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1 People integration: Creating and sustaining value in Mergers & Acquisitions Integration Playbook for Human Resources Practitioners Prepared and submitted by Russell Podgorski June, 2015 Russell Podgorski is the System Manager, Executive Recruitment for Providence Health & Services. He brings over a decade of experience recruiting executives and physicians for integrated healthcare delivery systems. Russell specializes in creating optimal recruiting processes to drive strategies and value into the business. He has built solid organizational capabilities by leading teams that recruited talent as the company restructured or initiated a M&A strategy. Russell holds a B.A. degree from Columbia College in Columbia, Missouri and a Master of Health Administration degree from St. Joseph’s College in Standish, Maine.
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Integration Playbook for HR Practitioners

Aug 17, 2015

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Page 1: Integration Playbook for HR Practitioners

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People integration: Creating and sustaining value in Mergers & Acquisitions

Integration Playbook for Human Resources Practitioners

Prepared and submitted by Russell Podgorski June, 2015

Russell Podgorski is the System Manager, Executive Recruitment for Providence Health & Services. He brings over a decade of

experience recruiting executives and physicians for integrated healthcare delivery systems. Russell specializes in creating optimal

recruiting processes to drive strategies and value into the business. He has built solid organizational capabilities by leading teams

that recruited talent as the company restructured or initiated a M&A strategy. Russell holds a B.A. degree from Columbia College

in Columbia, Missouri and a Master of Health Administration degree from St. Joseph’s College in Standish, Maine.

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List of Tables & Figures

Table

Number Table Content Phase Page

1 PIC Team Readiness Matrix I 7

2 Liability Analysis I 9

3 Key Leadership Impact I 9

4 Cultural Assessment Tool I 10

5 People Risk Mitigation Matrix I 11

6 Due Diligence Risk Dashboard II 20

7 Cultural Compatibility Assessment Scorecard II 16

8 Talent Assessment Form II 18

9 Change Management Planning Template III 27

10 RACI Model for Change Process IV 28

11 Leadership Change Management Checklist IV 29

12 Communication Project Plan IV 32

13 Cultural Mirroring Model IV 40

14 Post Implementation Review V 54

15 People Integration Planning Dashboard V 60

16 People Integration Dashboard V 61

17 People Dashboard V 62

Figure

Number Figure Content Phase Page

1 Due Diligence Checklist II 19

2 Organizational Design Model III 35

3 How to Create Value in a M&A I 13

4 Accelerated Recruiting Model IV 49

5 Integration Survey V 55

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Introduction

This document provides an explanation of a mergers and acquisitions (M&A) playbook

that includes a comprehensive people integration plan. It also describes the roles and

responsibilities for human resources and organization development departments necessary to

support and implement the people integration activities.

This document also describes how high performing organizations that engage in M&A

can create more value by improving how people are integrated into the newly formed entity.

Failures in people integration strategies result in a failure to retain and motivate key people from

the acquiring and target organizations, impacting the organization’s ability to achieve its

financial and strategic objectives. Organizations that are adept at integrating people realize

increased employee engagement and decreased negative turnover. Playbooks that focus on

people integration play an extremely important role in merger and acquisition success.

Case for Including People Concerns into M&A

Successfully integrating people after a merger or acquisition is announced continues to be

elusive and challenging for many organizations. It is no surprise that when key people are not

integrated successfully, companies find it difficult to achieve their intended strategic and

financial goals (Schweiger, 2002). Most M&A objectives are never realized because the people

integration efforts are managed very poorly. The failure rates are estimated to be as high as 70%

in some cases (Omri, 2011). What is even more troubling is that 85% of major organizations

surveyed indicated that their human resources professionals were underperforming at helping the

business to integrate people (CEB, 2006). Mercer Management Consulting conducted research

and discovered that companies utilizing people integration playbooks through the various phases

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of a merger were 50% more likely to create value for their respective organizations (Tetenbaum,

1999).

Integration Playbooks

Successful organizations approach a M&A and people integration in a very systematic

and methodical manner (Harvard Business Review, 1998). To that end, companies use

standardized, but adaptable integration playbooks that contain step-by-step detailed instructions

with tools, templates, checklists, process documentation, and tips to cover each major phase of

the M&A from beginning to end. They should be standardized because many key tasks, goals,

and processes are repeated in each M&A, but vary in magnitude and scope depending upon the

unique features of each M&A.

Human resources integration playbooks should typically be stored in centralized,

collaborative repositories, and should include activities such as organizational design, cultural

assessments, cultural integration tools, communication strategies, plans for the retention and

recruitment of key people, talent assessments, employee engagement techniques, and much

more. Once centralized, the playbooks can then become a resource to educate leadership about

people integration activities, outcomes, communicate status, and roadblocks of human resources

tasks, and facilitate the definition of human resource professionals' skillset requirements and

level of effort for the M&A project.

A comprehensive human resources integration playbook will include objectives,

activities, and deliverables. Each section of the playbook must be assigned to a human resources

subject matter expert to own and manage the playbook content, utilizing the described tools and

templates. The section owner must advise on the magnitude and scope of each task in relation to

the unique scope of the M&A, to ensure thorough but efficient coverage of the sections’

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requirements without unnecessarily overtasking the organizations’ resources. Additionally the

owner should be responsible for making sure that their assigned section of the playbook is

updated with status and progress notes on a regular basis. Human resources professionals play a

role in all five phases of a M&A:

1. Target Identification & Strategy Formulation,

2. Due Diligence,

3. Integration Planning,

4. Integration Implementation and Management, and

5. Integration Evaluation.

The following sections describe the five M&A phases and what people integration playbook

tasks should be included in each phase. Then each section clarifies those tasks, defines human

resources professional’s roles and responsibilities, and suggests helpful tools that can be used to

facilitate the described work. Each section of the playbook will conclude with helpful

instructions for leaders in the business to guide them through the process steps of each M&A

phase.

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Phase I – Target Identification & Strategy Formulation

In the first phase of any M&A, the target company is identified, strategies are

formulated, and initial high level plans are made. A M&A may fail due to lack of people

integration planning. In order to reduce the opportunity for failure, business executives must

involve the chief human resources officer as early as possible in the planning (CEB, 2006), so

that everyone has a common understanding of the financial and strategic goals. Once the chief

of human resources understands the M&A scope, that person must communicate a shared

vision and goals with the human resources professionals involved in the M&A work. The key

people integration deliverable for phase I, is to create a highly functioning human resources

team that is empowered to manage and implement the people integration playbook.

Create a dedicated and qualified human resources M&A team

The chief human resources officer must create a highly functioning, dedicated team to

support the people integration M&A activities.

Select a strong Integration Leader. The Integration Leader will be responsible for the

overall execution of the plan and will ultimately be accountable for project outcomes.

Additional duties include human resources team selection, assessing/managing and increasing

team skillsets as needed, collaboration with stakeholders from the target company, and keeping

the project on time and under budget (CEB, 2006).

Identify a dedicated core team. The Integration Leader must determine needed skillsets for

the specific M&A and then obtain adequate resources to achieve goals by the required

timeline. Best practice companies include a diverse set of subject matter experts on their core

teams: project managers, human resources Integration Leader, benefits specialists,

organizational development personnel, business partners, and internal communications

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professional. For the purposes of this article, the people integration core team will be referred

to as the PIC team. Additionally, depending on the complexity of the M&A, other experts may

be needed from compensation, payroll, immigration, relocation, recruiting, and/or training

(CEB, 2006).

Educate the team. The chief human resources officer must ensure that the PIC team fully

understands the M&A schedule and plan, its objectives/goals, and any financial or cultural

issues already identified. The PIC team must also understand the M&A playbook contents, its

role in defining the structure of the human resources and people integration activity, and its

scalability to the current M&A. Additionally, the team should be made fully aware of their

roles and responsibilities, as defined by the M&A playbook, including communication and

documentation expectations. The playbook must be reviewed and updated as needed to

reference shared tools, best practices, project charters, training documents, people integration

plan and other related resources (CEB, 2006). The human resources department typically uses

the following comprehensive dashboard to track and monitor their readiness to support a M&A

from a resources and skill set perspective.

Table 1

Core & Flexible PIC Team Readiness Matrix

(CEB, 2006)

Functions Compensation Communications PM Payroll Immigration Recruiting Training

Names of resources

Primary or secondary

work priority

Total time

commitment

M&A busiest phase

Issues that drive

additional resources

Years of M&A

experience

Capacity of current

resources

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Best practice and top performing human resources departments work with the business

to assess people related risks that can make the integration fail if not evaluated early in the

process. The risks at this Pre-Deal stage are evaluated at an extremely high level, but

nevertheless provide important insight to the acquiring company so they can make informed

decisions. The aspects that are evaluated include potential human resources liabilities,

engagement levels of the most senior level executives and impact of losing them if they left the

company, high level cultural assessment, and employee risk mitigation (CEB, 2006).

The human resources Integration Leader plays an instrumental role in obtaining the

information from the target company and will share it with executives at the acquiring

company. The objectives of the tools and likely places the acquiring organization can find

them are also included below.

Objectives

Account for potential human resources compliance and legal liabilities

Evaluate impact of losing key leaders and assess their intentions

Determine costs associated with retaining key leaders

Analyze high level cultural assessment

Assess and mitigate people related risks such as retention, turnover, and vacancy rates

Sources of information

Public records via the Internet and press releases

Legal documents available to the public

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Experienced M&A PIC Teams use the following sample dashboards to target the people risks

that can derail the integration prior to acquiring the target company.

