Management Remains Key to Buyout Success, Study Reveals
69% of senior venture and
buyout investors across Europe agree that when deals do not succeed,
the failure of the management team to deliver is the single-most
dominant reason. A report published identifies that a better understanding
of the dynamics of a successful management team, and greater ability
to assess and monitor this through the investment lifecycle, may
hold the key to successful investing through this phase of the economic
cycle. This important research study was commissioned by SJ Berwin
- one of Europe's leading law firms - in association with mergermarket.
In it, SJ Berwin canvassed the views of over 300 senior venture
and buyout investors across the United Kingdom, France, Germany
and Spain. The report also identifies a range of characteristics
indicative of diverse cultural factors relating to management style,
academic background, the availability of management evaluation metrics,
management/investor dynamics, investor risk profiles, and management
incentive schemes. The full report can be downloaded by clicking
here (PDF format, 392KB). To receive a complimentary copy of the
report, please email simon.witney@sjberwin.comJonathan Blake, Head
of Private Equity, SJ Berwin commented: "The term 'management'
will once again be inextricably linked with the buyout transaction,
after years when the term 'MBO' seemed to have been replaced by
'LBO'."Paul Evans, The Shell Chaired Professor of Human Resources
and Organisational Development INSEAD, Fontainebleau and Singapore,
commented: "The name of the game is, above all, leadership
- though what good leadership means varies from one deal to another.
Congratulations to SJ Berwin on sponsoring important comparative
research."Key findings of the report include:
the quality of the management team is the single most important
factor when evaluating a buyout or venture capital investment opportunity
and poor management is usually blamed when companies fail perhaps
paradoxically, less time is spent analyzing this aspect of the deal
than others - partly because reliable metrics for assessing a management
team are hard to construct
A number of other key messages emerged from this research:
despite the paramount importance of management, a large majority
of investors will back a business with a weak incumbent team if
other conditions are right (although this varies between countries)
respondents - including those from France, Germany and Spain - felt
that good management teams were most abundant in the UK a manager's
track record is a vital part of the equation, but the value of different
competencies varies: larger deals require strategists with financial
experience; smaller deals need stronger leaders with sector expertise
one-third of the respondents have backed managers or teams which
have failed in the past, and a high proportion of those investments
were judged to be successful, showing that analysing a track record
is more sophisticated than simply seeking to back proven winners
education and professional qualifications are largely irrelevant
to private equity investors, who rate their importance very low
on the list of attributes they look for in managers
As to the ongoing relationship with management:
a board seat - or at least a very active monitoring role - is still
crucial for investors, although when things are going well, management
are largely left to manage it is vital to make essential management
changes quickly when problems do emerge: an overwhelming proportion
of the respondents who had changed management wished that they had
done so sooner, but were side-tracked by seeking to make other -
less painful - changes first the use of equity incentives varies
substantially across Europe; in more established markets - like
the UK - more employees are incentivised with equity-related reward
structures the degree of control by investors of investee companies
varies across Europe; in France, the most extreme example in the
geographies we surveyed, exit opportunities were restricted by the
incumbent management In relation to each country surveyed, some
of the main themes were:
In the UK, the country with the highest abundance of good quality
management teams, management has been less critical in larger leveraged
buyouts in recent years, and willingness to invest in businesses
with poor incumbent managers is high. However, as the market has
become increasingly competitive, many believe that a renewed focus
on management quality will be key.
In France, the importance of a strong incumbent management team
was rated most highly. Yet French investors spend less time assessing
managers than their British counterparts, and have the least formal
training in the assessment process of the four countries surveyed.
German buyout investors were most prepared to back a weak incumbent
management team, and spend the least time on human capital due diligence.
But, paradoxically, they were also the most reluctant to make senior
management changes after the buyout - preferring to stick with the
team more often than their counterparts elsewhere in Europe. There
are indications that this conservative approach is changing.
In Spain, the least developed of the four private equity markets
considered in the report and the country where good managers were
thought to be most scarce, investors are more influenced by qualifications
than by track record. Reflective of a more conservative approach,
private equity houses also rewarded managers more with salary and
less with equity than elsewhere in Europe.
For further information please contact:Jonathan Blake, Steven Davis,
Rob Day or Simon Witney on +44 (0)20 7533 2222, or by emailing simon.witney@sjberwin.com
About SJ Berwin SJ Berwin is a full-service international legal
practice with more than 470 lawyers across its offices in London,
Brussels, Frankfurt, Berlin, Munich, Madrid and Paris.
With a formidable profile in mid market M&A across Europe and
a dedicated European private equity team comprising over 150 full-time
corporate private equity lawyers, SJ Berwin advises clients on the
full-range of M&A and private equity business.
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