resolved. 3. Not sweating the details It's hard to believe, but detailed post-close transition plans can be lacking even when two companies are working hard and have top-level leadership closely engaged. Why? To some extent, this reflects the daunting complexity of any integration. It can also, however, reflect the culture of the companies and a resistance to detail and top-down accountability. The acquirer may be suffering from acquisition fatigue, management distraction, and reluctance to share information, or a simple unwillingness to follow a methodical decision timeline. 4. Poor stakeholder outreach All relevant stakeholder groups—both internal and external— must receive communication about the transaction, early and often. While employees (see sin number eight), customers, and regulators get the bulk of the attention, there is a long list of additional stakeholders such as communities, suppliers, and the like who also need care and feeding. Management must strive to understand how these groups view the deal and how they might react to changes such as new pricing, the elimination of vendors, and adjustments in service and personnel.
  • 5. 5. Overly conservative targets Management must set aggressive targets from the start. This helps reinforce and clarify the transaction's guiding principles and strategic intent, specifically, how hard the integration teams need to push for cost savings and revenue growth. Most companies tend to focus on one or the other—but neglect to place adequate emphasis on both. Experience demonstrates that management never gets more in synergies than it requests. So, build your targets with some stretch and expect that your people will find a way to get there. 6. Integration plan not explicitly in the financials We have seen merging companies build detailed integration plans only to stop short of driving them into the combined entity's operating financials in a clearly identifiable manner. Institutional memory is short and the plans are often redone on the fly (see sin number nine). While the integration plan will evolve, you need to create financial benchmarks that can be tracked. 7. Cultural disconnect Bringing disparate groups of people together as one company takes real work and represents an effort that is often largely overlooked. Culture change management is not indulgent; it is a critical aspect of any transaction. However, simply acknowledging the issue or handing it off to specialists is not enough. Management must set a vision, align leadership around it, and hold substantive events to give employees a chance to participate. Detailed actions and well articulated expectations of behavior connect the culture plan to the business goals. 8. Keeping information too close There is a natural hesitancy to share information, and current regulations put pressure on what management can tell the organization without going to public disclosure. However, absent real facts, the rumor mill will fill the void. Tell employees what you can. Also, tell them what you can't tell them at the moment, why, and when you will be able to do so. 9. Allowing the wrong changes to the plan All the hard work and despite meticulously avoiding sins one through eight, some companies still miss the mark. The popular trend toward empowered line managers and decentralization carries the risk of handing off carefully designed plans to new decision makers who are not steeped in the balances and considerations that made the plan viable in the first place. Following handoff, every company needs clear decision rights about who can change the agreed-upon plans, under what circumstances, and with what approvals.
  • 6. The Formation of M&A &Hr Challenge: HR Issues in M&A:  Retention of Key employees  Compliance with applicable laws  Alignment of compensation & benefit plans  Cultural fit  Employee communication Different Phases of M & A in HR:  Pre- M & A phase : assessment of differences, role clarity, management styles  Post-M&A phase: designation for employees, compensation & PMS, relation between management & trade unions HR Activities in the Phases of M & A:
  • 7. Successful Examples of M&A: In an ideal merger, the newly created entity pools the best features of the two merging organizations. A well planned process built on the foundations of an open, honest and consistent communication strategy can pave the way. Mergers and acquisitions have become a common phenomenon in recent times. A merger of the size like HP-Compaq has implications for the workforce of these companies across the globe. Although the merging entities give a great deal of importance to financial matters and the outcomes, HR issues are the most neglected ones. Ironically studies show that most of the mergers fail to bring out the desired outcomes due to people related issues. The uncertainty brought out by poorly managed HR issues in mergers and acquisitions have been the major reason for these failures. The human resource issues in the mergers and acquisitions (M&A) can be classified in two phases the pre-merger phase and the post merger phase. Literature provides ample evidence of difference in between the human resource activities in the two stages: the pre-acquisition and post acquisition period. Due diligence is important in the first phase while integration issues
  • 8. take the front seat in the later. The pre acquisition period involves an assessment of the cultural and organizational differences, which will include the organizational cultures, role of leaders in the organization, life cycle of the organization, and the management styles. The mergers often prove to be traumatic for the employees of acquired firms; the impact can range from anger to depression. The usual impact is high turnover, decrease in the morale, motivation, productivity leading to merger failure. The other issues in the M&A activity are the changes in the HR policies, downsizing, layoffs, survivor syndromes, stress on the workers, information system issues etc. The human resource system issues that become important in M&A activity are human resource planning, compensation selection and turnover, performance appraisal system, employee development and employee relations. M&A activity presents a different set of challenge for the human resource managers in both acquiring and acquired organizations. The M&A activity is found to have serious impact on the performance of the employees during the period of transition. The M&A leads to stress on the employee, which is caused by the differences in human resource practices, uncertainty in the environment, cultural differences, and differences in organizational structure and changes in the managerial styles. The organizational culture plays an important role during mergers and acquisitions as the organizational practices, managerial styles and structures to a large extent are determined by the organizational culture. Each organization has a different set of beliefs and value systems, which may clash owing to the