Why Mergers Tend to Fail

Corporate mergers tend to fail because of conflicting corporate cultures

Many corporate mergers and acquisitions (M&As) fail to realize their wished-for synergies, and eventually fall short of producing value to the stakeholders. Some years ago, a KPMG survey estimated that 83 percent of all mergers fail to create value and half may actually destroy value.

M&As invariably produce disappointing results because of a variety of reasons. One of the principal reasons has to do with the failure of management to integrate successfully the operating cultures of the individual companies. During M&A deals, the due diligence processes tend to focus more on the corporate matters (market synergies, product or service offerings, financial projections, legal and regulatory matters, etc.) and overlook the organizational and cultural challenges.

Integrating Conflicting Corporate Cultures

Undoubtedly, the biggest barrier of post-merger integration is the conflicting corporate cultures of the individual companies. Management consultant Rick Maurer likens corporate mergers to the marriage of two single parents each with their own children — “just because mom and dad are so in love, they fail to see that the kids don’t get along.”

During a merger, two organizations with unique cultures cease to exist and a new organization is supposed to establish. The erstwhile individual organizations simply will not let go of the past and move on. In time, when the “stronger” partner tries to thrust its culture on the new combined organization, employees of the “weaker” partner resist change. This impairs cooperation among employees, as was case with AT&T’s unsuccessful acquisition of NCR in the early ’90s.

Forcing Employees to Mesh

Ill-fated Daimler-Chrysler merger suffered from cultural differences If cultural differences are far apart, the merged companies often fail to compromise and stick to a middle ground. The ill-fated Daimler-Chrysler merger suffered immensely from differences in the engineering and corporate cultures of the supposedly equal partners, Daimler-Benz and Chrysler Corporation, as well from differences in the national cultures of Germany and the United States. Within years of the merger, the dominance of the Daimler culture did not go well with employees in the United States. In December 2001, DaimlerChrysler CEO Jürgen Schrempp exclaimed, “What happened to the dynamic, can-do cowboy culture I bought”

Conflicting corporate cultures between US Airways and America West Combining two individual cultures and intricate administrative processes is very difficult to execute and manage successfully. Forcing employees to mesh behind the scenes is often ineffective because differences in organizational cultures are indiscernible to the top management. Take, for example, the merger of the Phoenix-based America West and Washington, D.C area-based US Airways in 2005. Many years into the merger, US Airways’s managers spoke of the “east side” (referring to the former US Airways) and the “west side” (referring to America West.) The unions continued to squabble over pilot seniority. Even though the company obtained a single operating certificate, two distinct cultures functioned internally resulting in poor employee morale, unhappy customers, and unpredictable financial performance.

Retaining Key Talent

Sagging morale and employee disorientation about job insecurity, company structure, seniority, decision-making processes, and promotion and growth opportunities often constitute another barrier to successful post-merger integration. Employees of the “weaker” partner or the acquired company tend to distrust the management of the “stronger” partner or the acquiring company. Fears of layoffs and new power equations in the merged entities often result in the exodus of key talent from the acquired company.

Forcing employees to mesh » why mergers fail

Engaging the Rank-and-file

Human due diligence is every bit as important as financial due diligence. Ultimately, every deal will succeed or fail based on the collective efforts of the individuals who make it up.”
* David Harding

The success or failure of a merger results not from what happens at the top management level, but from what happens at the rank-and-file level. The importance of engaging the rank-and-file employees in the merger process and retaining key talent during the initial transition period cannot be overstated.

Recommended Resources

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Inspirational Quotations by Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. (#339)

Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr., American physician, professor, author Today is the 201st birthday of American physician, professor, lecturer, and author Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. (August 29, 1809 — October 7, 1894.)

Born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and educated at Harvard, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. briefly studied law before turning to the medical profession. As a teacher of medicine at Dartmouth and Harvard, he initiated and advocated far-reaching medical reforms. He is the father of the renowned American jurist and Civil War officer, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.

Throughout his life, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. wrote poetry, novels, and essays. His peers, including Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and James Russell Lowell, regarded Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. as one of the best writers of the 19th century. His most famous works include The Autocrat of the Breakfast-Table (1858), The Professor of the Breakfast-Table (1860,) and The Poet of the Breakfast-Table (1872) and the biography of Ralph Waldo Emerson (1884.)

Inspirational Quotations by Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.

Knowledge and timber shouldn’t be much used, till they are seasoned.
* Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.

Now habit is a labor-saving invention which enables a man to get along with less fuel.
* Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.

