Acquisitions can open doors for innovation, market expansion, and brand evolution. But for marketing teams, they often bring more questions than answers: Who owns what campaign? What tools should we use? Are we still speaking with one brand voice?
The reality is, most mergers don’t unfold overnight. In fact, according to a McKinsey study, 75% of M&A transitions occur gradually, requiring careful coordination—not only for customers, but for internal teams navigating the change.
At Optimizely, we understand this firsthand. We’ve integrated multiple acquired companies into our own marketing operations over the past four years. And we’ve seen the impact of doing it right. We’ve also seen this managed successfully by one of our strategic partners, Valtech. Valtech’s recent acquisition of Kin + Carta, where Optimizely Content Marketing Platform (CMP) played a key role in aligning people, priorities, and platforms.
In this guide, we’ll walk through the common pitfalls of marketing team management during acquisition—and how to avoid them with the right strategy, tools, and mindset.
What could possibly go wrong when marketing teams merge?
Managing marketing teams during M&A is rarely straightforward. Even with strong leadership and clear goals, missteps can derail integration efforts. Here’s where we often see things go sideways:
When marketing teams aren’t effectively managed through an acquisition, the fallout isn’t just internal—it hits the bottom line:
According to a McKinsey survey of 200 seasoned M&A executives, companies on average only achieve 77% of their targeted ‘revenue synergies’(i.e. more money) following mergers and acquisitions. This shortfall highlights the challenges that companies can face in hitting those project growth targets when M&A becomes a reality.
This underscores the critical role of marketing in M&A success. Effective brand integration and strategic marketing planning are essential to realizing the full value of a merger or aquisition. Neglecting these aspects can lead to lost business revenue, employee dissatisfaction and diminished brand equity.
Case study: How Valtech navigated post merger integration (PMI) with Optimizely CMP
About Valtech
Valtech is a global experience innovation company with a strong belief in marketing orchestration—prioritizing visibility, collaboration, and scale across global teams. With over 900 tasks completed and 200+ content projects executed in Optimizely CMP, Valtech is realizing the true value of marketing orchestration, and this value really came into play with a high stakes acquisition.