M&A activity. The exposure to a new culture during the M&A leads to a psychological state called culture shock. The employees not only need to abandon their own culture, values and belief but also have to accept an entirely different culture. This exposure challenges the old organizational value system and practices leading to stress among the employees. Research has found that dissimilar cultures can produce feeling of hostility and significant discomfort which can lower the commitment and cooperation on the part of the employees. In case of cultural clash, one of the cultures that is dominant culture may get preference in the organization causing frustration and feelings of loss for the other set of employees. The employees of non-dominating culture may also get feelings of loss of identity associated with the acquired firm. In certain cases like acquisition of a lesser known or less profitable organization by a better one can lead to feelings of superiority complex among the employees of the acquiring organization. In case of hostility in the environment the employees of two organizations may develop “us” versus “them” attitude which may be detrimental to the organizational growth. The uncertainty during the M&A activity divert the focus of employees from productive work to issues like job security, changes in designation, career path, working in new departments and fear of working with new teams. The M&A activity leads to duplication of certain departments, hence the excess manpower at times needs to be downsized hence the first set of thoughts that occur in the minds of employees are related to security of their jobs. The M&A activity also causes changes in their well defined career paths and future opportunities in the organization. Some employees also have to be relocated or assigned new jobs; hence the employees find themselves in a completely different situation with changes in job profiles and work teams. This
  • 9. may have an impact on the performance of the employees. Research has found that at least two hours of productive work per employee per man day is lost during the M&A activity in the organizations. The increased political processes that may be underway in the organizations to sustain the importance of the various individuals and departments will add to the confusion. The human resource systems vary across organizations owing to the differences in the organizational culture, sectoral differences and national cultural differences. For example if the compensation in the acquired firm is lesser compared to the acquiring firm, the acquisition will raise employee expectations (for the employees of acquired firm) of a possible hike in compensation which may not be realistic. On the other hand if the compensation level of employees in acquiring firm is lower the employees may press to have equal compensation across all the divisions of the firm. The pay differential can act as a de-motivator for the employees of acquiring firm and may have long term consequences. The compensation issues may also involve legal angle. Two cases in the Indian context are important which underline the importance of legal issues related to compensation in M&A activity. The first case involving Hindustan Lever Limited acquiring TOMCO, the employees in TOMCO enjoyed better terms and services compared to the HLL employees. The HLL employees argued that if TOMCO employees are allowed to work on their original terms and conditions, two classes of employees will come in existence. Since both the set of employees now belong to same firm, a case of discrimination will arise against the employees of HLL. However the court supported TOMCO employees in the process. The second case involves merger of Glaxo and Wellcome-Burroughs who decided to merge in 1996. The Indian arms however couldn’t merge in the last seven years because of high pay differential between workers of Glaxo and Wellcome in India. The workers of Wellcome were offered a one time compensation of Rs. 2 lakhs in 1998, which they refused. Further the VRS scheme launched by the firm evoked very tepid response. Since 1997 the firms have been working as independent subsidiaries in India. Compensation differences need to be rectified by the acquiring firm so as to maintain the morale of acquired firm employees and to retain them. The compensation structure among the organizations may also differ creating troubles, for example one of the firms may have performance based pay while other may have higher component of fixed pay. Hence the differences in compensation structure and performance appraisal systems also need to be rectified so as to bring equity in the human resource systems and to treat employees at the equal level. Another practical problem is differences in the grading or organizational structures in the systems. Since the organizational structures are different designations for the employees are used, during the integration of acquired organization the acquiring organizations need to develop a mechanism to remove the differences in the grading systems bring them at equal level, as many a times the compensation is related to the grade of employee in the organization. The employee relations issues gain more importance in the acquisitions of manufacturing units in India. The power equation between management and trade unions is bound to change with
  • 10. the acquisition. The acquiring management also needs to keep track of number of unions in the workplace and equations between them as many Indian manufacturing units have multiple unions. Hence comprehensive analysis of trade unions operating in the plant should be done. This will require study of management-union equation, employee contracts, political linkages of the unions, compensation related clauses, number of trade union and dynamics between the unions. The impact on the employees can be divided into categories of psychological trauma, increased workload, survivor guilt and stress. The reaction of the employees can vary from anger to dejection and depression. The process of merger can have inbuilt psychological and social threats which should be identified like exodus of managers due to the perceived job insecurity. There is also fall in the morale, commitment and loyalty. The merger can lead to depression and impaired performance. The dissimilarity in the cultures can produce the feelings of hostility and significant discomfort, which impact on the commitment and cooperation on the part of employees. The cultural difference also leads to counterculture feelings where employees tend to completely reject the dominant culture of the organization. The impact of cultural shock is significant and long lasting on the employees. The initial shock is followed by employees making their own perceptions based on values and past experiences. The more dissimilar the culture is higher will be the cultural shock. The likely reactions as noted by studies are anger fear, denial frustration and depression which leads