A thought is often original, though you have uttered it a hundred times. It has come to you over a new route, by a new and express train of associations.
* Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.

I talk half the time to find out my own thoughts, as a school-boy turns his pockets inside out to see what is in them. One brings to light all sorts of personal property he had forgotten in his inventory.
* Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.

Men are idolaters, and want something to look at and kiss and hug, or throw themselves down before; they always did, they always will; and if you don’t make it of wood, you must make it of words . . .
* Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.

Laughter and tears are meant to turn the wheels of the same machinery of sensibility; one is wind-power, and the other water-power; that is all.
* Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.

Be polite and generous, but don’t undervalue yourself. You will be useful, at any rate; you may just as well be happy, while you are about it.
* Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.

The sound of a kiss is not so loud as that of a cannon, but its echo lasts a deal longer.
* Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.

Knowledge — it excites prejudices to call it science — is advancing as irresistibly, as majestically, as remorselessly as the ocean moves in upon the shore.
* Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.

He must be a poor creature that does not often repeat himself. Imagine the author of the excellent piece of advice, \Know thyself,\” never alluding to that sentiment again during the course of a protracted existence! “
* Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.

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The Nature of Worry

The nature and lifecycle of worry

Have you ever realized that most of your adversities never occur? Or that most of your worries like in anticipation of such adversities? That some of life’s most common troubling scenarios never come to pass? That most of your worrying is ultimately fruitless, and life goes on?

Below, I present a simple exercise to help you discover the lifecycle of worry. I encourage you to sit down at a quiet place, a place where you can relax and reflect. If necessary, fetch yourself a journal, special notebook or a piece of scratch paper.

Mindfulness Exercise

Consider a recent upheaval or stressful event. Go back in time and experience that moment for a minute. How do you feel? What preoccupies your mind?

Under the direct influence of your anguish, your mind is bewildered. You feel disoriented. Your mind is preoccupied with the apprehensions. Filled with distress, you cannot take your mind off the apparent ramifications of your suffering. The wounds of your sorrow appear incurable.

Now, fast forward a few days after the stressful event. What do you experience now? Your troubles no longer hold a grip on your life as before. You feel released from the immediate affliction of the moment. As you now investigate the progress of the stressful situation, you feel amazed by how your feelings have changed. What has become of the irreparable hardship?

Storms of Distress

Responses to distress are within your power Allow another interval of time to elapse. How do your feelings compare now? The original despair has experienced further diminution. The stressful event appears formless; your apprehensions are no longer recognizable. You are beginning to smile indulgently at the misfortunes.

A few days later, you are surprised how easily these storms of distress passed. You begin to wonder how these depressing emotions could have possessed you. The events are not undone and the external circumstances remain unchanged. What has changed is the condition of your mind.

“This too shall pass”

“Do not anticipate trouble, or worry about what may never happen. Keep in the sunlight.”
* Benjamin Franklin

It is your mind that relates the external circumstances to your internal being. Joy and sorrow, hopes and despairs, elation and desolation, pleasures and annoyances are nothing but outcomes of your sensibility. External circumstances are difficult to conquer — our control over the outer world is narrow, and merely illusory. The evolution of your thoughts and feelings, and your responses to distressing situations are within your power.

The next time you experience a hardship — a conflict, a distressing situation, or annoyance, recall what happened with your prior hardships. Recognize that everything happening in your external environment is but impermanent. Say to yourself, “This too shall pass.”

Suggested Resources

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Inspirational Quotations #338

Leisure only means a chance to do other jobs that demand attention.
* Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.

Most of us are aware of and pretend to detest the barefaced instances of that hypocrisy by which men deceive others, but few of us are upon our guard or see that more fatal hypocrisy by which we deceive and over-reach our own hearts.
* Laurence Sterne

Channels are blocked in the mind, from the day. Lie down in blackness of night, forgotten remnants rush to the mind, or creeping slowly appear in the dreams.
* Nathaniel LeTonnerre

Most men, after a little freedom, have preferred authority with the consoling assurances and the economy of effort which it brings.
* Walter Lippmann

Presence is more than just being there.
* Malcolm S. Forbes

If wisdom and diamonds grew on the same tree we could soon tell how much men loved wisdom.
* Lemuel K. Washburn

Do not value money for any more nor any less than its worth; it is a good servant but a bad master.
* Alexandre Dumas fils

While you cannot resolve what you are, at last you will be nothing.
* Martial

Sickness comes on horseback and departs on foot.
* Dutch Proverb

Lying to yourself about specific actions is easier than re-defining the bounds of your imagined identity… When I see once-ethical men devolve into moral grey, they still identify as upstanding.
* Ben Casnocha

Visit www.Inspiration.RightAttitudes.com for my compilation of inspirational quotations by author and topic. You may also subscribe to the weekly newsletter of inspirational quotations by sending a blank email to iqml-subscribe@yahoogroups.com.

