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Writer's pictureSunil Dutt Jha

The Hidden Risks of Capability Models in M&A: How 'One Enterprise, One Anatomy' Ensures True Integration

Mergers and acquisitions (M&A) are powerful strategies for growth, expansion, and innovation. However, the road to a successful merger is often fraught with challenges, especially when it comes to integrating two distinct organizations. Traditional approaches, such as capability models, have long been used to evaluate potential synergies. While helpful in identifying complementary skills and competencies, these models often fail to provide a complete picture, leaving critical integration challenges unaddressed.


The ICMG Enterprise Anatomy Model introduces a game-changing concept: "One Enterprise, One Anatomy." This approach provides a comprehensive understanding of an organization by mapping its core elements—strategy, processes, systems, components, and operations—across all levels. Much like the breakthrough realization of human anatomy transformed healthcare, understanding an organization's true structure can significantly improve M&A outcomes.


The Turning Point: "One Enterprise, One Anatomy"

To appreciate the impact of "One Enterprise, One Anatomy," let's draw a parallel with the history of medicine. Before the understanding of human anatomy, treatments were symptom-focused, leading to short-term relief but little improvement in overall health outcomes. In the early 1900s, life expectancy in the U.S. was around 40 years, as medical practices were limited by superficial knowledge. Today, with advanced knowledge of human anatomy and how different systems interact, life expectancy has increased to approximately 79 yearsansformation underscores the importance of understanding the underlying structure to achieve lasting results.


Similarly, the realization that every enterprise shares a unified anatomy changes how we approach M&A. Instead of focusing only on visible competencies (like a capability model does), the anatomy model examines the deeper connections, ensuring that strategic goals, processes, systems, and components are aligned for a smooth merger.

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