Companies pursue mergers and acquisitions as a way to drive value, but, for a variety of reasons, the end result may not always meet expectations. Given the expanding array of digital tools available to help address the M&A process, however, executives now have the opportunity to not only play a greater role in M&A strategy, but also guide such efforts toward success.
CFOs, it seems, are already starting to deploy such tools as they take a more digital approach to deal-making. The 2018 M&A trends report¹ by Deloitte, for example, found that a majority of respondents use tools other than the trusty spreadsheet to address a variety of M&A-related tasks, including streamlining integration and reducing costs. Of those who are not using these new tools, 62 percent plan to tap into them in pursuit of the aforementioned benefits.
Why the apparent growing interest in digital M&A? In large part because the factors that have been driving M&A for the last few years—low interest rates, inexpensive financing, healthy balance sheets and an economy that’s growing at less than 4 percent—remain intact. To win in this environment, executives may need to leverage an expanding array of digital tools designed to enhance M&A speed, efficiency and value creation.
Digital M&A: Propelling the CFO to the Role of Strategist
The advent of these new capabilities is fortuitous in several ways. For starters, they can provide a way for CFOs and their deal teams to keep up with the heated pace of M&A. The 2018 M&A trends report found that both corporations and private equity investors anticipate brisker M&A activity in 2018 versus 2017, and 2017 represented an uptick from 2016. In fact, while companies surveyed in the spring of 2016² chose “organic growth” as the most likely use of their cash at the time, the most recent survey found that M&A is now the top choice, cited by 40 percent of respondents.
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These new digital tools may also help CFOs play a more strategic role in M&A. While senior finance executives have long been involved in the execution of M&A, their traditional responsibility centered around post-deal integration. Today, however, CFOs are approaching M&A from a more holistic perspective, getting involved in the earliest stages, by helping to identify acquisition targets, articulating the thesis behind proposed deals and addressing due diligence in a broader context. As deals progress, they are also heavily involved in keeping them on track, monitoring anticipated synergies and taking ownership of the entire integration process.
Meanwhile, given how company valuations have risen in the current bull market, the pressure to deliver value is becoming more intense. That fact is not lost on CFOs. Consider, for example, that in the aforementioned Spring 2016 M&A survey, 40 percent of respondents said that more than half the deals they completed did not deliver the expected results. While the most recent survey painted a better picture, there is still plenty of room for improvement: Fifty-five percent of corporate respondents said that up to a quarter of their deals fall short of meeting or beating expectations.
While leveraging digital tools is no guarantee of increased deal value, survey respondents indicated that these technologies make post-integration run more smoothly, reduce costs and shorten the time to completion. Those attributes may be particularly useful in cross-sector deals in which the companies involved play in markets that are, at least for now, somewhat different. The 2018 M&A trends report found that respondents in some sectors fully expected to see increased convergence between various industries. In financial services, for example, 38 percent of respondents predicted that private equity, asset management, insurance, real estate, and banking and securities companies will likely converge. Life sciences and health care also ranked high as sectors primed for convergence, and many expect to see retail and technology firms combine. In such an environment, target identification alone may benefit from new digitally driven approaches.
Stepping on the Accelerator
Digital capabilities can be applied to M&A activities in a number of ways. Many CFOs are familiar with virtual data rooms, for example, that can provide a secure online environment in which team members who are not co-located can nonetheless review the increasingly voluminous amount of data associated with potential targets. Cloud-based enterprise resource planning systems, meanwhile, can provide a way to simplify an often complex facet of integration, the merging of disparate enterprise software suites. Natural language processing can help deal teams analyze vast numbers of contracts and other documentation in a highly automated fashion, and data visualization can help reveal the stories behind the numbers. Out there on the cutting edge, some consumer products companies are now using crowdsourcing as a way to identify potential acquisition targets.
Meanwhile, a new class of digital tools can be applied directly to the core activities of target research, valuation, and post-merger integration, as well as address so-called soft disciplines (i.e., employee engagement and corporate culture enhancement) that once seemed outside the scope of technology.