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Inspirational Quotations #337

A pure hand needs no glove to cover it.
* Nathaniel Hawthorne

Whoever one is, and wherever one is, one is always in the wrong if one is rude.
* Maurice Baring

When looking back, usually I’m more sorry for the things I didn’t do than for the things I shouldn’t have done.
* Malcolm S. Forbes

Take spring when it comes, and rejoice. Take happiness when it comes, and rejoice. Take love when it comes, and rejoice.
* Carl Ewald

You’re not free until you’ve been made captive by supreme belief.
* Marianne Moore

To fear is one thing. To let fear grab you by the tail and swing you around is another.
* Katherine Paterson

Everybody’s 12 years old in an apple orchard.
* Rachael Ray

There is an objective reality out there, but we view it through the spectacles of our beliefs, attitudes, and values.
* David G. Myers

Happiness is often the result of being too busy to be miserable.
* Unknown

You live longer once you realize that any time spent being unhappy is wasted.
* Ruth E. Renkl

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Anxious or stressed out? Try deep breathing for instant relief

Anxiety and stress are the body and mind’s natural responses to anything that jeopardizes your sense of balance. Your nervous system releases cortisol, adrenaline and other stress hormones that make your heart beat faster, tense up muscles, rise blood pressure, and sharpen the senses to respond to physical or symbolic threats. Your breath becomes faster and shallower.

Deep diaphragmatic breathing: An obvious antidote to stress and anxiety

Deep diaphragmatic breathing for instant relief from anxiety and stress When you feel nervous, frazzled, overwhelmed or worried about something, try the following exercise:

  1. Sit quietly in a comfortable posture with your back straight.
  2. Release the tension in your face, jaw, neck, and shoulders.
  3. Softly close your eyes. Smile and relax. Breathe through your nose.
  4. Examine the inflow and outflow of air through your nostrils.
  5. Make a conscious effort to slow down the pace of your breath.
  6. Deepen your breathing by inhaling and exhaling more air. As you breathe deep into your lungs, flex your diaphragm, expand your belly, and feel the sensation of air filling up your lungs. Do not flex by flexing your chest. Exhale slowly.
  7. Repeat the inhale-slowly-exhale-slowly cycle five times.
  8. Reflect on how your mind is now more composed, stable and clear. Gently open your eyes.

Simple and powerful relaxation technique

Deep breathing from the diaphragm is easy to learn. It’s a technique you can practice anywhere, anytime to quickly get your anxiety in check.

Research has shown that deep breathing gets more oxygen into the brain and exercises the parts of the brain responsible for concentration and regulation of emotion. The brain regulates the release of stress hormones and reverses the symptoms of stress and anxiety. Your heart rate slows down and your muscles relax. Consequently, you can calm yourself down.

Self-Assessment Quiz and Recommended Reading

***See other articles related to stress, anxiety, yoga, meditation, well-being, health, wellness

Inspirational Quotations #336

Mistakes are the usual bridge between inexperience and wisdom.
* Phyllis Theroux

The secret of your future is hidden in your daily routine.
* Mike Murdock

That best academy, a mother’s knee.
* James Russell Lowell

Fear and lies fester in darkness. The truth may wound, but it cuts clean.
* Jacqueline Carey

It is no easy thing for a principle to become a man’s own unless each day he maintains it and works it out in his life.
* Epictetus

A man that is young in years may be old in hours, if he has lost no time.
* Francis Bacon

To expect happiness without giving up negative action is like holding your hand in a fire and hoping not to be burned. Of course, no one actually wants to suffer, to be sick, to be cold or hungry — but as long as we continue to indulge in wrong doing we will never put an end to suffering. Likewise, we will never achieve happiness, except through positive deeds, words, and thoughts. Positive action is something we have to cultivate ourselves; it can be neither bought nor stolen, and no one ever stumbles on it just by chance.
* Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche

The turning point in the process of growing up is when you discover the core strength within you that survives all hurt.
* Max Lerner

I doubt not that in due time, when the arts are brought to perfection, some means will be found to give a sound head to a man who has none at all.
* Voltaire

Misfortunes one can endure – they come from outside, they are accidents. But to suffer for one’s own faults – ah! there is the sting of life.
* Oscar Wilde

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25 Ways to Instantly Become a Better Boss

Become a Better Boss

Bad management is not usually a result of bosses not knowing what to do to manage better. Rather, it stems largely from bosses not putting conventional managerial skills into practice. Little wonder, then, that despite the billions that organizations pour into managerial training, instances of shoddy management abound.

