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How to React When Company Ownership Changes

Scott Curtis is a Managing Director at Consilio and was previously at Huron Legal, a division of Huron Consulting that was just acquired by Consilio. Huron Legal has been a client of mine, but more importantly, Scott is a friend of mine, and we were talking about the challenges involved with company ownership changes. Scott asked if we could co-author a post about the topic, and I jumped at the opportunity.

I’ll let him introduce himself first:

Scott Curtis Writes:

Have you ever found yourself caught in an acquisition, “realignment,” workforce reduction or other organizational change to your day job? If you haven’t, you almost certainly will at some point in your career. Experiencing the collapse of Arthur Andersen taught me several lessons that have stuck with me in my career. Brent and I experienced significant changes in our organizations at about the same time. In a recent exchange, he and I identified several considerations to make the process less painful for those going through a change. Disclaimer: These are my personal opinions and are not the views of Consilio.

We’ve organized these comments into advice for employees and advice for leaders. Basically, those who have no advance warning about upcoming changes vs. those who are do.

Scott’s Advice for Employees (No advance warning):

Brent says: that last part is so incredibly important. There’s a new concept of acqui-hire – buying a company just to get the skills of its staff. You might be the very asset that’s getting acquired. This could be your chance to improve your career situation, big time. I’m not talking about taking over job duties from people who quit – I’m talking about managers that need team leaders and visionaries who aren’t afraid of change.

Scott’s Advice for Leaders:

Brent says: Be as honest as you can about why the company’s going through this change. If it’s good news, tout it! If it’s not good news, like if the company’s going down the toilet and it’s basically being acquired for its IP or customer list, I understand that you can’t be completely transparent. However, coach your team to find the right opportunities for their long term goals. It’s easy to drop hints about folks who should move on as quickly as possible when things aren’t going well.

Scott’s Advice for Everyone

Brent says: If you’re good at what you do, the people around you today are the people who will want to hire you (or be hired by you) down the road. As companies change and people take different career paths, stay in touch. It really is a small world, and you never know who you’ll get the blessing to work with again.

About Scott Curtis

Scott Curtis

I live in the Chicago suburbs with my family and my bbq. I started my career as an accountant at Arthur Andersen analyzing large data sets for investigations and big litigation projects. Since then I’ve continued to spend my time around data and lawyers, sometimes consulting directly on projects and other times (including most recently) building software. I work with an awesome team of developers to build solutions for the legal industry. I am a self-described data enthusiast.

Blog: ScottGCurtis.com

 

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