Table 2

Liabilities Analysis of the Target Company

Liability

Approximate

Cost Comments

Health Insurance $50M No major concerns

Other Benefits $15M No major concerns

Lawsuits $5M Significant risk

Pensions $25M No major concerns

403(b) $100M Moderate risk

(CEB, 2006)

Table 3

Key Leader Impact of the Target

Position Plans Impact Cost to retain

Chief Executive Leave High performer $500,000

COO Stay High performer $300,000

CFO Stay Low performer $250,000

CPO Leave Low performer $200,000

CNO Leave Low performer $175,000

Chief Strategy Officer Stay High performer $400,000

Total $1,825,000

(CEB, 2006)

There are two cultural assessments most successful organizations conduct during a

M&A. The first one happens at the Target Identification & Strategy Phase I when the deal is

being initially evaluated with an emphasis on people and what the impact will likely be at the

integration stage and if the issues discovered will deter the organization from creating value.

The second cultural assessment happens at the Due Diligence phase. The cultural assessment

process at Due Diligence is focused on the people aspects as well, but includes a series of

varied organizational cultural components that are assessed.

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The following Cultural Assessment Tool of the target company can be used to compare the

people components of the acquiring and target companies that can prevent the new

organization from creating value and realizing business synergies because of significant

cultural differences. Organizational Development professionals play an instrumental role in the

cultural assessment process.

Table 4

Cultural Assessment Tool of the Acquiring & Target

Companies

People Dimensions Difference

Impact to the

Integration

Impact to

Value

Creation

Key Leader

Differences

Individual contributor or team

based focus High Low Medium Low

Performance improvement

emphasis High Medium Medium Medium

Customer focus High High Low High

Promote internal talent from

within vs. external hiring Medium Low Low Low

Technical hard skills vs. soft

skills Low Medium Medium High

Employee development Low High Low High

Leadership development Medium Low Low High

Employee mobility Low Medium Medium High

Compensation philosophy

(market leader or lagging) Medium High Low High

Performance management

systems High Low Low High

Employee engagement focus High Medium Medium Medium

Problem solving approach

(individual or consensus

driven) High High Low Low

Employee performance vs.

tenure Low High Low Medium

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(CEB, 2006)

To help gain early insights into the people risks at the target company it is necessary to

review employee metrics and key human resources performance indicators. The information is

captured on a matrix (like the one below) and allows the PIC team to address issues that could

adversely impact the successful integration of the acquiring and target companies. Here is a

sample list of plausible people issues that can be recorded on the matrix.

1. Retain key department directors and managers because leadership changes could

compromise the technology implementation

2. Important to retain IT analysts to ensure the impending technology implementation

goes smoothly.

3. High vacancy rates in critical nursing areas.

4. High employee turnover rates in the emergency department

Table 5

People Risk Mitigation Matrix at Target Company

People Issue Impact Risk Level Actions PIC Team Owner

Leadership retention Integration High Short term retention bonuses provided

Compensation,

Organizational

Development, and

People Business

Partner

IT analyst retention Integration High

Short term retention bonuses provided

and employee engagement surveys

conducted

Compensation,

Organizational

Development, and

People Business

Partner

High nursing vacancy

rates

Creating

Value Medium

Use contract labor in the short term and

develop candidate pipelining tactics

Organizational

Development,

Recruiting, People

Business Partner

High employee turnover

rates

Creating

Value High Conduct employee sensing sessions

Organizational

Development,

Recruiting, People

Business Partner

(CEB, 2006)

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Business Process Guide for Leaders: Helpful Tips

During a M&A leadership needs to be bold, courageous, and transparent at all times. They

need to stand behind decisions and accept responsibility when they make mistakes. Leadership

needs to model the organizational Values when making decisions. They need to believe in the

acquisition and create an inspiring Vision for everyone in the organization. Leadership needs

to ensure communication strategies and plans are established as well as effective mechanisms

to facilitate it. The financial and strategic goals of the M&A deal need to be clearly defined

and communicated to all stakeholders. Strategy formulation is imperative well before the

integration takes place. Leadership is responsible for establishing and communicating the

strategy to the working teams downstream. When the objectives are clear it will then be

important to establish key performance indicators and success measures to track and monitor

progress. Financial objectives are very important as well. Some of the common M&A financial

and strategic objectives include market consolidation, addition or extension of new products or

services, entering a new geographic market, and vertical and horizontal integration. After the

financial and strategic goals are met leadership needs to establish the synergies needed. The

most common synergy is referred to as cost synergy and this happens through the reduction of

costs and achieving economies of scale when the two organizations come together. Eliminating

redundant positions in the new organization is one example of a cost synergy. Market power

synergies are another form of synergy that companies use as well. A great example of a market

power synergy is the elimination of competitors from a market (Schweiger, 2002).

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Business Process Guide for Leaders: Helpful Tips

Synergies allow the organization to achieve the financial and strategic goals of the M&A deal

and thus it is essential that leadership clarify what synergies are needed at the start of the

process. Synergies are captured through the integration process and this is why integration

must be planned and executed for organizations to be successful. When the strategic and

financial goals are met and synergies realized through integration it enables the organization to

create value for its customers. The following illustration captures the process of creating value

in a M&A or organizational restructure. It is important for HR and the business to keep this in

mind as they go through the key M&A phases.

Figure 3

How to create value in a M&A

(Schweiger, 2002)

Financial &

Strategic

Objectives

Price Paid for

the Company

Synergies

Required

Integration

Successful &

Synergies

Achieved

Value Created

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Phase II – Due Diligence

The purpose of due diligence is to examine the target company’s financial, compliance,

and people related risks allowing the acquiring company to establish a bidding price. During

this phase, the PIC team should help with the due diligence assessments of the target company

in three ways: (1) assess the human resources financial and regulatory compliance health, (2)

complete a cultural assessment, and (3) conduct initial talent assessments of the target

organization’s leaders for retention purposes.

Identify financial and compliance risks of the target company

During phase two, the PIC team surveys primary contacts at the target company to

obtain detailed information about their financial and regulatory compliance health regarding

human resource concerns. All of the tools and documents used in Phase II should be

incorporated into the M&A playbook as well as helpful suggestions to support the work. For

example, to enable a more streamlined communication approach, it is best to identify a single

point of contact at the target company and level-set expectations regarding accountability,

timeliness, amount of detail, and nondisclosure agreements. Once expectations are set,

standardized human resources due diligence survey templates should be provided to the target

company for completion. The due diligence survey should contain questions about general

organizational size and make-up, benefits details, payroll expenditures, talent succession plans,

number of open positions, voluntary turnover data, organizational charts, policies, union

contracts, employment agreements, employee engagement data, equity plans, pending

litigation, retirement plan information, and severance agreements of leaders (CEB, 2006). An

example Human Resources Due Diligence Questionnaire (Figure 1) is included at the end of

this section. Table 6 is a sample dashboard that can be used by the human resources

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Integration Leader when meeting with other leaders to review financial and compliance risk

information gathered during the due diligence process.

If the target company is uncooperative during the due diligence survey process, then it

is the responsibility of the Integration Leader to intervene, and seek assistance from senior

executives as needed. Once the survey information is returned, the PIC team must analyze the

data to identify potential problem areas and alert the M&A leadership, so that mitigation

strategies can be developed. Information discovered during the Human Resources due

diligence survey could potentially impact the decision to continue with the M&A, so it is

critical to compile the information into an executive summary that is easily understood by the

M&A leaders. Oftentimes, the PIC team and Integration Leader will be asked to provide

consultation on mitigation strategies. Some of the more likely mitigation strategies could be

incorporated into the M&A playbook as the business gains experience over time.

Complete a cultural assessment

A well-performed cultural assessment during the due diligence portion of a M&A can help

to avoid cultural clashes between the two organizations when they come together and thereby

enhance the M&A’s ability to achieve the intended strategic goals. The culture of an

organization influences employee behavior, processes, and overall organization structure

(CEB, 2006). The cultural assessment must analyze communication processes and styles,

leadership philosophies and practices, and performance measurement systems and values.

Seasoned organizational development staff on the PIC team should use focus groups and

interviews at all levels of the company to evaluate the cultural compatibility of the target

organization.

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The cultural assessment of the target company must be compared to the culture of the

acquiring organization. Additionally, the cultural assessment will be used in later phases of the

M&A to build integration and communication strategies/plans. The cultural assessment data

can be populated into a cultural compatibility/fit comparison scorecard like the one in Table 7

below to better support a review by leadership.

Table 7

Cultural compatibility/fit comparison scorecard

Cultural Fit Index

Cultural Indicator Low Med Hi

Focus on teamwork X

Change readiness X

Importance of

diversity

X

Customer focus X

Serving the

community

X

Mission emphasis X

Importance of

learning and

development

X

Change resistant X

Focus on quality X

Innovation focus X

Size of organization X

Centralized shared

services model for

administrative

functions

X

Metrics driven X

Leadership model X

Governance and

decision making

structure

X

(CEB, 2006)

The tools and templates for the cultural assessment should be in the M&A playbook. Also,

as the PIC team adjusts any tools/templates content to support each M&A, the playbook should

be updated including helpful strategies for successful completion of the M&A work: for

example how to select members of focus groups and how to conduct the meetings.

Assess and retain top performing leaders at the target company

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Top performing talent, especially in leadership, helps the organization achieve its goals and

therefore it is critical to retain these people during and after M&A. It is vital therefore to

conduct talent assessments of leadership during the due diligence phase. Often key leaders and

performers will leave during the M&A process for other opportunities. Talent assessments can

help the acquiring organization target key players for aggressive retention strategies.

The talent assessment process should be managed by the organizational development

professionals on the PIC team. Any talent assessment data obtained during the due diligence

survey process should be reviewed. If recent talent assessments at the target company are not

available, performance evaluations, bonus payouts tied to goal attainment, or other related

business documents can be reviewed to determine high potential and high performing talent. If

the target company does not have that kind of documentation, then the acquiring company can

assess talent through its own interviews, focus groups, or through the attitudes, behaviors,

conversations, and presentations during the M&A process. The PIC team should collect,

analyze, and document resulting talent assessment information. Table 8 is sample talent

assessment form that can be used during due diligence.

