Be Quick or Be Dead

Aside from being the title of a great song from one of the greatest rock bands ever -Iron Maiden- Be Quick or Be dead is a great metaphor for today’s business environment. No matter how you look at it speed is picking up and someone will take advantage of it at someone else’s expense. Now more than ever with falling valuation of assets, lack of liquidity, and reduced consumer confidence the notion of “survival of the quickest” is the real deal. Darwin famously stated that it is not the strongest but the most adaptable to change that survives, and this is true as true in the business world as it is in nature.

Actually if you think about it, when is the best opportunity to actually go on the offense and make a change? When the going gets tough or when everything is gently pointing upwards? Companies will either be acquired, stripped of assets, or go on the offense to acquire underpriced assets when markets and demand soften up. The real deal then is obviously to make sure you quickly can get your organization aligned and executing on the new company’s direction, and that you drive the calculated synergies of a merger or acquisition home. With people being by far the biggest expense for any given business (on average 70% of operational cost) how you deal with your joined workforce must logically be the most important factor in any M&A situation.

In any merger or acquisition, investment banks and equity analysts will provide you with a plethora of figures quantifying the synergistic strategic benefits of the union. Yet what determines whether a merger succeeds or fails is really its people.” – Jean-Pierre Garnier, ex-CEO of GlaxoSmithKline

Logically then, companies with better people processes and a serious focus on people performance should do better in a merger. To test this hypothesis, SuccessFactors research examined the performance of ten of our customers that specifically cited challenges resulting from a merger or acquisition as their business drivers for investing in SuccessFactors. The results were clear – the ten companies that leveraged SuccessFactors to drive the merger home completely outperformed their competition in 12 month revenue growth, 12 month income growth, return on equity and price to book ratio. These mergers were not just successful on paper, they worked in the real world.

Download the SuccessFactors Research Data Sheet: Mergers & Acquisitions to see just how successful our customers are and how they are winning in these uncertain economic times.

This entry was posted in People Strategy, SuccessFactors Research and tagged , , , by Erik Berggren. Bookmark the permalink.

About Erik Berggren

Erik Berggren Erik Berggren, Vice President of Customer Results & Global Research, leads the Global Research team and Strategic Consulting group within SuccessFactors.

Mr. Berggren has worked on strategic consulting service engagements with more than 30 companies across Europe and the US. He has held positions with Ernst & Young in Stockholm and New York and prior to his current job as head of SF Research worked with Capgemini in the Nordics.

He was the CEO and cofounder of a research based consulting company that developed thought leadership on business execution measurement systems.

Mr. Berggren is a recognized thought leader in the business execution and people performance field and is frequently invited to speak at conferences around the world. He's published numerous papers and is now focused on launching the Return on Execution(c) book.

He holds a Masters of Business Administration from the University of Uppsala, Sweden. He has studied Marketing and Finance at an MBA program at K.U. Leuven, Belgium and also studied French in Katholique Université de Lyon, France.

He was an elite mountainbike racer with world cup and world championship racing experience.

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