The deal is signed and the press releases are out. For the CEO, it feels like the finish line. For the CIO, now tasked with onboarding new users from the acquired company, it’s just getting started. The post-merger period is where planned synergies and the harsh reality of technology integration collide. This is where the value of a merger is either realized or lost.
The new combined organization is usually saddled with redundant systems, conflicting processes, and plummeting employee productivity. This post-merger hangover can erode deal value for years. But it doesn’t have to be this way. With a strategic platform approach, CIOs can turn this chaos into a predictable engine for savings and efficiency. By applying the findings of IDC’s Business Value of Hybrid Citrix Infrastructure study to a 4,000-user model, organizations can expect over $2.3 million in hard-dollar annual savings. More importantly, this transition paves the way for M&A operational synergies that further amplify the total return on investment.
Phase 1: Conquering the post-merger productivity plunge
The initial 100 days post-close is a race to provide business continuity. The top priority is ensuring that all employees can work together effectively without disruption. This is where the biggest business benefits are realized.
The challenge: The high cost of disruption
On Day 1, you have new employees who need secure access to unfamiliar systems and legacy employees who need access to acquired applications. The result is often a mix of new logins, slow app performance, and network latency that grinds productivity to a halt. The cost of this disruption, combined with the risk of unplanned outages from a fragile, newly combined infrastructure, can be immense.
The platform solution: Driving immediate business value
Citrix’s unified digital platform is the key to delivering a seamless experience and instant, reliable productivity.
By leveraging Citrix DaaS, you can provide all new users with a single, secure portal to access all their necessary applications from Day 1. This bypasses complex network integration and ensures everyone can collaborate effectively. You can further enhance productivity by using Citrix observability to establish a Digital Employee Experience (DEX) baseline, proactively identifying and resolving IT issues before they disrupt thousands of users and impact the bottom line. By prioritizing the user experience and application reliability, organizations can unlock more than $1.2 million in yearly value. Using our previous 4,000-user model, IDC identifies over $1 million in direct productivity improvements, bolstered by an additional $204,000 saved by reducing downtime.
Phase 2: Optimizing the new IT landscape
Once the initial integration fire is out, the CIO’s focus must shift from stability to strategic optimization. This is a long-term effort to build a leaner and more profitable new company by streamlining the new IT environment.
The challenge: redundant systems and IT overload
Your new organization is now paying for redundant infrastructure and an overlapping portfolio of software. At the same time, your IT staff is stretched thin, managing two of everything and fighting fires across unfamiliar systems. This operational drag prevents them from focusing on high-value strategic work.
The platform solution: A new weapon for IT
The Citrix platform provides deep visibility and simplified management needed to make informed, evidence-based decisions that directly benefit the IT organization.
- Streamlined infrastructure and operations: A consolidated Citrix environment allows you to run applications and workloads more cost-effectively. Remember our 4,000-user example based on the IDC study? With Citrix you can repurpose existing hardware, optimize cloud spend, and consolidate licenses driving $520,000 in annual IT infrastructure cost reductions.
- Unburdening your IT talent: The simplified, single-pane-of-glass management of the Citrix platform drastically reduces the time your infrastructure, help desk, and application teams spend on day-to-day support. According to IDC, this should free up your most valuable technical resources, generating at least $588,000 in annual IT staff productivity benefits supporting 4,000 new users.
Reinvesting your savings
Here is the most powerful outcome for the strategic CIO. The $1.1 million in combined annual savings from IT infrastructure and staff productivity isn’t just a number that disappears into the corporate balance sheet. These are savings that remain within your IT department.
This is your innovation fund. This is the budget that allows you to move from being a cost center to a value-creating business partner. Imagine reallocating $1.1 million to strategic projects that were previously unfunded: completing an underfunded AI initiative, building a new data analytics platform, or accelerating your Zero Trust security roadmap. By turning the chaos of M&A into a source of efficiency, you create financial freedom to invest in the future of the business. The post-merger period is the CIO’s moment to lead. It’s the opportunity to deliver not just the promised synergies of the deal, but to build a more efficient, productive, and innovative enterprise for the years to come.
Learn more by downloading our whitepaper, The CIO’s M&A Playbook: Accelerating value and de-risking integration and companion e-book, How Citrix cuts months off M&A time to value.
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