Additionally. the chief human resources officer must help the PIC team to identify the

roles that will be critical to the success of the new organization. The information should be

organized into four distinct categories: long term talent in a key role, short term talent in a key

role, senior long term talent not in a key role, and junior talent not in a key role (CEB, 2006).

The talent needs and inventory assessments should be consolidated into a comprehensive

report for executives. Retention strategies should then be developed and implemented to

ensure key leaders do not leave the organization. Again, successful retention strategies should

be added to the M&A playbook as the PIC team gains experience in these areas (CEB, 2006).

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Table 8

Talent Assessment Form

Talent Assessment Likert scale 1 (low) - 5 (high) Totals

Employee Name:

Knowledge, skills, and abilities

Technical 5

14 Hard to find skills 4

Solid experience with skill set 3

Critical contact to customers 2

Competencies

Business acumen 1

10 Politically savvy 2

Building teams 3

Customer focus 4

Role in organization

Strategic thinker 4

16 Builder 5

Organizer 4

Leader 3

Performance

Past performance 2

12

Has leadership potential 1

Serves as a mentor to others 2

Attitude about changes 3

Develops others 4

(CEB, 2006)

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Figure 1

Due Diligence Questionnaire

Due Diligence Preparation

0.01 Please sign and return the attached Non-Disclosure Agreement as

soon as possible.

Please provide the following information and attach documents to

provide detailed supporting evidence.

Employee Information

1.01 Employee handbook

1.02 Mission, Vision, and Values

1.03 Number of full time

employees

1.04 Number of part time

employees

1.05 Number of agency

staff

1.06 Number of temps on

payroll

1.07 Please provide a comprehensive set of Organizational charts

1.08 Please provide a complete employee roster with job titles and

employment dates

1.09 Please provide a comprehensive set of Job descriptions

Benefits Information

2.01 Please provide Compensation pay grades

2.02 Please provide Executive compensation

2.03 Please provide detailed explanations of incentive plans and copies of

all current agreements

2.03 Please provide policy documents for Severance agreements, and data

for any active severance packages

2.04 Please provide Health insurance benefits documentation and

Summary plan descriptions

2.05 Please provide Dental insurance benefits documentation

2.06 Please provide PTO plans and balances for all employees

2.07 Please provide sick leave balances for all employees

2.08 Please provide Tuition reimbursement policy and details of payout

for the past five years

2.09 Please provide Life insurance documents and reports

2.10 Please provide Short term disability documents and reports

2.11 Please provide Long term disability documents and reports

2.12 Please provide Retirement plan explanations, and data indicating

current retirement benefits to retirees

Regulatory Compliance Information

3.01 Please provide detailed descriptions of all affirmative action plans,

and any regulatory incidents over the past 10 years.

3.02 Please provide any historical and current lawsuits over the past 10

years.

Employee Engagement Information

4.01 Please provide Turnover data for both voluntary and involuntary

dismissals

4.02 Please provide Recruitment data

4.03 Please provide data on all Employees on corrective action

4.04 Please provide data on all Employee engagement scores

4.05 Please provide Leadership development tools and resources

4.06 Please provide records of talent assessments for the past 5 years

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Table 6

Due Diligence Risk Dashboard

(CEB, 2006)

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Business Process Guide for Leaders: Helpful Tips

Leadership needs to continue communicating the financial and strategic goals as well as the

synergies needed so the various stakeholders stay focused. Leadership should review the

cultural assessment the Human Resources department put together to analyze the cultural

similarities and differences. If the gaps are significant enough leadership may need to walk

away from the deal. Many organizations have failed to achieve the financial and strategic goals

of the deal because of cultural challenges. The next step leadership needs to take is selecting an

integration champion or leader for the business. The integration leader will be responsible for

managing the integration process for the business. This role is absolutely critical because they

will help to eliminate fragmentation and will work closely with the human resources

Integration Leader. The integration leader will need to develop and maintain relationships with

people from both the acquiring and acquired organizations. The human resources department

will help to assess talent in the organization. In addition to using the previously mentioned

assessment it is recommended that leadership from the acquired organization be assessed using

a process called the Birkman model. This model evaluates talent, fit, styles, competencies, and

skills. Having this information as well as the assessment the Human Resources department

provides is helpful because it is another data point that can be used to evaluate leadership

strengths and weaknesses (Schweiger, 2002).

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Phase III – Integration Planning

After the deal has closed and official announcements to the public and employees have

begun the process of merging and integrating two companies needs to be planned and executed

properly. At this step the HR teams have ownership of significant activities that are essential

for effective people integration. The depth of planning and managing the integration depends

on the size, scope, and complexity of the transaction (Schweiger, 2002).

Create a detailed human resource integration work plan and success metrics

A detailed work plan of the human resources integration tasks must be developed and

owned by the Integration Leader of the PIC team. The core work for implementation must

mirror the tasks defined in the M&A playbook. The work plan must include specificity of

tasks, due dates, and task ownership, with enough detail for the Integration Leader to oversee

the work and ensure completion of all deliverables. The Integration Leader must also make

sure that the human resources core and flexible teams understand their tasks, deliverables, and

due dates. The work plan should include the following integration activities as defined by the

M&A playbook:

Change management,

Communication plans,

Organizational design development,

Cultural integration,

Employee engagement and retention,

Recruiting and building organizational capability, and

HR and Information Systems alignment

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Develop success metrics that align with and support organizational strategies

Success metrics with specific goals must also be developed at this phase of the

integration, and should be based on the expected outcomes of the M&A. Employee integration

metrics must also be included to quantify success. Appropriate integration metrics might

include:

Employee engagement,

Voluntary turnover,

Retention of key talent, and

Employee performance scores.

Additionally, accountability structures such as regular status meetings and status report

documentation expectations must be established. The Integration Leader must be ready to

drive adherence to the work plan dates and escalate any roadblocks that jeopardize success.

Lack of focus and attention to details during the Integration Planning phase can result

in diminished returns for the M&A. The PIC team must build the work plan with that in mind;

however, the timing of execution in a M&A is oftentimes even more critical. This means that

the PIC team cannot allow analysis paralysis to jeopardize the timely implementation of the

M&A activities. They must remain sensitive to the needs of the organization and its leaders.

Some of the more time sensitive elements are described below.

Leverage a change management model

A M&A is a significant change initiatives and thus will need to be planned and

managed effectively to ensure value is sustained. There are several different change

management methodologies that can be used, but selecting the methodology is not as

important as using one consistently. The PIC team is responsible for change management with

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regards to people integration, so knowledge and use of the methodology is a core competency.

Regardless of the change management approach used there are generally four core components

to any change management process including:

1. Planning for change,

2. Managing the change,

3. Communicating to and engaging the organization, and

4. Measuring the success of the change.

Planning for Change

Learn about change management. An inventory of the change initiative needs to be

completed for planning purposes. Table 9 is a sample template.

The next step in the Planning for Change phase is the need to build a business case to

manage the change process. It is important to show how change management impacts

the bottom line. In the case of a M&A you could show that a decline in employee

engagement negatively impacts achieving the strategic and financial objectives of the

deal.

The third step of the Planning for Change stage is to clarify roles and responsibilities to

all stakeholders and communicate that information on a regular basis. The following

RACI model can be used to help clarify roles and responsibilities. A RACI template

and sample checklists for senior leaders and managers are included below in Tables

10 and 11.

(CEB, 2010)

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Manage Type of Change

The fourth step is to tailor the change strategy to the initiative. In the case of a M&A

the following action steps could be taken to customize the change initiative:

Identify M&A opportunity, Prepare the details of the deal, Get ready for due diligence,

Plan for the Integration, Manage the Integration, and Measure success after the deal.

This entire playbook is a prime example of tailoring the change strategy to support the

initiative (CEB, 2010).

Communicate and Engage

The fifth step is to evaluate stakeholder’s change management competencies. Several

change management competencies need to be assessed including communication,

project management, strategic thinking, coaching, and adapting to change. If there are

gaps actions need to be taken to close them. Surveys and interviews can be used to

evaluate the competencies.

The sixth step is communication. Communication is a major component as previously

mentioned though this guide. The communication strategy needs to be established and

agreed on by stakeholders. To set the strategy the following questions can be asked:

What are we trying to accomplish?, How can the communications strategy help achieve

the objectives, What do we need to communicate and by whom?, Who is the audience

and what is the timing and order of the communications?, What are the communication

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vehicles that will be used?, and What will we assess if the communication strategy has

enabled us to achieve the goals (CEB, 2010)? The change management

communications always need to incorporate the following elements: background

information about the change, ask staff for their help in making the change a success,

support staff, provide specifics and not vague slogans, be as realistic as possible, create

a two-way communication channel by soliciting feedback, offer support, summarize

the key themes of the communication, and express gratitude to employees.

The seventh step is to engage employees through the change. This happens through

informing, educating, and committing to them.

Measure Success

The eighth and ninth steps include tracking and measuring success. These steps will be

covered in more detail in the forthcoming phases of Integration Management and

Evaluation. The dashboard on the next page can be used by the Human Resources

department to track and measure their components to the integration process. The

dashboard can be used as a project plan and helps all the stakeholders to know what

action items are required and who has to get them done. The last step requires that a

post implementation review be conducted. After the change is implemented it is

essential to conduct the review.

(CEB, 2010)

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Table 9

Change Management Planning Template

Proposed Change Project Increase adoption of EMR implementation

Change Goal

Improve employee knowledge of EMR proficiency and increase

proficiency levels

Subject Instruction Comments

Company to Define Change Management

How does the organization define

change?

Troubleshoot the Change Problem

How?

How will we get people to use

the new EMR?

What?

What can we use to measure

EMR adoption rates?

Why?

Why is it so important that

people adopt and use the EMR?

Change Management Tactics & Strategies

What is the right strategy to achieve

the change goal?

Show benefits to leadership,

employees, and our patients.

Resistance to Change

What obstacles will prevent us from

being successful?

Leadership not supportive. Too

many other projects are on

everyone's plates.

