Why Mergers Are Often Bad For Business
from the losing-site-of-the-customer dept
The results of a new Business Week study are unlikely to surprise very many, but it would be good if some big company dealmakers got their head around the message. It appears that, for all the big corporate mergers happening, many of them tend to piss off their customers in a big way. What really happens is that the merged company starts focusing on "savings" rather than its customers. So it looks towards what things they can cut out to emphasize the "synergies" of the merger and make Wall Street happy. Of course, what that upheaval does is make life very annoying for customers -- many of whom don't forgive the company very easily. In fact, the study found that customer satisfaction ratings for merged companies tend to stay low for many years following the merger. A few companies have figured the formula out, and it works by focusing much more on the customer experience than the cost savings initially. Over time, it's easier to recognize the real savings, but simply cutting away left and right not only damages the company's core, but pisses off customers a great deal.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Bad Will:
- The Precision Blogger
http://precision-blogging.blogspot.com
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Cash in
- Synergies!
- Cost Reduction
- Know How gains
- Good Will (as someone pointed out)
etc.
But no CEO will tell you, "Yeah, the deal is good for all those things but in the end I get also a big fat check".
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