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If you have ever attended a well-hosted MBA program or similar business education class, you may have experienced a learning and collaboration phenomenon where 10 or so teams set out to evaluate a particular case study and return to share findings based on their collective experiences. For attendees paying close attention to presented solutions, they walk away with more than their own team analyses and the strengths or findings of all 10 teams – collectively raising the knowledge of everyone in attendance. Every successful post-merger or acquisition (M&A) integration offers new, relevant perspectives about your industry, business operations, and related systems excellence. From my personal experiences, these topics have ranged from new customer and marketing strategies, philosophies in engineering excellence, and a wealth of manufacturing and field services strategies to best serve the market in booming and in competitive times. IT leaders have the opportunity to help generate value and collectively raise the bar for enterprise business processes when integrating a recently acquired company. M&A transactions are comprised of arduous multi-discipline tasks to complete due diligence and the transaction itself – this is before the labor-intensive process begins to integrate the newly acquired company. If M&A integration is not properly managed and handled carefully, it can be full of risk and disaster on both sides, but when managed correctly, it is an opportunity to expand and strengthen your system and technology offerings, in addition to the intended capacity, product, service, or asset purchase.
Industry Driving Forces & Market Consolidation With increasing pressure for decarbonization in the industry, increased attention on ESG initiatives, the need to reduce the cybersecurity footprint, and the latest market pricing pressure to ultimately reduce cost drives us further into the depths of our information systems and related data sets. In January 2022, Haynes and Boone reported 293 oilfield services bankruptcies and 311 oil and gas producer and midstream company bankruptcy filings since 2015. This rapid market decline points to the extreme need for balance sheet strength, activity cost optimization, and opportunities for strategic M&A. ERP Systems remain at the core to describe the activities of key assets and related financial performance – all other systems are ancillary to these foundational components. Strengthen your enterprise information core by choosing your best applications and rallying around a common ERP system – the benefits will outweigh the cost and time of managing disparate systems. Portfolio Optimization through Rationalization and ConsolidationM&A activity increases the number of assets and services under your scope of responsibility and in all cases requires careful consideration of the long-term life of assets.
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