(CEB, 2010)

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Table 10

RACI Model to Manage Change Process

Activity

HR

Integration

Leader

HR

Business

Partner Executives Employees

Line

Managers

Support change C R A I A

Create group leading change C I R I I

Communicate with staff C A C I R

Develop change management

strategy and plans A R A I C

Provide support to managers and

staff I R I I I

Provide feedback on change C A I R A

Coach employees through change

and resistance C I A I R

Communicate how change with

impact employees C C A I R

Build change management project

plan R A C I I

RACI is defined as follows:

Responsible: Leads the activity or task

Accountable: Owns the activity

Consulted: Provides input into activity

Informed: Provided with information about activity

(CEB, 2010)

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Table 11

Leadership Change Management Checklist

(CEB, 2008)

Senior Leaders Managers

Assess the organization's readiness for the change

initiative

Assess the business operating unit's readiness for the

change initiative

Review data such as employee engagement scores

in order to determine willingness to accept the

change Examine impact on the business unit

Assess the impact of the change on the

organization's culture Bring up possible risks to the team

Decide if the proposed change is aligned with

strategic goals and will ultimately help the

organization achieve goals

Align change goals with business operating unit

objectives

Define and clarify and vision of the change initiative Clarify the goals of the project

Define and align change goals with strategic

objectives Determine owners of change management activities

Decide stakeholders that will own various elements

of the change initiative

Make sue resources are in place to support change

initiative

Determine who the key champions of the change

initiative will be

Explain the business case for the change with key

stakeholders and obtain feedback

Examine and assign resources to support change

initiative Answer questions about change initiative

Develop a compelling story to help drive

communication about the change Ensure team processes are aligned with change

Explain the business case with executives and obtain

buy in Support implementation

Develop a communication plan

Monitor and assess change initiative at regular

intervals

Execute on communication plan by disseminating

information Continue to communicate about the change

Make sure the related technologies are aligned with

change

Communicate key talking points to employees and

show support for change

Implement change

Make sure communications are aligned with

organizational communications

Monitor change initiative at regular intervals and

communicate information to appropriate

stakeholders as necessary Continue to answer questions about the change

Lead outreach to show senior leaders embrace

change initiative

Schedule 1:1 meetings with employees to get

feedback about the change

Encourage communications to ensure people are

comfortable sharing feedback

Examine engagement of key contributors whose

departure may derail the change initiative

Make changes to communication when necessary to

support adoption of the change

Put together action plans to improve engaged for

disengaged employees

Review performance to ascertain if change has

resulted in improvements Coach and train employees

Assess the impact the change has had with

employees and their engagement

Monitor the adoption of the change at regular

intervals

Make adjustments when necessary to improve

employee engagement with change initiative and

drive course corrections throughout the organization

Assess the impact the change has had with

employees and their engagement

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Develop and be ready to deploy communication plans immediately

Communication plans and message content must be developed early. Best practice

companies will be ready to initiate communication at a moment’s notice if needed, with a goal

of reducing employee stress and fear prior to and during the M&A. The following list reflects

the minimum communication points and can be adjusted based on the specific M&A

requirements. For organizations that frequently use a M&A as a growth strategy, their M&A

playbook should establish communication plan patterns and content standards to ensure

consistency for their stakeholders.

Pre-Deal message. If details about the merger leak, it is imperative that a high-level

announcement be on standby. This message content must include general information for

employees and factual M&A strategies with no reference to rumors of an impending deal.

Post-Deal message. To reduce employee confusion, best practice companies succinctly

communicate information about talent implications. Key talking points are shared with line

managers in advance of sending the general communication so employee meetings allow for

questions and discussion. It is vital to use multiple communication vehicles such as email,

town halls, voice mail, Blogs, intranet, and webcasts. In all messages, two way

communications must be encouraged so that employees can share their feedback.

Post-Close of the deal message. Best practice companies will tend to over communicate once

the deal is closed. Two audiences must be considered to ensure maximum success of the

M&A: customers and employees. External communications to customers are developed and

timed appropriately to improve customer retention. Employee communication must be as

comprehensive as feasible to reduce employee speculation and fear. In order to maximize

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people integration effectiveness, best practice companies will cascade integration plans,

explaining how they will impact employees, and defining the roles that employees will play in

the integration process. Slotting and recruiting plans with key milestone dates should be

communicated as soon as possible so that employees know if they have jobs in the new

organization (CEB, 2006). More information about these processes are covered at Phase IV.

Table 12 is a sample communication plan template that can be used to ensure the right

communications happen at the right intervals.

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Table 12

Communication Plan

(CEB, 2006)

Communications Activity People Objectives Due Date People Owner

Cross functional

communication plans

Delineate the different teams across the

company and organize them so they

receive the right communication Pre-Deal CPO

Executive communication

workshops

Support new executives so they are

equipped to communicate information Pre-Deal CPO

Develop key talking points for

functional managers

Equip functional managers with details

about the deal so they can answer

customer or employee questions Pre-Deal

People Integration

Director

Executive announcements to

employees developed

Inform employees of the strategic

rationale for acquiring the other

organization Pre-Deal

CPO and People

Integration Director

Blog developed for employees

Enhance two way communication with

leadership and employees Post-Deal People Directors

Deal Close announcement

developed for functional

managers

Inform managers of upcoming events

and milestones within the next 90 days Post-Deal People Directors

Deal Close announcement

developed for employees

Inform employees of upcoming events

and milestones within the next 90 days Post-Deal People Directors

Announce leadership changes

Inform employees of leadership

changes

Post-Close of the

Deal

People Integration

Director and People

Directors

Develop functional manager

communication toolkit

Equip functional managers to respond

to employee questions

Post-Close of the

Deal

People Integration

Director and People

Directors

Integration plans

communication developed and

shared with employees

Inform employees of new operating

structures and organizational charts

Post-Close of the

Deal (Within 10

days if possible of

the Close)

People Integration

Director and

integration teams

Slotting roles and staffing

direction communications

developed and shared

Inform employees of new roles in

organization

Post-Close of the

Deal (Within 30

days if possible of

the Close)

People Integration

Director and People

Directors

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Optimize organizational design

The organizational development lead from the PIC team facilitates the creation of

organizational design by working with key stakeholders to understand the business direction

and vision and clarifying the structure of all levels of the organization. Design and

implementation of the top two layers of the new organization structure must be started as soon

as possible, and completed within 30 days of the deal being closed. This allows recruiting and

retention activities to commence. Additionally, when developing the organizational design,

consideration should be given to the governance structure to ensure adequate integration and

elimination of redundancy. Here are some of the key questions that prepare the way for an

optimal organizational design.

How are the two organizations structured at this point in time? Analyze organizational

charts, management layers, job titles, and job descriptions.

If we compare both organizations side by side what do they look like? How are they

similar or dissimilar?

Where is the newly formed organization headed in the future?

What do the answers to the first three questions suggest about the size and scope of the

organizational design changes needed?

What organizational design ideas or vision are in the minds of the executives at this

time? How many management layers? Will there be a centralized support services model or

not (CEB, 2006)?

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There are also four principles to keep in mind when designing the new organization (Figure 2):

1. Need to ensure there is a clear understanding of the design of both the acquiring and

target organizations. Look beyond the department names and job titles. Look at

performance outcomes, measures, and numbers of employees.

2. Do not use an organizational structure that has not been tested before.

3. Get rid of old habits that have slowed growth or prevented it from achieving its goals.

4. Stay focused on the first two levels of the organizational design in the beginning.

(CEB, 2006)

Other important issues to consider include not designing the new structure around people even

though it will be tempting to do it. It becomes more difficult as new relationships are fostered

and developed. Another mistake companies make in organizational design is that they build

huge jobs that have a narrow scope. The result is that there are too many layers designed

underneath it to get the work done. In addition to what has been shared previously companies

should use the following framework when designing the new organization during a M&A.

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Figure 2

Organizational Design Model (not in sequential order)

(Deloitte, 2008)

The following provides a more detailed step by step guide to the four major activities of

organizational design that integration and functional working team should consider using when

building the architecture for the new organization.

Define Strategic Objectives: It is important that the functional operating units and PIC teams

understand the business drivers behind the deal. It is also important to clarify the strategic and

financial goals. The leaders in the departments need this information so they can design their

new process workflows. The integration and functional teams should have a good sense of

current state processes and workflows between the acquiring and target organizations. It will

be important for the PIC teams to get buyoff from the Executive Project Steering Committee or

• Transition employees in and out, train, and align them to new organization srtucture

• Select new employees to achieve goals of new organization

• Improve new organization over time

Transform Organization

• Put together project scope and deliverables

• Determine business drivers

• Perforn diagnostics on organizations

• Define improvement opportunities

Define Strategic Objectives

• Define possible organization design theories

• Define core capabilities

• Determine key performance indicators and balanced scorecard

• Define improvement opportunities

• Design business model

Define Core Capabilities and Design Model

• Develop high level organizational structure, roles, and processes

• Determine decision making model

• Define performance system and leadership profiles

• Align decision making model, processes, and structure

Design Organization

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appropriate governing body as it relates to potential ideal state processes and workflows

because it all needs to align with the business strategy.

Define Core Capabilities and Design Model: Based on the business strategy and direction of

the new organization the team needs to build core capabilities to support it so that it will

achieve the objectives. This will result in key performance indicators and a balanced scorecard

to help keep the organization on track. The functional and PIC teams need to ensure they are

engaging the various department leaders to get their feedback as it relates to core capabilities.

Measuring employee performance before and after the organizational design is important to

determine if the change has resulted in improvements. An operating and decision making

model will be designed as well.

(Deloitte, 2008)

Design Organization: The design can begin at this step and it is best to focus on the two top

levels of the organization. It will be very helpful to design a few possible organization design

options that can be used. Each design should show potential benefits and risks of each option.

