The problem is, the post-merger playbook for creating business value from deals centers on optimizing assets, growing margins, and increasing efficiency to drive revenue. Talent and culture often take a backseat, if they are even considered at all, even though those two elements ultimately determine the fate of most deals. “If talent in an increasingly digital-first world was an issue before a merger, it is even more so now, post-merger,” says Topping.
Simply merging or acquiring another company doesn’t necessarily equate to greater insight into customers, or better value across the supply chain. Achieving those results requires a methodical assessment and integration of talent to form a cohesive, collaborative, data-driven workforce. “The very difficult talent challenge is finding leaders who possess the left- and right-brain capabilities to work across the new business realities and the old core competencies to constantly check that execution and strategy are in balance,” says Verizon’s Angiolet, whose company spent more than $8 billion in recent years to acquire AOL and Yahoo to form the digital content unit Oath.