Consider how the following five tools developed by Deloitte can help accelerate a wide variety of essential activities across the full M&A lifecycle:
Digital target screening: As its name implies, this tool provides a way to narrow down a target list to the most viable acquisitions. It incorporates data from external sources in order to review industry trends, compare the growth paths and financial profiles of various potential targets, and refine the list based on user-defined criteria determined by the underlying acquisition strategy. It can also simulate real-world acquisition scenarios to enhance discussions around growth pathways. One large biotech organization used this tool to narrow a universe of 350 potential acquisitions down to about 10 in just a few weeks, allowing the company to quickly progress to substantive discussions with that smaller list much earlier than expected.
Interdependency accelerator: Large transactions entail many dependencies between functions and work streams. To keep such projects on track, M&A teams may need to account for these dependencies across hundreds or even thousands of milestones. Using data visualization to highlight critical path milestones, the interdependency accelerator provides a means of aggregating hundreds of work plans to deliver insights on key risks, issues and cross-functional dependencies for both acquisitions and divestitures. The accelerator relies, in part, on a database of comparable industry roadmaps to reduce the set-up time for interdependency discussions. In a matter of hours, one large technology company involved in a global acquisition was able to use this tool to focus on thousands of milestones while identifying gaps and developing mitigation plans to address them.
Digital organization design: Leaders can dynamically design the future-state organization and supporting structures by efficiently analyzing and addressing the key talent challenges that are critical to an integration. By using internal data and industry benchmarks that focus on leading practices, CFOs can create custom organization-sizing and costing models to facilitate workforce alignment based on post-deal goals, objectives and the desired attributes of the new organization. After all, deciding who goes where not only has a substantial impact on the people involved, but determines the resulting culture of the organization. Digital organization design can help companies address the composition of the future-state organization in a mindful, intentional way that can help reduce or eliminate surprises.
Digital purchase accounting: In the wake of an M&A transaction, streamlining purchase accounting can be complex, but the digital purchase accounting tool can automate several aspects of the process by aggregating and mapping relevant data to decrease the time required to prepare journal entries (including supporting documentation), calculate adjustments at required levels (and keep track of changes and impacts), and automate review and error-checking. When two large pharmaceutical companies combined, they used the digital purchase accounting tool to automate the creation of periodic purchase price adjustments, deferred tax, goodwill and currency translation adjustments, as well as for supporting documentation and footnotes. As a result, they effectively reduced processing time from weeks to hours, while also reducing the potential for manual processing errors.
Divestiture financials processing: Because a robust M&A strategy may entail divestitures as well as acquisitions, organizations need to be able to create a detailed view of historical financials to create a clearer picture of the true drivers of the business. The divestiture financials processing tool automates the historical adjustment process to accelerate the creation of adjusted financial results. In some cases the process (as measured from data acquisition through audit) was reduced from six to eight weeks to just 10 days. By reducing the time to close, organizations reduce the time to value.
From Transactional to Strategic
Moving from familiar manual processes to unfamiliar digital tools may seem like a big leap. Some organizations justify the status quo by stating, “We have the bodies, so we use the bodies.” But as the speed of business intensifies, as M&A becomes an important strategic weapon, and as the sheer volume of data around a potential deal grows exponentially, the status quo may reach its logical limit.
Before deploying a digital solution, CFOs should conduct a careful assessment to determine how a given tool will enable some facet of the M&A process to be addressed faster, more efficiently, and/or more economically. Does the tool fit into the organization’s larger strategic approach to M&A execution? What are its data capabilities? Does it pose a security concern?
More specifically, consider how the tool fares when measured against five distinct dimensions of business impact: faster speed of execution, improved insights, lower reliance on manual tasks and/or low-value-add capabilities, improved data reliability and enhanced collaboration.
Generally speaking, this new breed of digital M&A technology does not require in-house specialists or intensive training, although there may be learning curves of various degrees involved. For the most part, these solutions automate and digitally enable core M&A processes.
That said, because these tools bring more speed, accuracy and insights to a number of discrete processes along the M&A continuum, deal teams can not only approach their responsibilities with more speed and accuracy, but extract more insights that can drive more informed, faster decisions. In short, these digital tools shift the emphasis from the transactional to the strategic aspect of the deal.
Date: September 4, 2018
Source: WSJ