News & Insights
Mid-market insights from Mike
Thoughts on growing mid-market companies.
The mid-market transition: Executive roles, activity portfolios and ‘role peeling’
…. Growth company boards spend lots of time thinking about how to get the best performance from existing executives and which new roles may be needed to cope with expansion. Bandwidth and skill constraints are weighed up against budgets, and the trade-offs between those factors are debated.
Unbalanced: Why private equity governance and strategy-making can go wrong
…. There have been various research reports in the UK and US suggesting that private equity generates higher returns than public markets, even when adjusted for risk and fees. However, those returns seem to have declined over time due to increased competition, higher entry multiples, changes in debt markets and the greater instability of major economies.
The mid-market transition: Is your group structure adding value or just creating complexity?
…. Plenty of the mid-market growth companies we work with create group structures. That may be because of expansion into new territories, the separation of, say, services activities from a technology product, or through acquisitions.
How easy is it to predict the success of CEOs and FDs?
The importance of CEOs and FDs to the success (or failure) of private equity backed companies is relatively self-evident. But to what extent can we glean useful clues from data regarding incumbent or candidate executives before either doing additional assessment work or making a decision?...
Two methods to ease due diligence indigestion
In the world of private equity and growth investing, due diligence is a critical process that underpins investment decisions and shapes post-deal strategies. However, the sheer volume of information generated during due diligence can be overwhelming, leading to what we might call "due diligence indigestion…
What investors worry about when assessing management teams
Catalysis has carried out tens of training sessions with private equity investment teams in recent years and we ask participants to answer a few questions to help us focus the topics we cover…
Tech Trailblazers: Women leading the way in growth companies
In recent decades, initiatives by companies and governments have aimed to boost the representation of women in the Technology, Media, and Telecommunications (TMT) industry…
Mastering executive referencing: A succinct guide for validating your key hires
Hiring senior executives is a high-stakes game. One of the most critical steps in this process is executive referencing. Done right, it can confirm a candidate's true potential and fit…
How bad is it out there in the deal world? Three measures from Catalysis
…. We all know - by all the main metrics - that deal volumes and value have decreased significantly over the last, say, 18 months. Buyers and sellers both appear more reluctant to transact due to uncertain valuations, costly debt and economic sluggishness.
The mid-market transition: If you want to make something significantly better, make it into a “thing”
…. How do we get important things done in growth companies? Take the examples of Sales and Operations which are at the core of most businesses. For starters, we create dedicated functions and populate them with people who have relevant skills and manage them through senior managers with relevant experience.
The mid-market transition: Addressing top team bandwidth constraints
…. Managers in growth companies expect to work hard and it is desirable that things run reasonably ‘hot’ because that forces teams to ignore trivial issues. But frequently that can tip over into unhelpful over-loading where we see the following phenomena:
The mid-market transition: What really matters?
…. Pretty much all the companies Catalysis gets to work with are going through a transition - or several transitions at once.
Just one of those things – or an avoidable mistake?
…. Imagine the following scenario. A year ago, the board decided to make a senior appointment to add capacity and capability to the senior team. Head-hunters were appointed, candidates screened, references taken, and an appointment made.
Building value with less sweat and blood: the role of catalytic intervention
…. Some months ago, I argued that formal value creation methodologies – created to address the problems of a less favourable investing environment – could be self-defeating unless balanced by greater attention to how teams and organisations build value in practice (which Catalysis refers to as value enablement.
Smaller companies, bigger prices – and what that means
…. You’ve heard of shrinkflation in consumer products like chocolate bars, drinks and even toilet paper: smaller portions at the same or higher cost. Have you ever considered that the same might be happening with companies being backed by private equity, albeit for different reasons?
Why management due diligence (MDD) needed to evolve into team and organisation strategy - and beyond
…. I suggested recently that private equity investors are involved in building ‘value machines’ built from four components: partnership; governance; expectations; team & organisation strategy.
Why private equity investors are building ‘value machines’ - whether they know it or not
…. It is often helpful to give labels to new concepts which otherwise stay fuzzy. The problem with fuzzy concepts is that they are hard to visualise, communicate and work on.
Who should lead value enablement?
…. To have the highest probability of success in enabling value, the investor or Chair probably need to check whether all five contributions are likely to be provided by the people involved in post-deal planning and strategy setting. If there is a gap, it needs to be filled somehow.
How might activities across the deal cycle evolve to become more value-adding?
Armed with more empowering assumptions; the insight, focus, and acceleration questions; and a desire to seek out low cost (in money but especially time) but high impact solutions, how might activities across the investment lifecycle become more value-adding?
Value enablement: what is it and how does it make a difference?
The previous article concluded that current Value Creation approaches may, through their assumptions and methods, cause various dysfunctions which impede value creation. It proposed, by way of a counterbalance and partial cure, ‘value enablement’.
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