This phase needs to be heavily participative to ensure feedback is being shared and received

from stakeholders in the different departments. Senior leadership should be involved.

Processes, workflows, and the decision making model needs to align with the organizational

design. Because many departmental business processes will change, mapping the new

processes is critical. Each functional department should create high level workflow categories

so it is clear how the department will create value for the new organization. The functional

department should consider what it needs to do to meet customer expectations. Process

mapping should focus on what needs to be done in the business to support the strategic

objectives. It will be very helpful to assign a business process lead to assist at this stage and the

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PIC team can help coordinate that. The business process lead would map the new workflows

and processes to the performance goals identified when the core capabilities were defined

(CEB, 2006)

Transform Organization: The PIC team can consult with the functional working teams or line

managers to ensure the selection processes are aligned with the new organizational design.

Other activities include assisting impacted employees through a mobility program and helping

to transition some employees out of the new organization.

(Deloitte, 2008)

It will be imperative to continually measure and assess if the new organizational design is

helping it to achieve the strategic and financial goals. This means the new design and structure

of the organization as well as the workflow processes need to be evaluated on a regular basis.

Measuring the new design is critical to ensure the structure is helping it to achieve the goals. It

is an important step as priorities change often which can impact the department. The following

questions can be asked of department leaders when workflows and processes are being

evaluated.

1. Are there functions or activities that are no longer aligned with the business strategies?

2. Are there any functions or activities that will be needed to support the business goals?

3. What functions or activities need to coordinate and collaborate much more to achieve

the objectives?

4. Are there any business processes that are no longer needed to support the business

strategy?

5. Does the department have the right people in place to help it achieve the strategic

goals?

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6. Are there any core capabilities we need now or in the near future?

7. Are there any process redundancies, inconsistencies, or non-value added activities

preventing us from helping the organization to move forward?

(CEB, 2006)

Phase IV – Integration Implementation & Management

The integration implementation and management phase executes the plan as defined in

phase III. This work includes rebuilding the organization into a stronger more competitive

company to achieve synergies as well as the intended M&A financial and strategic objectives

(Schweiger, 2002). If done correctly, capable people are in the right roles, added to the

appropriate teams, and driving value into the business through their contributions.

Throughout implementation, the PIC team should manage and monitor all of the

implementation work, including tracking success metrics and making course corrections as

needed. For example, if employee turnover is getting worse, it may be necessary to work with

the business to create new mitigation strategies. Additionally, the work plan should be

regularly reviewed and updated, and status summaries should be communicated at all levels of

the organization. Regularly scheduled stakeholder meetings can help to gather status and

quickly identify any roadblocks that need to be escalated.

Integrate the cultures

Cultural clashes between the acquiring and target companies happen often, but they can

be mitigated by following a more systematic cultural integration process (Schweiger, 2002).

This work should build upon the information gathered from the prior cultural assessment in the

M&A’s Due Diligence phase. To begin, the Integration Leader must get clear direction from

the executives in order to understand the desired vision and culture for the new organization

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(CEB, 2006). Then a deep-dive review and expansion of the prior cultural assessment should

include the most recent collective knowledge of the target company’s culture, as well as a

review of business processes, hierarchies, and organizational structures. The assessment

should now incorporate a more complete picture and comparison of the two cultures. After that

is complete, a cultural integration plan can be conceived, with the goal being to get teams from

both organizations to work together collaboratively as early as possible. There is a highly

effective four-step cultural integration process called Cultural Mirroring that should be

incorporated into every company’s M&A playbook (Schweiger, 2002).

1. Increase communication. Identify key organizational team leaders from both

organizations who need to work together. Ensure that they are introduced to one another and

that they define roles and responsibilities for their future work together.

2. Enable cross organization pollination. Set collaboration and communication

expectations for the cross-organizational teams, defining cross-company goals and target

completion dates.

3. Clarify culture expectations. Remind all cross-organizational teams and leaders of

their need for professional courtesy, communicate the new vision for the culture, and explain

the core values within which the teams should operate.

4. Define and articulate the value in both cultures. As the vision for the new culture is

communicated, it is important to articulate the most valuable elements of the two

organizations’ cultures, what they bring to the new organization, and how those elements will

support the new cultural vision (Schweiger, 2002).

The merging departments would meet regularly and use the organizational level

cultural assessment scorecard to guide the process. The meetings can be facilitated. The vision

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the Executive Project Steering Committee developed would also be shared. The culture of an

organization will be different from the culture of a department. This is why both merging

departments need to come together. They would meet and start describing their respective

cultures. After that the team members would describe how they think the other organization’s

department would describe their culture. To help facilitate the conversation a listing of various

cultural dimensions can be shared (Schweiger, 2002). This will help the teams to describe their

department cultures instead of going in with a blank slate. The following is an example of a

template that could be used.

Table 13

Cultural Mirror Modeling Template

Cultural Dimensions Rating

Centralized or Decentralized decision making Dept. A Dept. B

Fast or Slow decision making Dept. A Dept. B

Short or Long term focus Dept. A Dept. B

High or Low risk tolerance Dept. B Dept. A

People Accountable or Not Dept. B Dept. A

Fast or Slow communications Dept. B Dept. A

Direct or Indirect communications Dept. A&B

Resistant or Open to change Dept. A&B

Results or Process focused Dept. A&B

(Schweiger, 2002)

Survey questions or individual interviews can also be used to obtain the cultural dimension

information. The objective of this exercise is to learn about the similarities and differences.

The differences are then reconciled. In order to reconcile the differences, shared goals need to

be determined. With that in mind both merging departments should answer the following

questions:

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What are the department’s goals?

What cultural characteristics would allow the unit to achieve its goals?

What specific actions need to be taken to ensure the cultural characteristics are

achieved?

What specific actions need to be taken to ensure the cultural characteristics are

maintained?

When these questions are answered the new department can develop new structures, policies,

systems, and processes to achieve performance measures and synergies. These performance

measures need to be tracked and evaluated over time to see if improvements are being made.

When these steps are finished the new merged department can begin to leave the past behind to

collaboratively develop the new reality together. This model has proven to successfully

integrate organizational and department cultures. This is because it provides a better

understanding of both cultures, increases collaboration so people do not feel stuff is being

pushed on them, and improves trust on the teams (Schweiger, 2002). Integrating cultures does

not happen overnight. It is an iterative process. In order to be successful, cultural integration

planning needs to ensure that teams and leaders of both organizations are working

collaboratively together on a regular basis.

Improve employee engagement and retention

M&A success requires the retention of high performing teams, individual contributors,

and line managers. Retention and improvement of employee engagement should follow a

systematic process. That systematic process should be documented in the playbook, and

should have the following steps at minimum.

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1. Conduct anonymous employee risk surveys. For expediency, the survey should be

provided electronically. Survey questions should be designed to (a) assess employee

perceptions of the M&A as a whole, (b) assess the need for course correction of M&A

implementation activities, and most importantly, (c) determine if employees are thinking of

leaving the organization. Effective examples of employee risks survey questions should be

maintained in the M&A playbook.

2. Share the survey results. Responses need to be reviewed by managers. The PIC team

should work with the line manager to build a specific retention strategy for any team that

appears to be at risk for high turnover of top talent. Line managers should be asked to share

the survey results with their teams, and any additional feedback supplied by the employees

during those communication sessions should be shared with the PIC team.

3. Complete talent assessments. Line managers also need to complete talent

assessments, to evaluate the talent on the team. This analysis will help to determine

capabilities that are needed to support the new organization as well as key employees that are

crucial to the success of the functional areas.

4. Complete follow-up employee interviews. Line managers should also conduct

individual interviews with each employee to determine where each is on the retention

spectrum. If managers identify critical risks during this process, they should work with the

PIC team to define mitigation strategies.

5. Provide retention packages. High performing employees who are thinking of leaving

the organization need to be flagged and provided with retention packages if necessary. All

retention packages need to be developed and coordinated by the HR business partners on the

PIC team.

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During the above work, the PIC team needs to monitor all of the activities and ensure

that they are completed in a timely fashion per the defined work plan in Phase III. Regular

status updates and risk summaries need to be communicated to the M&A leadership as well as

executives. The PIC team should document all mitigation strategy activities on the work plan

and monitor their implementation and effectiveness. Particularly effective mitigation

strategies should be incorporated into the M&A playbook to support future M&A work.

Recruit to build organizational capability

One of the most significantly important factors in any M&A is the expedient

redistribution and selection of the best and brightest employees into the new organizational

design. This task is often viewed as transactional in nature, but to the contrary is of strategic

importance. Managers must be tasked to hire and retain the best talent to make the new

organization more competitive. Employees in both organizations will be understandably

anxious. Many of them do not know if they will have jobs or not, and some are so talented they

can find jobs anywhere. It is therefore imperative that recruiting teams partner with the

business to move as quickly as possible to ensure that the right people are placed in the right

position at the right time, acquiring and retaining top talent and intellectual capital

(Tetenbaum, 1999). Many best practice organizations such as GE Capital complete this work

within 30 days of the deal being closed, which is an optimal goal to strive for, and ensure

maximum retention of top talent. GE Capital has been successful because they designed a

streamlined recruiting process in advance to support all of their M&A engagements. The

following process can be used to guide PIC teams and department managers through an

efficient recruiting and slotting process.

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1. Develop positions: Departmental leadership needs to commit to working with the

Human Resources department to develop positions in the newly designed organizational

structure. The Human Resources department sends the leaders a job description template

with talking points. The leaders will develop a draft of the job description outlining the

roles, responsibilities, and accountabilities. Please note the importance of using the core

capabilities and workflow processes that were put together during the organizational

design process as a guide. This will ensure the new positions help to achieve the business

strategies. Knowledge, skills, abilities, and competencies required need to be included in

the job description as well as whom it will report to and/or if the position will manage

people (Schweiger, 2002). Also included in the job description are the high level

performance goals. The leader sends the job description draft back to the Human

Resources department. The Human Resources department refines it and validates it one

last time with the department manager. When the job descriptions are finished and

approved the business partner from the Human Resources department then works with

the department manager and senior leaders to determine the number of positions it is

allowed to have by position type. The organizational structure is also updated.