to altered behavior, reduced productivity, stress, illness, accidents , conflicts and a total lack of commitment to make merger work. The feeling of political back stabbing adds to the psychological trauma. Managing M & A Clearly defined communication strategy during M&A plays an important role in removing the employee fears and kill rumors floating around in the organization. The organizations need to reach their employees before the press as the employees will have feelings of getting cheated. Studies show that communication strategy that involves senior managers of the acquired organizations work well. Involving other employees who are trusted by the employees for instance trade union leaders are also helpful. The employees meeting in small groups so as to discuss their concerns, fears and positive feelings also helps to lessen the stress on employees of acquired firm. The group meetings seem to help because many-a-times employees are reluctant to come out and speak their concerns, whereas in groups where everyone shares same set of feelings to an extent, it becomes easier to come out with the common set of concerns and fears. This also provides confidence to employees that the new management is willing to listen to their concerns and feelings, building an atmosphere of mutual trust. The transition period also becomes crucial from communication point of view. In case of lengthy transition period the employee stress increases, the best strategy in this period is to convince the employees that they are part of new organization and their concerns will be taken
  • 11. care of. The transition period can also be used to improve communication with the employees of acquired firm. Improved communication will help to better understand each other’s cultures and practices. Firms can also use this period to analyze the human capital of the acquired firm and define their possible roles in the new organizations. The transition period provides ample opportunity to design the new organization, explain the new roles to the employees, plan synergies and train the employees as the new role. This will make the integration process easier for the acquiring organization. The communication aspect being very important should be handled carefully by the human resource department. The communication should provide precise information to the employees, providing any piece of information which is unreal can lead to rumors and counteract. The communication should be sufficient enough to answer the queries and worries of the employees. The first set of information should be related to their future jobs, this will help to lessen their worries related to job security. The communication shouldn’t involve false promises which may counteract later. The communication can be through trusted and credible employees of the acquired company and trade unions can be involved in the process too. Acquisition strategy of GE Capital The GE Capital uses a successful model called “Pathfinder” for acquiring firms. The model disintegrates the process of M&A into four categories which are further divided into subcategories. The four stages incorporate some of the best practices for optimum results. The pre-aquisition phase of the model involves due diligence, negotiations and closing of deals. This involves the cultural assessments, devising communication strategies and evaluation of strengths and weaknesses of the business leaders. An integration manager is also chosen at this stage. The second phase is the foundation building. At this phase the integration plan is prepared. A team of executives from the GE Capital and the acquiring company is formed. Also a 100 day communication strategy is evolved and the senior management involvement and support is made clear. The needed resources are pooled and accountability is ensured. The third is the integration phase. Here the actual implementation and correction measures are taken. The processes like assessing the work flow, assignment of roles etc are done at this stage. This stage also involves continuous feedbacks and making necessary corrections in the implementation. The last phase involves assimilation process where integration efforts are reassessed. This stage involves long term adjustment and looking for avenues for improving the integration. This is also the period when the organization actual starts reaping the benefits of the acquisition. The model is dynamic in the sense that company constantly improves it through internal discussions between the teams that share their experiences, effective tools and refine best practices.
  • 12. Acquisition strategy of Cisco The acquisition strategy of Cisco is an excellent example of how thorough planning can help in successful acquisitions. After experiencing some failures in acquiring companies, Cisco devised a three step process of acquisition. This involved, analyzing the benefits of acquiring, understanding how the two organizations will fit together – how the employees from the organization can match with Cisco culture and then the integration process. In the evaluation process, Cisco looked whether there is compatibility in terms of long term goals of the organization, work culture, geographical proximity etc. For example Cisco believes in an organizational culture which is risk taking and adventurous. If this is lacking in the working style of the target company, Cisco is not convinced about the acquisition. No forced acquisitions are done and the critical element is in convincing the various stakeholders of the target company about the future benefits. The company insists on no layoffs and job security is guaranteed to all the employees of the acquired company. The acquisition team of Cisco evaluates the working style of the management of the target company, the caliber of the employees, the technology systems and the relationship style with the employees. Once the acquisition team is convinced, an integration strategy is rolled out. A top level integration team visits the target company and gives clear cut information regarding Cisco and the future roles of the employees of the acquired firm. After the acquisition, employees of the acquired firm are given 30 days orientation training to fit into the new organizational environment. The planned process of communication and integration has resulted in high rate of success in acquisitions for Cisco. HR’s control: • Train managers on the nature of change • Technical retraining • Family assistance programs • Stress reduction program • Meeting between the counter parts • Orientation programs • Explaining new roles • Helping people who lost jobs • Post merger team building • Anonymous feedback helpline for employees
  • 13. Conclusion:  HR role both tactical & strategic in M&A  Open mindset what works well  Maintain synergy with merged or acquired firms  Remove “us vs them”  Managing grapevine by effective communication strategy  Ensuring confidentiality & Knowledge  Proper counseling and career assistance