Here are a few simple and specific actions you can take now to become an effective boss.

  1. Smile more
  2. Appreciate more, judge less
  3. Compliment openly; critique and correct in private
  4. Don’t worry about who gets credit; give credit where due
  5. Give feedback now; don’t wait until the next performance review
  6. Reiterate employees’ strengths and make them feel smarter
  7. Get rid of busy work
  8. Simplify work and encourage expediency
  9. Establish deadlines and stick with them
  10. Organize employees’ time and priorities
  11. Explain what needs to be done and get out of the way
  12. Avoid giving conflicting orders
  13. Find the time to listen to your employees and follow-up
  14. Recognize the small picture
  15. Seek to understand what inhibits employee effectiveness
  16. Give employees adequate latitude
  17. Fix problems, not blames
  18. Encourage mistakes; own up to your mistakes
  19. Standup for your employees
  20. Encourage participation in decision-making
  21. Be tough-minded, not mean
  22. Do not play favorites; discourage sucking up
  23. Be accessible and friendly, yet consistent and objective
  24. Earn respect; don’t demand deference
  25. Attempt to influence by persuasion, not by wielding authority

Recommended Reading

***See other articles related to being a better boss, managerial skills, leadership skills, office environment

Inspirational Quotations #335

A leader or a man of action in a crisis almost always acts subconsciously and then thinks of the reasons for his action.
* Jawaharlal Nehru

What we forgive too freely doesn’t stay forgiven.
* Mignon McLaughlin

We are but dreams, and dreams possess no life by their own right.
* Gene Wolfe

Having your fate rest in the hands of a jury is the same as entrusting yourself to surgery with a mentally retarded doctor.
* Bill Messing

Hate leaves ugly scars, love leaves beautiful ones.
* Mignon McLaughlin

What some call health, if purchased by perpetual anxiety about diet, isn’t much better than tedious disease.
* George Dennison Prentice

The function of values is to give us the illusion of purpose in life.
* John P. Grier

A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.
* Herm Albright

Find out the reason that commands you to write; see whether it has spread its roots into the very depth of your heart; confess to yourself you would have to die if you were forbidden to write.
* Rainer Maria Rilke

Time has a wonderful way of weeding out the trivial.
* Richard Ben Sapir

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Inspirational Quotations by George Bernard Shaw (#334)

The best brought-up children are those who have seen their parents as they are. Hypocrisy is not the parent’s first duty.
* George Bernard Shaw

Titles distinguish the mediocre, embarrass the superior, and are disgraced by the inferior.
* George Bernard Shaw

Imprisonment is as irrevocable as death.
* George Bernard Shaw

Virtue consists, not in abstaining from vice, but in not desiring it.
* George Bernard Shaw

To a mathematician the eleventh means only a single unit : to the bushman who cannot count further than his ten fingers it is an incalculable myriad.
* George Bernard Shaw

The difference between the shallowest routineer and the deepest thinker appears, to the latter, trifling ; to the former, infinite.
* George Bernard Shaw

A learned man is an idler who kills time with study. Beware of his false knowledge : it is more dangerous than ignorance.
* George Bernard Shaw

Moderation is never applauded for its own sake.
* George Bernard Shaw

The unconscious self is the real genius. Your breathing goes wrong the moment your conscious self meddles with it.
* George Bernard Shaw

What a man believes may be ascertained, not from his creed, but from the assumptions on which he habitually acts.
* George Bernard Shaw

Man is the only animal which esteems itself rich in proportion to the number and voracity of its parasites.
* George Bernard Shaw

Greatness is the secular name for Divinity : both mean simply what lies beyond us.
* George Bernard Shaw

Those who understand evil pardon it : those who resent it destroy it.
* George Bernard Shaw

The man with toothache thinks everyone happy whose teeth are sound. The poverty stricken man makes the same mistake about the rich man.
* George Bernard Shaw

No man dares say so much of what he thinks as to appear to himself an extremist.
* George Bernard Shaw

Visit www.Inspiration.RightAttitudes.com for my compilation of inspirational quotations by author and topic. You may also subscribe to the weekly newsletter of inspirational quotations by sending a blank email to iqml-subscribe@yahoogroups.com.

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