A CASE of a MERGER and ACQUISITION MEGA BLIND SPOT
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Transcript A CASE of a MERGER and ACQUISITION MEGA BLIND SPOT
A CASE of a MERGER
and ACQUISITION
MEGA BLIND SPOT
for the ACADEMY OF MARKETING STUDIES
Dr. J.D. Williams
Kutztown University
ABSTRACT
M&A mania-- The world has seemed fixated on
growth through M&A as evidenced by the
thousands of mergers that have taken place over
this past decade.
This paper has uncovered a flaw in the M&A
process that has blinded the financial and
managerial sectors.
While determining the M&A cost-benefits of the
joint relationship, the role of marketing has
been diffused or just left out.
INTRODUCTION & PURPOSE
Total worldwide value of M&As topped
$2.7 trillion in 2005 [M&A Blind Spot: Ettenson & Knowles, 2007]
Consider the potential losses if only 20%
of the M&As were conducted without
marketing due diligence [Ettenson & Knowles]
Include marketing analysis into the
traditional M&A models
INTRODUCTION & PURPOSE (cont.)
MARKETING Fresh approach for financial M&A portfolio
managers, strategic managers, & asset managers
New concept ushers in potentially lucrative &
holistic application assessment for the corporate &
banking industries
Will likely justify itself as highly cost effective tool &
potentially offer increased typical R.O.I.
LITERATURE REVIEW
M&As- Cartwright, Susan; Schoenberg, Richard (2006). Thirty Years of Mergers and Acquisitions Research: Recent Advances and
Future Opportunities. British Journal of Management.
- DePamphilis, Donald (2008). Mergers, Acquisitions, & Other Restructuring Activities. New York: Elsevier, Academic Press.
- Ettenson, Richard & Jonathan Knowles (June 16-17, 2007). M&A Blind Spot: When Negotiating a Merger, Leave a Seat at the
Table for a Marketing Expert. Wall Street Journal.
- Harwood, I. A. (2006). Confidentiality Constraints within Mergers and Acquisitions: gaining insights through a 'bubble' metaphor.
British Journal of Management.
- Finklestein, Sydney (2007). Cross Border Mergers and Acquisitions. Dartmouth College.
- King, D. R.; Slotegraaf, R.; Kesner, I. (2008). Performance Implications of Firm Resource Interactions in the Acquisition of R&Dintensive Firms. Organization Science.
- King, D. R., D. R. Dalton, C. M. Daily, & J. G. Covin, (2004). Meta-Analyses of Post-Acquisition Performance: Indications of
Unidentified Moderators. Strategic Management Journal.
- Lien, Kathy (2005). Mergers And Acquisitions - Another Tool For Traders. Investopedia.
- Maddigan, Ruth; Zaima, Janis (1985). The Profitability of Vertical Integration. Managerial and Decision Economics.
- Mergers and Acquisitions Lead to Long-Term Management Turmoil. Newswise.
- Platt, Gordon (2007). Cross-Border Mergers Show Rising Trend As Global Economy Expands.
- Rosenbaum, Joshua; Joshua Pearl (2009). Investment Banking: Valuation, Leveraged Buyouts, and Mergers & Acquisitions.
- Straub, Thomas (2007). Reasons for frequent failure in Mergers and Acquisitions: A comprehensive analysis.
- Vermeulen, Freek (2005). How Acquisitions can Revitalize Companies. MIT Sloan Management Review.
- Zax, Igor (2009). Distressed M&A: Some Strategic and Financial Trends and Considerations.
- Zollo, Maurizio & D. Meier (2008). What is M&A Performance? The Academy of Management Perspectives. V. 22 No. 2. pp. 5577.
LITERATURE REVIEW
Marketing- Anderson, Carol and Julian W. Vincze (2004). Strategic Marketing Management
- Berry, Leonard L. (April, 2001). Harvard Business Review.
- Burghard, Ed and Lisa Mackay (Dec. 2004). Marketing Management.
- Cross, Robert G. and Ashlosh Dixit (2005). Customer-Centric Pricing: The
Surprising Secret for Profitability. Business Horizons.
- Keller, Kevin Lane and Sanjay Sood (Fall 2003). Brand Equity Dilution. MIT Sloan
Management Review.
- Kotler, Philip (1972). A Generic Concept of Marketing. Journal of Marketing.
- Kotler, Philip (Aug. 1997). The Future of Marketing. Cambridge Marketing College.
- Kotler, Philip (2004). A Framework for Marketing Management. Prentice-Hall.
- Leon, George H. (Jan./Feb. 2005). You Choose, You Lose. Marketing
Management.
- Porter, Michael E. (1985). Competitive Advantage: Creating and Sustaining
Superior – Performance.
- Reece, Shelly (Jan.-Feb., 1996). The Very Model of a Modern Marketing Plan.
Marketing Tools.
- Roegner, Eric V., Michael V. Main, and Craig C. Zawada. (Jan./Feb. 2005).
Pricing gets Creative. Marketing Management.
- Walker, John S. (white paper, 2007). The Marketing Cure to the M&A Blind Spot.
