New developments in the M&A business
Transaction Engineers is a joint venture of Aschenbach Corporate Finance and h&z Unternehmensberatung. As the name suggests, we see ourselves as transaction engineers in the best sense of the word. Behind this merger is the conviction that the M&A business, especially in strategic transactions, will require more and more industry knowledge and approaches to performance optimization in due diligence and integration in the future. Investment banks and traditional transaction advisors can no longer do this. We also believe in the need to strip the M&A process of everything that our clients don’t really need. Don’t complicate something simple to justify retainers. — In our view, M&A is thus becoming much leaner in terms of process, but deeper in terms of industry expertise and the necessary operational know-how.
It is becoming increasingly important for the buy side to quickly discover the potential sticking points of a transaction during integration, to have a 100-day plan at hand, and to have clarity on the value levers of the investment. These operational and performance issues are becoming more central to buyers than deriving purchase price ranges from Excel models. Experience shows that it is not so much the optimally negotiated purchase price as the successful integration that makes a transaction successful.
For sellers of companies, our value creation lies primarily in discrete strategic transactions. This is where we can leverage our full potential in the search for the best strategic buyers. It is always a question of which buyer is willing to pay the highest strategic premium. And this in a process that is not visible on the market. Classic auction processes and secondaries of PE houses are not our business.
The central idea behind the M&A Bootcamp is that CEOs can often manage small and low-complexity corporate transactions themselves, but they are unsure about the M&A process.
For this purpose, we have developed an M&A boot camp for managing directors of medium-sized companies. In the M&A Bootcamp, all relevant topics and questions are addressed in one day, not only in general, but also specifically related to the company. From the typical course of the process to the valuation of the company, dealing with lawyers and tax advisors, managing a due diligence, ultimately negotiating and up to the final handover of the company.
The bootcamp is designed as a one-on-one coaching session that focuses on the individual issues and questions of a potential corporate transaction. It’s a pragmatic look behind the scenes — where making yourself expendable as a consultant is probably unusual, but intentional.