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How top management steers fast cycle teams to success

V.K. Narayanan (V.K. Narayanan is Stubbs Professor of Strategy and Entrepreneurship, Department of Management, Le Bow College of Business and Chair of the Academic Council for the Laurence A. Baiada Center for Entrepreneurship in Technology in Drexel University, (VNarayanan@worldnet.att.net).)
Frank L. Douglas (Frank L. Douglas, PhD, MD is Member of the Board, and Executive Vice President, Drug Innovation and Approval at Aventis Pharma AG, (frank.douglas@aventis.com).)
Brock Guernsey (Brock Guernsey, Pharm D, MD is Vice President, Project Management and Head, Project Management Group – 4, Quintiles Inc., (brockguernsey@worldnet.att.net).)
John Charnes (John Charnes is Area Director of Finance, Economics and Decision Sciences, University of Kansas School of Business (jcharnes@ku.edu).)

Strategy & Leadership

ISSN: 1087-8572

Article publication date: 1 June 2002

2166

Abstract

Every merger and acquisition deal presents a different goal and a different mix of critical issues to manage. Making, consummating, and integrating a deal puts pressure on chief executives to play multiple leadership roles and switch quickly from one role to another throughout the merger process. The roles employed vary dramatically with the type of deal and how ambitious the strategy. As the rationales for transactions have changed, new challenges have evolved, especially for those leading the deals: leaders must establish and communicate the strategic vision for the merger ‐‐ they need to explain the top four or five sources of value in the deal and what the core values and culture of the new organization should be; leaders must cheer on the stakeholders to generate enthusiasm for the merger or acquisition, and to confront fear and uncertainty in its various forms; leaders must close the deal; leaders captain change by managing the integration of the two entities; and leaders crusade for the new entity. These five roles are essential to all transactions, but leaders need to employ each at different times. The strategic rationale behind the deal, and the inherent risks and opportunities that it presents, determines which roles a leader needs to play and when.

Keywords

Citation

Narayanan, V.K., Douglas, F.L., Guernsey, B. and Charnes, J. (2002), "How top management steers fast cycle teams to success", Strategy & Leadership, Vol. 30 No. 3, pp. 19-27. https://doi.org/10.1108/10878570210427927

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 2002, MCB UP Limited

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