2. Analysis: After it is decided the types and number of positions the department is

allowed to have the Human Resources department works with the department manager to

analyze the existing employees from the acquiring and target companies. The analysis

includes the number of people, types of jobs they currently have, and what they are doing

in these roles. All of this is compared to the future design of the department. This

comparison will inform the leader and the Human Resources department if there are

recruiting shortages, overages, and/or slotting activities. If an employee working in the

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department from the acquiring and target companies are performing at least 50% of the

major responsibilities in the new position they can be slotted as long as there are enough

approved positions in the new department. If there are not enough positions the recruiting

department will have to post positions for employees. Slotting employees is always the

preferred practice because when employees have to apply for jobs this increases their

anxiety and has a negative impact on morale.

3. Post positions and collect candidate information: The Human Resources department

and PIC teams will work with the department manager to ensure the correct jobs are

posted. Location information of the job and if relocation is available needs to be clear. It

is crucial to communicate with employees at several intervals to ensure they understand

the recruiting process, number and types of jobs, associated timelines, etc. The more

communication the better. It is also very important that employees from both the

acquiring and target companies are given consideration. In fact the recruiting lead on the

integration team should provide frequent status reports regarding the candidate slates to

the human resources Integration Leader who has some oversight on the overall process.

The reports need to be reviewed to ensure employees from both the acquiring and target

organizations are treated in a fair and consistent manner though the entire recruiting

process. If a department manager is biased and only considering employees from the

acquiring organization the human resources integration leader will need to intervene.

4. Candidates are screened: Candidates should be screened against and job description

and other specifications. Candidate information needs to be gathered at this step such as

performance details, etc. so that the department manager has the right information to

make a selection decision. This step needs to be as objective as possible. The recruiting

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lead on the integration team should be equipped to escalate concerns to the human

resources Integration Leader if they feel a manager is biased.

5. Candidates are delivered: The recruiting department vets candidates, narrows the pool,

and delivers the most qualified candidates from both organizations to the manager.

Candidate details need to inform managers why each candidate is best suited for the role.

The candidate’s salary expectations need to be checked to ensure they are aligned with

the pay ranges. If there are too many positions and not enough employees the recruiting

department may need to post and recruit externally. Before the jobs are posted externally

a communication to the employees should happen apprising of the situation and that jobs

are being posted externally. Posting jobs externally could make employees panic and this

is why the communication is important.

6. Interviews: The recruiting department should develop interview guide templates for the

department managers. The interview questions needs to be aligned with the competencies

of the role so that the managers are equipped to assess the candidates

during the interview. Managers should check with candidates at the interview to ensure

they understand the job and if relocation is required make sure the candidate can relocate.

7. Evaluate & Decide: Selection decisions need to be based on competence, performance,

and fit. The human resources Integration Leader should be involved before decisions are

made to ensure the process has been fair. Selection decisions needs to be documented and

job related in the event of a future audit or if there is a need to justify a hiring decision.

8. Impact Assessment: If there are employees who will not be getting a role it needs to be

determined if they can be retained in their existing role for a period of time or need to

have transition support. The transition support will help the impacted employee obtain

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another position in the organization or placement outside the organization. These

transition decisions need to be made for the impacted employee so they have options.

9. Communicate: Successful candidates will receive job offers. Unsuccessful candidates

will be provided with transition packets providing them with retention packages, internal

mobility, or outplacement options. The timing of both of these communications needs to

be coordinated. When successful candidates start receiving job offers the candidates who

do not receive any communication will start to worry.

10. Close: Successful candidates receive job offer letters from the recruiting department

and are moved to their new roles. Unsuccessful candidates should simultaneously receive

their transition packets.

It is essential to move through this phase of work quickly, but efficiently. This is because your

top performers are more likely to leave the organization when there is uncertainty instead of

the poor performing employees. Managers in the business need to let the People PIC teams

know what their respective organizational structures will look like and the types/numbers of

positions needed to accomplish the goals. The following high level expedited recruiting

process was designed for handling high volume (hundreds) of positions at a time if necessary

for internal employees impacted because of a merger or departmental restructure. This process

was designed because there were too many top performers leaving the organization. It was

taking too long to create, post, and fill hundreds of positions for the new organization. If

managers meet the timelines, several employees can be moved into new roles within 21 days

from the date the positions are posted.

Manager creates org charts and job descriptions for new positions. Manager reviews

with People business partner on the PIC team.

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Manager submits job descriptions and org charts to PIC team each week to kick off the

accelerated process.

By end of day Friday, the PIC team sends meeting invitation to manager for the

following Tuesday.

Monday – PIC team reviews/finalizes job description, market prices jobs, completes

internal equity review, assigns FLSA status, and assigns job codes.

Tuesday – Manager meets with PIC team and recruiting team in one meeting to review

compensation outcomes, finalizes compensation details and job description, share

information needed for position builds, and develop screening questions for posting.

Wednesday – PIC team builds position codes.

Thursday – Positions built and posted by the recruiting team.

Requisition posted for 7 days.

-- Customized career portal for applicants.

-- Streamlined application.

-- Digital interviews to save time of travelling to attend interviews.

Manager can review applicants on a daily basis.

Recruiting team provides the manager with list of applicants every day, current base

salaries and any relevant bonus information for the candidate. Recruiting team also

sends managers summary candidate reports to the manager so they can review

qualification details about the candidates.

In-person interviews completed, if necessary.

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Manager meets with the recruiting team to select candidates and discusses offers.

Recruiting develops and extends the job offers. The People business partner

provides input to the offer if there are unusual circumstances.

The milestones are illustrated below and guide you through the major process steps previously

mentioned.

Figure 4

Accelerated Recruiting Process

Managing employee transitions

While the slotting and recruiting processes are happening it is crucial to manage

employee transitions. Employees will either have roles in the new organization or they will

not. If it is decided they will not have new positions they transition into an impacted

classification. Best practice organizations have a dedicated team in the recruiting department to

support impacted employees. This team within the recruiting department focuses on managing

the impacted employees by placing them in other positions within the organization or assisting

them with outplacement services. They advocate on behalf of the impacted employee. They

receive a list of impacted employees from the HR business partners. This list provides this

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team with the names of the impacted employees, their job titles, date they will leave the

organization, and performance status. When an employee moves into impacted status they

need to receive regular updates from the recruiting team. Here is a sample list of programs and

services the recruiting team provides to impacted employees.

o Provides an intake assessment

o Career guide workbook

o Flagged in the applicant tracking system as an impacted employee which makes their

record more conspicuous in the system

o Training classes

o Automated notifications of job announcements

o Single point of contact

o Competitive search for internal positions

o Resume consultation

o Career sites navigation

o Review of their job applications

o Advocates to other members of the recruiting team and hiring managers

o Interview coaching

o Outplacement

o Relocation assistance

o Severance

o Provides resources for building a social media profile

o Provides feedback after interviews are completed

This impacted employee support model helps to ease the employee’s transition. If it is decided

there are no internal positions then outplacement services are provided. Impacted employees

need to be treated with care and respect through the entire process.

A good rule of thumb is to follow the organization’s Values. As much advanced notice should

be given to employees if they are to transition out of the company or if it is anticipated there

are any potential impacts. Even though outplacement services are costly they should be offered

to avoid negative consequences such as lawsuits. Employees leaving on a negative note are

also more likely to damage the organization’s reputation which is not good for business

(Schweiger, 2002)

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Align HR policies and information systems

This is a brief section, but only because most HR organizations already intuitively provide

adequate support in these areas. Obviously alignment of HR policies and information systems

in the newly formed organization are key to the success of the M&A. When updating HR

policies, be sure to define and communicate a clear transition plan so that employees know

which pre-existing policies to follow and for how long. Communication about the status of the

policies needs to be disseminated to employees apprising them of updates and changes (CEB,

2006). These communication points should be incorporated into the overall communication

plan so that messages can be timed appropriately amongst all other communication.

The HR information systems being used in both organizations also need to be evaluated

for strengths and weaknesses to determine what should be kept, integrated, or eliminated. Be

sure to include the Information Technology departments of both organizations to capitalize on

any integration and automated data migration opportunities. It might also be helpful to add

historical experiential notes of particularly effective technology integration tactics in the M&A

playbook.

.

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Business Process Guide for Leaders: Helpful Tips

The business and human resources Integration Leaders at this stage needs to articulate the

financial and strategic goals of the deal as well as the synergies needed to achieve success to

all of the PIC teams. The business Integration Leader will be responsible for making sure all of

the cross functional integration plans are delineated and managed in a consolidated project

plan. Refer to the appendix for a consolidated implementation plan. This consolidated project

plans helps to drive the implementation to ensure it will be successful. The business integration

leader will also clarify what exactly needs to be integrated. All of the PIC teams will analyze

their respective areas and identify how synergies can best fulfill the financial and strategic

goals of the deal. They will also determine the most optimal way to accomplish these goals.

Each functional area will manage their own respective integration plan and provide status

updates to the business integration leader who tracks all activities holistically. The business

Integration Leader is also responsible for selecting the stability and synergy capture teams.

These teams are independent of one another and the PIC teams. The stability team makes sure

the disruption to the customers and daily operations is minimal. If there are problems the

people on the stability team will escalate issues to the business integration leader. The synergy

capture team will track the synergies being captured from all of the functional areas. Once the

synergies are captured they are reported to the business Integration Leader (Schweiger, 2002).

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Business Process Guide for Leaders: Helpful Tips

A change management approach was outlined in the previous pages for managing the people

side of change. As the two different organizations come together it is inevitable, but many of

the business processes will need to change as well. It will be critical for the various teams to

work together to change and improve processes. To facilitate these activities it is suggested

that the new organization use the change acceleration process (CAP) and Work-Out methods.

