Healthcare Market Outlook: Insights From Axial’s Top Dealmakers
We recently released the 2024 Top 50 Lower Middle Market Healthcare Investors & M&A Advisors. This list showcases Axial’s 50…
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With add-on acquisitions at an all-time high, companies are often challenged in executing an effective integration plan. There’s always much talk of synergies and cost-savings overlaps, but frequently, little factual basis for identifying the best of what to keep and what to toss. Financials provide a good line of sight as do operational reviews, but are there other tools to use to accelerate integration and growth?
Add-ons are traditionally used for inorganic growth — an immediate infusion of revenue added onto an existing platform. Most often you’re buying market share or intellectual properties that help infuse the platform with an immediate infusion of cash — and sometimes, debt. The need to ramp up growth in the latter case puts extra stress on the organization to really build out a growth strategy.
Here are the top five areas to explore for growth to supplement the standard integration operational efficiencies.
All of these can be supported by a robust Voice of the Customer study — either before close or immediately after. One of our case studies illustrates the values clearly.
A highly acquisitive strategic had been on a fast-track of add-ons to build out its product portfolio and make a stronger grab for share. They identified a much smaller, but seemingly promising, company that they were preparing to pull into the mothership — enabling them to achieve immediate operational savings.
Before the close, Strategex was engaged to provide a Voice of the Customer study to determine the stability of the company’s customer relationships and growth opportunities, but more importantly also to identify if there were any under the radar issues that could impact the add-on thesis.
What we learned from the target company’s customer interviews was that not only was the company a promising one, it was a real gem. With a Net Promoter Score of 93%, it was one of the highest performing companies we had ever studied in our 25+ years of customer engagements.
The critical findings were eye-opening: not only were customers loyal, they were fanatics about what made the company great. They extolled the company’s product development, customer service, and customer-centricity. They raved about the educational tools and training that were part of the purchase value-chain, and the deeply-felt personal relationships that they had with staff associates who “always went above and beyond” what would be normally expected in business. They loved absolutely everything about the company — even to the point of telling our researchers more than once, “They don’t have any areas in need of improvement. They’re perfect!”
Needless to say, during our presentation to the strategic acquirer before the close, you could hear the high-fives in everyone’s voice. Then, reality set in. Within the presentation findings, there were huge areas for concern — the iceberg effect — voiced most pointedly by the head of acquisitions, “So, you’re telling us, when we acquire this one, not to screw it up?” Precisely.
The next day, our client called to ask that we make the same presentation to the integration team. His wise directive to the team, “We’re going to have to change our usual integration process in order to protect this asset. We’ll kill them, if we force them through our usual post-close hoops.”
To their credit and with the leadership of the head of acquisitions, the team enthusiastically took on the challenge. The deal closed successfully and importantly, both the integration team and the newly acquired management team moved forward working through a process that assured keeping the best elements of what was acquired. They weren’t afraid to deviate from the norm because we could document exactly what current and future potential they had acquired. It would turn out to be a win for both the acquirer and the acquired.