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Ten Areas To Consider

There is no doubt that JVs can be invaluable in allowing companies to access new customers, expand revenues and pursue new product development, all while offsetting costs and risks… if they are structured and managed well. There are a number of points to consider before you sit down to negotiate with your potential JV partner. These items reflect the intersection of business and legal points which will guide both the negotiating process and the trajectory of the JV:

Scope: What will be the scope of the proposed JV’s business and territory? Are there any carve-outs or exclusions that will be retained by the individual JV partners?

Goals and objectives: Are the JV partners aligned on the business objectives and strategic goals of the JV? Is there at least a preliminary consensus on the initial budget and business plan (including the timing for launch) for the JV?

Form: Will the JV take the form of a new entity or be simply contractual in nature? If a new entity, what form will it take (and what options exist under law)? Ownership and capitalization. If the JV will take the form of a new entity, what will be the relative ownership between or among the JV partners, and how will the economic benefits, costs, obligations and liabilities be allocated? What is the anticipated initial capitalization and what will the JV’s policy be as to capital calls and the incurrence of debt?

Management: How will the board or other governing body be composed?

What approval or “veto” rights will the JV partners have at the board or shareholder level, including any supermajority or unanimous approval rights?

Jurisdiction: Where will the JV be formed and what will be the governing law of the JV/partner agreements? What legal, tax and regulatory issues are associated with the JV’s proposed jurisdiction(s) of formation and operation?

Relationships: Will additional services, obligations and undertakings be required by one or more JV partners beyond capital contributions?

Liquidity rights and obligations: What liquidity rights and restrictions will the JV partners have in respect of their interests in the JV?

Disputes: What will be the mechanism for resolving disputes?

Termination: What termination rights will the JV partners have? What are the consequences of termination? What post-termination restrictions on doing business will be imposed on the former JV partners?

Useful deal tips

All JVs pose challenges, and many of the points identified above are relevant both to a purely domestic or international JV. However, there are unique challenges associated with doing a JV across international borders.

The most obvious consequence of an international deal is the applicability of multiple legal regimes, including those of each JV partner, the JV itself and the jurisdiction(s) where the JV is operating. While this by itself will add complexity, time and cost, it is particularly problematic when the legal requirements are in conflict. In addition, international transactions will implicate additional legal requirements (such as the FCPA and U.S. export laws).

Also, U.S. companies will frequently find their business ethics and practices (and compliance requirements) to be radically different from those of their foreign counterparties. This will add challenges in performing due diligence, drafting and negotiating the JV agreements, establishing the JV’s policies and conducting the JV’s operations.

Teaming with another company in a JV or other form of strategic alliance continues to be a popular and effective means to expand internationally. Pursuing such rewards has associated risks and costs. Nevertheless, with a little foresight and planning, parties seeking to launch an international JV can significantly improve their chances of success.

sri 8 years ago
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Launching a World-Class Joint Venture