These methods have been used by GE for a number of years. These methods are used to help

teams accept change, solve problems, improve processes, and break down barriers. Here is an

overview of some of the major steps.

Bring teams together

Give them a problem to solve or a process to improve

Team solves problems or improves processes using several techniques such as

brainstorming

Team presents solutions to leadership

Leadership supports or rejects the recommendations

Responsible owner drives the implementation of the changes or improvements

CAP and Work-Out methods also facilitate cultural integration because PIC teams from both

organizations solve problems and create new processes together.

(Harvard Business Review, 2009)

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Phase V – Integration Evaluation

The post implementation review and overall assessment of the integration is needed now. This

is when organizations conduct a retrospective, document their findings, and make

improvements for the next merger and acquisition. Here is a sample of a post implementation

review that can be shared with internal customers to assess the Human Resources department’s

M&A performance.

Table 14

Post Implementation Review

Tasks

Strongly

Disagree Disagree Neutral Agree

Strongly

Agree

Human Resources department team

roles and responsibilities were clear

Recruiting processes were effective

Impacted employees were cared for

throughout the process

The People Business Partner

provided good consultation with me

The project management

components allowed the team to

accomplish the M&A goals

The team met the major milestones

and deliverables

The human resources Integration

Director guided us through each

major phase of the deal

The cultural assessment process was

effective

The Compensation team assisted me

in creating effective job descriptions

The Human Resources department

worked well together

The Human Resources department

assisted me in retaining top talent

(CEB, 2006)

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Conduct a post integration employee survey

The most vital post-implementation activity is addressing employee concerns. People

integration risks identified in the due diligence and integration planning phases will change

over time. Employee satisfaction and morale surveys should be conducted throughout the

M&A implementation as well as two to three months after the deal is closed. After the results

of the assessment have been analyzed, retention strategies and mitigation plans should be

reviewed and updated as needed. Refer to Figure 5.

Figure 5

Integration Survey (using a Likert scale)

1. My position motivates me.

2. I would recommend my employer to others.

3. In this organization there is open and honest communication.

4. I receive the information and communication I need to do my job.

5. I am kept aware of issues that impact me.

6. The organization stays focused on the Mission and Values.

7. Customer issues are handled quickly.

8. My department is committed to performance excellence.

9. I receive recognition when I do good work.

10. Perception of senior leadership.

11. Perception of my supervisor.

12. Rate the working environment.

13. The team works together to get things done.

14. Communication is received timely.

15. I believe my organization has a positive future.

16. I receive appropriate training on my job.

17. My talents and abilities are used in my role.

18. I get feedback about my performance regularly.

19. My department uses performance methods to make process improvements.

20. My performance goals have been explained to me.

(CEB, 2006)

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Evaluate the PIC team’s service to their customers

Best practice companies continually assess and track their human resources outcomes

throughout the entire M&A, documenting their issues as they go along. This allows them to

learn and make course corrections along the way, to maximize effectiveness and results.

Another best practice is for the chief human resources officer to continually assess the PIC

team’s performance by asking for performance feedback from internal customers as well as the

newly acquired company. At minimum the PIC team should conduct interviews of key players

who were a part of recent M&A process. Then the PIC team could conduct online surveys to

obtain a broad set of feedback from line managers and other stakeholders. Some of the

questions that should be asked include:

Does the PIC team understand the objectives of the M&A deal, and do they understand

their role?

Did the PIC team collaborate with one another and deliver a coordinated service?

Did the PIC team know how to use M&A tools?

Did the PIC team manage conflict effectively?

Were the right resources and skillsets present on the PIC team to adequately address

the integration scope?

Were there enough PIC team resources available throughout the project?

Is there enough redundancy of PIC team skillsets to ensure adequate coverage for a

future M&A (CEB, 2006)?

Conduct an assessment of the effectiveness of the tools

The PIC team should also conduct a retrospective on tools and methods used during the

M&A. Were the tools as effective and comprehensive as they could have been? Did the

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acquired organization easily understand the tools and their intent? Were the tools easily scaled

to the actual size of the M&A, i.e. were they over burdensome for the smaller acquired

organization?

Process Optimization

It will be imperative to evaluate integration performance and processes at regular

intervals throughout the M&A. Process improvement methods should be used to optimize

performance during various phases of the M&A lifecycle and afterwards. There are many

different types of process improvement techniques that can be leveraged including CAP, Lean,

Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA), Six Sigma, Total Quality Management (TQM), or Work-Outs.

The process technique used will depend on the complexity of the problem identified.

Regardless of the method used to improve processes they all share some common principles

that can be leveraged if it is decided that processes need to be improved (as defined below).

Data and Measurement: Data creates visibility to possible process related problems. Data can

also be tracked, measured, and monitored over a period of time. Data is great, but it will not

explain why there are issues. It is a great first step in the journey to process excellence (Health

Foundation, 2010).

Mapping Processes: At some point processes will need mapped out step by step. The goal is to

map out the current state process. In order to do this effectively, it will be crucial to obtain

feedback and input from the process stakeholders. The staff will appreciate being engaged to

map out the processes. They will pinpoint processes that add value and those that do not add

value. Problems with processes will start becoming clear and can be isolated. Map out each

step by indicating the owner of the process. Decision points in the process should be captured.

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Reliability and Control: Once a process or a system is analyzed another important step is

making sure reliability is improved and consistency is achieved. At this phase redundancy and

waste are identified and eliminated. Handoffs in the process get special attention due to the

fact that they increase the likelihood of errors.

Demand and capacity: If there are delays with a process many people assume there are

resource or capacity challenges meaning there may not be enough staff. Before making a

decision like that it is important to look at demand for a service and flow. When demand and

capacity are reviewed often times unnecessary bottlenecks are discovered. When these

bottlenecks are removed the process or system starts to flow smoothly and delays are

mitigated.

Stakeholder engagement: It has been mentioned already, but it is really important to engage

people involved with touching these processes to get their input. Customer feedback should

also be solicited as well. When people feel they are part of the solution instead of having

something pushed on them will increase the likelihood the process changes will be supported

and adopted.

(Health Foundation, 2010)

Design New Process: After the problems are identified the stakeholders will work together to

map out a new ideal state process. The new processes should be aligned with business

operating unit and organizational strategies. Value added process steps identified will be

included in the new process design. Process owners and decision points are identified on the

map.

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Implement: The new process is implemented. The change management information in the

previous sections should be referenced. If this step does not go well it could easily jeopardize

the adoption and implementation of the new process.

(Health Foundation, 2010)

Evaluate: The new process should be assessed and measured. The PDSA tool was mentioned

previously and needs to be considered. It allows people to answer the following questions:

What is it that we are trying to accomplish?

How will we know that a change resulted in an improvement?

What changes can we make so improvements are made?

(Institute for Health Care Improvement, 2013)

Update the playbook, and create improvement plans for future M&A

Once the retrospective information from customers and tools has been compiled, the

playbook and its supporting tools should be updated. Additionally, the PIC team should

engage in skills enhancement and expansion training, to improve future M&A work. It is best

to continually refresh skillsets to increase speed and flexibility of a future M&A.

The following dashboards are different examples that can be used to track people related

integration progress.

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Table 15

(CEB, 2006)

PEOPLE DEPARTMENT INTEGRATION PLANNING DASHBOARD

We must be ready to do:

1 Identification and retention of key management talent

2 Attain synergy targets and eliminate redundancies in positions

3 Launch cultural integration process

Major Activities StatusAction

RequiredOwner

Secure Key Management Talent

Talent assessment process for Vice Presidents - establish definitions for key talent based on deal strategy and goals and

evaluate talent against the specific criteria. (pre-close)

Talent assessment process for key middle management (deal sign through post close). Senior managers will identify

Talent assessment process with key talent through organization (post close). Middle managers will identify.

Determine leadership assignments

Retention Management

Complete talent risk analysis - critical roles, manager and above

Design customized retention strategies for key talent (short and long term)

Staffing

Review processes, resources and tools. Determine best practices.

Review diversity philosophy, assess diversity

Develop plans to attract and retain long-term talent

Review contractors to permanent employee ratio and determine strategy

Determine hiring requirements (identify current vs. future)

Review hiring practices philosophy (i.e. temp to perm, market pricing, etc.)

Cultural Integration

Understand differences in philosophy, vision and guiding principles

Understand "patient - centric" philosophy

Outline new reporting relationships and decision-making processes for combined entity

Educate acquired employees about the company's work processes and environment, employment practices

Review existing employee satisfaction surveys, as applicable

Review current performance management process and determine transition required and timeline. Determine if

performance appraisals / bonuses are tied to achieving company objectives.

Create team building activities to facilitate cultural integration and change management

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Table 16

People Integration Dashboard

Major Deliverable Owner Status Start End Actions Needed

Revenue Cycle

recruitment tier 2 Recruiting On track 6/7/2013 8/17/2013

None. Interviews taking

place.

Cultural Integration

Organizational

Development Delayed 7/7/2013 10/1/2013

Cultural assessment not

completed at due diligence

step.

Retention of certified

EMR analysts

People Business

Partners Completed 7/15/2013 8/22/2013

Retention bonuses

provided and agreements

signed.

IS impacted

employees given 60

day notice Recruiting On track 7/22/2013 10/1/2013

Have impacted employee

list and uploaded it to

applicant tracking system.

Build new job

descriptions and

position codes Compensation Delayed 7/22/2013 9/22/2013

Managers have not

provided draft job

descriptions.

HR policies aligned

People Business

Partners Delayed 7/1/2013 10/1/2013

Many of the policies are

completely different.

Notified CPO to obtain

additional details.

Benefits integration

with target company Benefits Completed 8/9/2013 10/17/2013 Enrollments completed.

