Examlex

Solved

M&A Gets Out of Hand at Cisco

question 26

Essay

M&A Gets Out of Hand at Cisco

Cisco Systems, the internet infrastructure behemoth, provides the hardware and software to support efficient traffic flow over the internet. Between 1993 and 2000, Cisco completed 70 acquisitions using its highflying stock as its acquisition currency. With engineering talent in short supply and a dramatic compression in product life cycles, Cisco turned to acquisitions to expand existing product lines and to enter new businesses. The firm’s track record during this period in acquiring and absorbing these acquisitions was impressive. In fiscal year 1999, Cisco acquired 10 companies. During the same period, its sales and operating profits soared by 44% and 55%, respectively. In view of its pledge not to layoff any employees of the target companies, its turnover rate among employees acquired through acquisition was 2.1%, versus an average of 20% for other software and hardware companies.

Cisco’s strategy for acquiring companies was to evaluate its targets’ technologies, financial performance, and management talent with a focus on ease of integrating the target into Cisco’s operations. Cisco’s strategy was sometimes referred to as an R&D strategy in that it sought to acquire firms with leading edge technologies that could be easily adapted to Cisco’s current product lines or used to expand it product offering. In this manner, its acquisition strategy augmented internal R&D spending. Cisco attempted to use its operating cash flow to fund development of current technologies and its lofty stock price to acquire future technologies. Cisco targeted small companies having a viable commercial product or technology. Cisco believed that larger, more mature companies tended to be difficult to integrate, due to their entrenched beliefs about technologies, hardware and software solutions.

The frequency with which Cisco was making acquisitions during the last half of the 1990s caused the firm to “institutionalize” the way in which it integrated acquired companies. The integration process was tailored for each acquired company and was implemented by an integration team of 12 professionals. Newly acquired employees received an information packet including descriptions of Cisco’s business strategy, organizational structure, benefits, a contact sheet if further information was required, and an explanation of the strategic importance of the acquired firm to Cisco. On the day the acquisition was announced, teams of Cisco human resources people would travel to the acquired firm’s headquarters and meet with small groups of employees to answer questions.

Working with the acquired firm’s management, integration team members would help place new employees within Cisco’s workforce. Generally, product, engineering, and marketing groups were kept independent, whereas sales and manufacturing functions were merged into existing Cisco departments. Cisco payroll and benefits systems were updated to reflect information about the new employees, who were quickly given access to Cisco’s online employee information systems. Cisco also offered customized orientation programs intended to educate managers about Cisco’s hiring practices, sales people about Cisco’s products, and engineers about the firm’s development process. The entire integration process generally was completed in 4–6 weeks. This lightning-fast pace was largely the result of Cisco’s tendency to purchase small, highly complementary companies; to leave much of the acquired firm’s infrastructure in place; and to dedicate a staff of human resource and business development people to facilitate the process (Cisco Systems, 1999; Goldblatt, 1999).

Cisco was unable to avoid the devastating effects of the explosion of the dot.com bubble and the 2001–2002 recession in the United States. Corporate technology buyers, who used Cisco’s high-end equipment, stopped making purchases because of economic uncertainty. Consequently, Cisco was forced to repudiate its no-layoff pledge and announced a workforce reduction of 8500, about 20% of its total employees, in early 2001. Despite its concerted effort to retain key employees from previous acquisitions, Cisco’s turnover began to soar. Companies that had been acquired at highly inflated premiums during the late 1990s lost much of their value as the loss of key talent delayed new product launches.

By mid-2001, the firm had announced inventory and acquisition-related write-downs of more than $2.5 billion. A precipitous drop in its share price made growth through acquisition much less attractive than during the late 1990s, when its stock traded at lofty price-to-earnings ratios. Thus, Cisco was forced to abandon its previous strategy of growth through acquisition to one emphasizing improvement in its internal operations. Acquisitions tumbled from 23 in 2000 to 2 in 2001. Whereas in the past, Cisco’s acquisitions appeared to have been haphazard, in mid-2003 Cisco set up an investment review board that analyzes investment proposals, including acquisitions, before they can be implemented. Besides making sure the proposed deal makes sense for the overall company and determining the ease with which it can be integrated, the board creates detailed financial projections and the deal’s sponsor must be willing to commit to sales and earnings targets.
-Why did Cisco have a "no layoff" policy? How did this contribute to maintaining or increasing the value of the companies it acquired?


Definitions:

Long Term Debt

Borrowings of a company or government that are due to be repaid over a period longer than one year.

Capital Structure

The mix of debt and equity financing used by a company to fund its operations and growth.

Return on Equity Ratio

A financial ratio that measures a corporation's profitability by revealing how much profit a company generates with the money shareholders have invested.

Financial Statements

Formal records of the financial activities and condition of a business, entity, or individual, including balance sheet, income statement, and cash flow statement.

Related Questions