Most acquisitions fail to deliver expected value, and integration execution is often the culprit. What happens in the first 100 days sets the trajectory for success or disappointment.
The statistics are sobering: studies consistently show that 50-70% of acquisitions fail to deliver their expected value. While deal thesis, valuation, and due diligence all matter, the most common point of failure is integration execution. The first 100 days after close are particularly critical—patterns established early tend to persist.
Day One Readiness
Integration planning must begin well before close, not after. The moment the deal closes, employees, customers, and suppliers are watching to see how the combined organization will operate. Confusion or chaos on Day One signals trouble ahead.
Effective Day One planning addresses practical necessities: access to systems, reporting relationships, decision rights, and communication plans. It also addresses symbolic actions that signal the combined organization's direction and values.
The 100-Day Sprint
The first 100 days should focus on three priorities: securing the base, capturing quick wins, and building integration momentum.
Securing the Base
Protect the ongoing business. Customer-facing operations must continue without disruption. Key employees—particularly those with critical knowledge or relationships—must be retained. Supply chain and operational continuity must be assured. These are not integration activities per se, but their failure will doom the integration regardless of other efforts.
Capturing Quick Wins
Early synergy capture builds credibility and funds ongoing integration investments. Focus on procurement savings, elimination of duplicate costs, and revenue opportunities that can be realized quickly. These wins demonstrate that the deal thesis is achievable and maintain organizational energy for harder work ahead.
Building Integration Momentum
Use the first 100 days to establish integration governance, resolve organizational design questions, and begin cultural integration. Early decisions on structure and leadership cascade through the organization; delays create uncertainty that paralyzes action.
Common Pitfalls
Several patterns predict integration failure. Inadequate resources reflect underestimation of integration complexity. Retention failures of key people often result from delayed or inadequate attention to talent. Culture clashes emerge when organizations move to merge operations without addressing underlying differences in how work gets done.
The Role of Leadership
Integration is a leadership challenge as much as an operational one. Leaders must be visible, communicate relentlessly, and make decisions quickly even with imperfect information. The cost of delay almost always exceeds the cost of occasional wrong decisions that can be corrected.
The first 100 days won't complete the integration, but they will determine whether the integration succeeds. Organizations that approach this period with appropriate urgency, resources, and leadership attention dramatically improve their odds of capturing the value that justified the deal.