(CEB, 2006)

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Table 17

People Dashboard

KPI Goal Current Change

Rec

ruit

ing

Quality of Hire 4.5 4.6 ↑↑

New Hire Turnover (HQ/Sales)

New Hire Turnover (Manufacturing)

Dev

elo

p

Level of Succession Planning

Impact of Training on Business

Training Transfer for Key Courses (Composite)

Ret

ain

Eligible to Retire

Retention of High Performers

Satisfaction with HR

Workload (Associates Losing PTO)

Ch

all

eng

e

Culture

Alignment & Commitment (HQ/Sales)

Alignment & Commitment (Manufacturing)

Action on Feedback (HQ/Sales)

Action on Feedback (Manufacturing)

Productivity

Div

ersi

ty

% Females Director and Above

% Workforce Minorities

Summary

Actions to Remedy Red and Yellow KPI's

(CEB, 2006)

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Business Process Guide for Leaders: Helpful Tips

Now that many new processes have been mapped leadership should make sure audit teams are

being used for auditing these processes. Any process or performance based gaps need to be

analyzed against the success measures and course corrections taken if necessary to ensure the

new organization stays on track. It is now critical that the business accept the responsibility of

developing high performance teams so that value can be sustained and organizational

objectives are achieved. The Human Resources department can help guide this process, but

again leaders need to take the responsibility of making sure it happens. High performing

teams model the following qualities:

Communication is important so that everyone is clear on the plan and goals

Knowledge and skills are similar and transferred easily

Team members are all involved

Team is dedicated to the success of their department and the organization

Performance excellence is very important to the team

Roles and responsibilities are clearly defined

People on teams are self-directed

(CEB, 2004)

Senior leaders in the organization should make sure all leaders include this as a required goal

on their performance evaluations so it can be assessed on a continual basis.

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Business Process Guide for Leaders: Helpful Tips

Leadership needs to continue to track, monitor, and improve performance using the PDSA

cycle. Interventions may be needed using various process improvement methods. When the

integration is completed a report by each PIC team listing things that went well, not so well,

and improvement recommendations used should be submitted to the business integration

leader who will consolidate this information in a central database so it can be referenced in the

future by all PIC teams. Lessons learned documents for specific departments can also be

created so the same problems do not surface in the future. Feedback about performance needs

to continue to be solicited. Case studies should be put together. Best practices should be shared

easily. Playbooks, tools, and other related documents also need to be updated when changes

are made to them. Track, assess, adjust, and be flexible (Schweiger, 2002).

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New and Improved M&A Playbook

A comprehensive M&A playbook with people integration activities, deliverables, and

tools has been developed with feedback from key human resources and M&A leaders. The

following reflect their comments:

The playbook content is rich and valuable

The tools, templates, and step-by-step instructions made the playbook easy to use

Several of the people integration concepts were anticipated and well-proven

The value of the new tools and concepts could be proven through pilots and modified as

needed

Communication plans are absolutely critical, and the communications department needs

to drive their development

The last M&A phase, Integration Evaluation, is a critical component that should not be

overlooked because it outlines the importance of monitoring and evaluating the

integration and conducting a post implementation review.

Conclusion

For a successful M&A to be realized, the people integration elements must be

incorporated, and a strong human resources team and Integration Leader must be assigned the -

ole of overseeing those integration activities. Well-planned and executed people integration

processes can drive value into the business, and a comprehensive playbook can guide them to

consistent success. This, in essence, will create and sustain value so that the financial and

strategic goals of the M&A are achieved.

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References

CEB. (2010). Change management: An end to end process guide. Arlington, VA, 3-19.

CEB. (2008). Change management checklist for leaders. Arlington, VA, 1-2.

CEB. (2004). Developing high performance teams. Arlington, VA, 1-4.

CEB. (2006). HR's role in mergers and acquisitions. Arlington, VA, 2-117.

Deloitte. (2008). Boosting business performance through organization design [PDF document].

Retrieved December 7, 2013, from http://www.deloitte.com/assets/Dcom-

UnitedStates/Local%20Assets/Documents/us_consulting_hc_BoostBusPerfOrgDesign_2

30908.pdf

Harvard Business Review. (2009). How GE teaches teams to lead change [PDF document].

Retrieved December 22, 2013, from

http://www.ge.com/pdf/innovation/leadership/hbr_crotonville.pdf

Harvard Business Review. (1998, January). Making the deal real: How GE Capital integrates

acquisitions [PDF document]. Retrieved October 27, 2013, from

http://hbr.org/1998/01/making-the-deal-real-how-ge-capital-integrates-acquisitions/ar/1

Health Foundation. (2010). Quality improvement made simple [PDF document]. Retrieved

February 1, 2014 from

http://www.health.org.uk/public/cms/75/76/313/594/Quality_improvement_made_simple

.pdf?realName=uDCzzh.pdf

Institute for Health Care Improvement. (2013). How to improve. Retrieved December 16, 2013,

from http://www.ihi.org/knowledge/Pages/HowtoImprove/default.aspx

Page 67: Integration Playbook for HR Practitioners

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Omri, M. (2011). The role of speed of integration in the integration effectiveness and mergers &

acquisitions success [PDF document]. Retrieved November 8, 2013, from

http://www.gphd.ktk.pte.hu/files/tiny_mce/File/Vedes/Omri_Morag_disszertacio.pdf

Schweiger, D. M. (2002). M&A integration: A framework for executives and managers. New

York: McGraw Hill.

Tetenbaum, T.J. (1999). Beating the odds of merger & acquisition failure: seven key practices

that improve the chance for expected integration and synergies. Organizational

Dynamics, Autumn 1999

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Appendix A: Consolidated Implementation Plan

Integration Implementation Plan

## ##

Phase Workstream/Activity Assigned Status

Establish strategy and finance goals of M&A: Understand business

drivers and organizational strategy behind dealSr. Executives

Define value and set integration process and goals Sr. Executives

Set communication philosophy, strategy, and continual

communication feedback mechanism

Communication

Executive

Define synergies required Sr. Executives

Get to the table with the executives to understand the M&A goals CPO

Align deal goals with People M&A goals and activities CPO

Establish People M&A infrastructure (integration working team) and

identify competencies and skill sets needed to support People agenda.

Train integration working team

CPO

Identify early stage People related risks including liabilities, leadership

engagement, and cultural and organizational alignmentCPO

Select due diligence team and business integration leader (CPO on due

diligence team)

Sr. Executives and

CPO

Select integration leader for the People Department selected (People

integration leader on due diligence team)CPO

Create and share integration project charter with leadersBusiness integration

leader

Create the right atmosphere to ensure the integration process will be a

successDue diligence team

Detect possible business or cultural challenges that might prevent

integration successDue diligence team

Negotiate with the targeted company Due diligence team

Prepare to gather necessary due diligence info and manage the

negotiation processDue diligence team

Appoint top level executives of new organizationSr. Executives and

CPO

Formally announce integration leaders to both organizationsSr. Executives and

CPO

Identify compliance and financial risksCPO and People

integration leader

Cultural assessment of target company happensPeople integration

leader

Top level talent assessment conductedPeople integration

leader

Talent retention audits start to take placePeople integration

leader

Negotiation closedSr. Executives and

due diligence team

Share approved project charter with cross functional integration

working teams

Business integration

leader

90 days +

Deal Closed

########

Pre-Deal 30 days 60 days

Leadership &

Strategy

Transaction

(due diligence)

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Appendix B: Consolidated Implementation Plan

Integration Implementation Plan

## ##

Phase Workstream/Activity Assigned Status

Establish a collaborative integration infrastructure by bringing senior

leadership teams together

Business integration

leader

Plan the business integration process and determine what will be

integrated

Business integration

leader

Resources specifically planned and approved for the integrationBusiness integration

leader

Integration and cross functional teams selected and start working

together across both organizations

Business integration

leader

Put business integration project plans togetherBusiness integration

leader

Synergy analysis startsBusiness integration

leader

Tools, templates, practices, and processes are put together to support

the integration

Business integration

leader

Process mapping, CAP, and Work-Out used to accelerate the

integration

Business integration

leader

Organization redesign plannedPeople integration

leader

More talent retained and people engagement startsPeople integration

leader

People slotting, staffing, and transition activities launchedPeople integration

leader

People integration teams come together. People change management

activities commence.

People integration

leader

People policies and systems establishedPeople integration

leader

Cultural integration People integration

leader

People integration plans shared with business integration leaderPeople integration

leader

People communication plans formulated and feedback loops initiatedPeople integration

leader

90 days +

Deal Closed

########

Pre-Deal 30 days 60 days

Integration

Planning

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Appendix C: Consolidated Implementation Plan

Integration Implementation Plan

## ##

Phase Workstream/Activity Assigned Status

Integration transitioned to the businessBusiness integration

leader

Synergies captured Integration leaders

Processes mapped and improved to accelerate the integration Integration leaders

Use feedback to adjust integration plan Integration leaders

Integration audits taking place Integration leaders

New teams built and developed Integration leaders

Ensure value is created and organizational is achieving the financial and

strategic goalsIntegration leaders

On-Going Communication Integration leaders

Monitor and react to People risks that may impact value realizationPeople integration

leader

Ensure People synergies are being capturedPeople integration

leader

Cultural integration achievedPeople integration

leader

On-Going people communications happening Integration leaders

Key performance indicators are evaluated and measuredBusiness integration

leader

Continued development and refinement of tools, templates, practices,

and processes

Business integration

leader

Audit teams continue to analyze integration and make improvement

recommendations

Business integration

leader

Adjustments made if necessary to ensure synergies are captured, goals

achieved, and value realized

Business integration

leader

Plan-Do-Study-Act Integration leaders

Continual communication continues Integration leaders

Track and measure People performance indicatorsPeople integration

leader

Assess People M&A performancePeople integration

leader

Continual process improvement techniques used to enhance

performanceIntegration leaders

Continue to evaluate and optimize Integration leaders

90 days +

Deal Closed

########

Pre-Deal 30 days 60 days

Integration

Management

Evaluation