More than 5,000 joint ventures, and many more contractual alliances, have been launched worldwide in the past five years. The largest 100 JVs currently represent more than $350 billion in combined annual revenues. So it’s become clear to many companies that alliances—both equity JVs (where the partners contribute resources to create a new company) and contractual alliances (where the partners collaborate without creating a new company)—can be ideal for managing risk in uncertain markets, sharing the cost of large-scale capital investments, and injecting newfound entrepreneurial spirit into maturing businesses. What’s less clear to these companies is how to overcome the many challenges inherent in implementing joint ventures and alliances. In 1991, we assessed the performance of 49 joint ventures and alliances and found that only 51% were “successful”—that is, each partner had achieved returns greater than the cost of capital. A decade later, in 2001, we assessed the outcomes of more than 2,000 alliance announcements—and the success rate still hovered at just 53%, despite studies that have highlighted the well-known reasons for JV failure: wrong strategies, incompatible partners, inequitable or unrealistic deals, and weak management. Our most recent research, on which this article is based, confirms that the challenge continues. Why is JV success so elusive? We believe it’s because many companies overlook a critical piece of any alliance or JV effort—the launch planning and execution. Although most companies are highly disciplined about integrating acquisitions, they rarely commit sufficient resources to launching similarly sized joint ventures or alliances. Mistakes made during the launch phase often erode up to half the potential value creation of a venture. The launch phase—beginning with the signing of a memorandum of understanding and continuing through the first 100 days of operation—is usually not managed closely enough. This lack of attention can result in strategic conflicts between the allied companies, governance gridlock, and missed operational synergies. As one executive told us, “If we could improve our skills in one area, it would not be in deal making or ongoing management but in the launch phase. That’s where the rubber meets the road.” JV Challenges When an organization brings an acquired company into the fold, only one corporation exists after the deal, allowing for unilateral decision making. By contrast, after two companies agree to an alliance, there are still multiple parties (two parent companies, and, in many cases, a new company) dealing with disparate interests. This creates a unique set of challenges. (For an overview of the challenges companies face in launching JVs and alliances, see the exhibit “Clearing the Hurdles.”) Clearing the Hurdles Weak controls can cost the parent companies money and can expose them to unexpected risks. The first challenge is building and maintaining strategic alignment across the separate corporate entities, each of which has its own goals, market pressures, and shareholders. If these individual interests are not addressed during the launch phase, conflicts will develop in crucial strategic areas. For instance, should the JV’s products or services target high-end or mass-market consumers? Should the venture’s reinvestment goals emphasize revenue growth or cash flow? Such conflicts can delay the venture’s development and can set the stage for costly compromises down the road. JV and alliance partners try to anticipate areas of potential misalignment during the negotiation phase —but many conflicts of interest surface only when the partners dig deep into operational details and start to run the business. The second challenge is to create a governance system that promotes shared decision-making and oversight between the two parent companies. Even though a joint venture isn’t necessarily a marriage for life, governance problems can quickly trigger termination of the deal. Weak controls can cost the parent companies money and can expose them to unexpected risks. The secret to effective governance is balance: providing enough oversight to protect important assets without stifling entrepreneurship. The third challenge that most joint ventures—and virtually all nonequity alliances—face is managing the economic interdependencies between the corporate parents and the JV. To avoid duplicating costs, most alliances are structured so that the parents continually provide financial capital, human skills, material resources, and marketing and other services. The parent companies generally do outline the broad extent of the economic interdependencies during the negotiation phase—but they often don’t quantify the specific resources and finances that should be flowing to and from each partner until the launch phase. Consider what Starbucks and PepsiCo did. In 1994, the companies formed their successful North American Coffee Partnership, a JV with more than 90% of the U.S. ready-to-drink coffee business. The venture was set up with fewer than a dozen full-time professionals, who have capitalized on the parent companies’ capabilities. Starbucks contributes services such as coffee purchasing and roasting, creation of beverage concentrates, and quality assurance. PepsiCo provides distribution of the JV products to grocery, convenience, and massmarket stores. The two companies jointly manage marketing and product development. And they agreed during the launch phase on specific ground rules for compensating each parent fairly for its contributions. The fourth challenge is building the organization—a cohesive, high-performing JV or alliance—when most managers come from, will want to return to, and may even hold simultaneous positions in the parent companies. Many venture CEOs lament that alliances are treated as dumping grounds for underperforming executives, rather than as magnets for high-potential managers. Most companies that complete a merger dedicate a full-time team of their best leaders to integrate the target company. By contrast, many JV launch teams comprise a handful of part-time managers who are learning as they go. According to a board member of one successful multibillion-dollar JV, “We agreed to virtually every decision—picking the IT systems, selecting staff at every level—prior to closing the deal.” If organizations underinvest in launch project management, they can jeopardize the long-term health of their ventures. Some guidelines for launch planning and execution apply to all JVs and alliances. The parents should appoint a launch leader (sometimes, but not always, the JV CEO) and identify deal champions. The latter are typically senior executives from each parent company who are known and respected across the organization and have a strong interest in the success of the joint venture. The parents should also assemble a dedicated and experienced transition team immediately upon signing the memorandum of understanding. This team is responsible for getting the business up and running. Its tasks include developing a detailed business plan, creating the 100-day road map that orchestrates the activities of all work groups, and intervening when the launch process veers off track. Other requirements of launch planning vary based on the nature of the venture. There are basically four types of joint ventures: In the consolidation JV, the value of the alliance comes from a deep combination of existing businesses. In the skills-transfer JV, the value comes from the transfer of some critical skills from one partner to the joint venture—and sometimes to the other partner. In the coordination JV, the value comes from leveraging the complementary capabilities of both partners. And in the new-business JV, the value comes from combining existing capabilities, not businesses, to create new growth. The transition team should focus on maximizing operational synergies in the first two cases, and it should focus on understanding new or expanded market opportunities in the latter