Ambassador Financial Group, Inc.
M&A DECISION
PROCESS & MARKETING
Business combinations, formed through M&A,
bring together both intangible and tangible
resources.
- Marketing offers both
Operating synergies may take a variety of
forms, whether the merger was vertical or
horizontal.
- Most horizontal mergers should include
marketing components
Reasons why M&As Fail
Biased canopy of knowledge when they focused too
much on the financial, accounting and
management aspects of a deal and neglect the
important marketing particulars (Walker, 2007)
Poor results from execution timing relative to market
valuation.
To acquire a company, one has to pay more than its
worth (premium, 10 - 15 percent above market value)
(Dalton)
A critical question would be what percentage of M&A
creates shareholder value?
90%
70 %
40%
20%
It turns out that M&A create value only about
20% of the time
Applying Marketing to M&A
Qualitative assesses degrees of synergy realizations, of integration
process efficiency, and of strategic gap reduction
Over 50% of marketing is consider soft-side performance
criteria (i.e. perceptions, desires, (mind-share, heart-share),
dislikes & personal values)
Objective measurement methodologies (e.g., financial and
accounting figures) organizational level of analysis (e.g.,
improvement of the firm’s competitive position)
Marketing also shares quantitative components (i.e. product
production costs, break-even analysis, pricing strategies,
logistic costs, & promotion cost/benefit analysis)
Process level (e.g., quality of the post acquisition plans, magnitude
of premium paid, etc.) (Zollo & Meier, 2008)
Marketing offers MARKET SHARE for a process or transition
level contributor
TABLE 3A - 10 Most Active Industries by Number of Transactions in 2005
Rank Industry
No. of Deals % of all M&A Deals
1
Business services
1,295
17.7%
2
Software
647
8.9%
3
Real estate firms
406
5.6%
4
Durable goods wholesaling
256
3.6%
5
Investment & commodities firms 246
3.4%
6
Health services
245
3.4%
7
Measuring, medical & photography 221
3.0%
8
Oil & gas
210
2.9%
9
Insurance
207
2.8%
10
Hotels & casinos
183
2.5% .
Marketing functions
TABLE 3B - 10 Most Active Industries by Dollar Volume in 2005
Rank
Industry
Value ($billions) % of Total M&A Value
1 Telecommunications
95.5
9.7%
2 Metal & metal products
73.5
7.5%
3 Oil and gas
67.4
6.9%
4 Real estate firms
62.6
6.4%
5 Business services
52.7
5.4%
6 Software
49.4
5.0%
7 Investment & commodity firms
42.4
4.3%
8 Gen. Merchandise & apparel retailing 40.2
4.1%
9 Hotels & casinos
40.1
4.1%
10
Insurance
32.4
3.3%
Adopted from Mergers & Acquisitions, February 2006, p.40
Marketing functions
Marketing Elements for M&A Analysis
Strategic Planning
External Market Assessment of Opportunities and
Threats
Internal Audit of Applied Resources
Target Market Profiling
Designing the Marketing Mix Element- Product or
Service Strategy
Designing the Marketing Mix Element- - Place/Logistics
Strategy
Designing the Marketing Mix Element- Promotion Mix
Strategy
Designing the Marketing Mix Element- Pricing Strategy
Designing the Monitor and Control Systems
Marketing Commercialization
Market Expansion, Retraction, and New Niche Market
Selection
TABLE 5 - Model of M&A Marketing Expectations
Weighted
Factor (1-5)
5
3
2
3
2
5
2
4
2
4
2
3
Marketing
Element
Marketing Leadership
(XML)
Marketing Strategy (XMS)
External Market Assessment (XMA)
Internal Audit of Resources (XIA)
Target Market Profiling (XTM)
Product or Service Strategies (XPS)
Place/Logistical Strategy (XL)
Promotion Mix Planning (XPM)
Pricing Strategies (XP)
Monitor & Control Systems (XMC)
MKT. Commercialization (XMC)
Market Expansion, Retraction, &
Niche Market Selection (XNMS)
( poor) 1
Effective/ Acceptance Ranking
2 3 4 5 ( excellent)
n
n
n
.
n
n
n
n
n
n
.n
n
n
Weighted Value of a firm’s M&A Marketing Expectations = YME,
where ‘n’ represents the selected evaluation of the potential
merged firms marketing component position.
YME = 5 (XML)n + 3(XMS)n + 2(XMA)n + 3(XIA)n +
2(XTM)n + 5(XPS)n + 2(XL)n + 4(XPM)n + 2(XP)n
+4(XMC)n + 2(XMC)n + 3(XNMS)n
Establishing acceptable to unacceptable range
185 - 150
highly acceptable
149 - 130
acceptable
129 – 100
marginally acceptable
99 – 70
highly questionable
69 – 0
unacceptable
CONCLUSION
Typically, the pre-merger discovery process
limits itself to verifying the potential of hard
assets such as property, equipment, patents and
existing service contracts.
A marketer would also look at ‘relational’ assets
that drive cash flow, such as corporate
reputation, goodwill and the brand(s)
itself/themselves.
(Ettenson, 2007)