two. When Is a JV Worth the Trouble? Some managers avoid or overlook the JV option because they aren’t sure at what point the advantages outweigh the complexities. Yet some companies have developed a core competency in alliances and pursue JVs over and over again with good results. Judicious use of JVs starts with a careful evaluation of the business opportunity at hand. First, consider your dedicated internal resources. If you don’t have the required skills and experience in house— and there is not enough time to develop these capabilities from scratch—an external vehicle (a JV, a contractual alliance, or mergers and acquisitions) might be a good option. In general, the further removed a new business opportunity is from a company’s core competencies and existing businesses, the more likely the company is to consider an alliance instead of an acquisition or organic growth. Alliances tend to have higher success rates than M&As when the objective is to enter a new region, product area, or customer segment or to develop entirely new capabilities. Alliances have lower success rates when control is important—for instance, when the goal is consolidation of operations or improved performance. Once the right launch team is in place and a time line has been set, the real work begins. Successful JVs tackle each of the challenges outlined previously. They preempt failure by exposing inherent tensions early in the process. They move quickly from general road maps to detailed, practical planning. They clarify strategy and governance, and they put in place the right incentives and processes to secure top talent and critical resources from the parents. Resolving Strategic Conflicts Up Front It is common for companies to assume that the JV’s strategy has already been defined during deal making and that the launch phase, therefore, is simply the time to implement a shared strategic vision. In our experience, it is virtually impossible to get into enough detail during the deal-making phase to surface and resolve all the strategic differences between the corporate parents. Consider the following examples. Two large pharmaceutical companies formed a venture to expand the market for a specific class of drugs. Each partner contributed complementary patentprotected medicines within the drug class and regional marketing strengths to the JV. Yet once the JV was up and running, one parent wanted to promote its higher-margin, lower-volume products, while the other parent wanted to expand its market share for its products through aggressive pricing. The companies had failed to address this fundamental misalignment early in the process, and the venture struggled through two years of friction and weak sales before one partner ultimately bought the other out. In another consolidation JV between two global Many companies assume the fastest way to gain scale with new products or capabilities is to buy or merge with another company. But anyone who’s gone down the M&A evaluation path knows the barriers and risks. Mergers and acquisitions often require that the buyer pay a premium of 20% to 50% over the current stock price of the targeted company. But experience and research show that most acquirers never recover that premium. By contrast, a joint venture typically involves no premium. An unwilling M&A target or partner can also be a barrier. If two companies are comparable in size, and one party is unwilling (or unable, perhaps by local law) to participate in a merger, a joint venture may be an attractive alternative for capturing specific capabilities from another company. And let’s not forget that integrating an acquired company takes lots of time and resources. It can tie up managers for years while the core business goes unattended. The process is particularly risky when a company has no experience—or a poor track record—with integrating acquisitions. Again, a joint venture or contractual alliance, which can allow a more tailored deal, may be a safer alternative. Equity JVs make the most sense when value will be gained by integrating assets or capabilities, or when the size of the prize warrants the effort of setting up a separate company with its own culture chemical companies, it was clear early on that one partner was more willing to invest in the venture than the other one was. The companies had different targets for return on capital and different perceptions of the long-term strategic benefits associated with the venture. The CEO of this joint venture was caught in the cross fire, lacking agreement from the parent companies about how and where the JV would compete and what level of investment was appropriate. In both cases, the companies had failed to discover strategic conflicts early enough in the launch process, when the partners might have been more amenable to negotiation. To root out these conflicts, companies should do the following: Develop a VC-quality business plan. Prior to closing the deal, the launch team, working with future management, needs to develop a detailed business plan. It should meet the same standards of rigor, detail, and logic that a venture capitalist would demand. To start with, the management team (the CEO, CFO, and COO) should meet off-site for two or three days with members of the JV board and the deal champions from both parent companies. The group should define exactly how and where the JV will compete, project how the JV might expand beyond its initial scope, set financial targets, plan capital expenditures, and create a blueprint for the organization. This work is then translated into a detailed business plan. It all sounds straightforward, but these meetings are often contentious precisely because they reveal gaps in strategic alignment. The launch team, working with the JV board, also needs to draw up performance contracts that make key JV managers accountable for the success of the venture. The partners should clarify the resources, personnel, and behaviors required for the JV’s success so confusion about these matters won’t hamstring the people charged with running the venture day to day. Consider the following example: Four electric power companies interviewed for a CEO to run their proposed joint venture. One candidate was offered the position but took his time in deciding whether to accept. Before committing to the venture, he interviewed each board member to understand the parents’ objectives, revised the JV business plan, and proposed six specific objectives for the first nine months of his tenure as CEO. He then insisted on the collective endorsement of the JV board as a precondition to accepting the job, and he negotiated a compensation agreement that linked his bonus to these objectives. He also negotiated an employment contract that empowered him to make key operating decisions and choose executives. As he later explained, “In joint ventures, especially with many partners, there is a tendency for the partners to each make back-channel requests of the CEO and to try to influence the alliance through people they put into the JV. I was not going to put up with that. I needed all the partners to agree on the venture’s overall priorities and hold me responsible for executing against them.” Act quickly to manage inevitable setbacks. A detailed business plan and supporting performance contracts are important, but they can’t prevent unpleasant surprises once the venture is launched. For instance, Starbucks and PepsiCo were forced to rethink the direction of their joint venture after the first product it introduced, a carbonated coffee drink, received mixed results in early tests with customers. “We had a great partner, a leveraged organizational model, but no product,” one Starbucks executive recalled. The partners ultimately redefined the JV’s product, drawing on the lessons they learned from those initial market tests. Successful alliances pay a lot of attention to communication—not just during the launch phase, but throughout the life of the venture. For instance, senior management at TRW Koyo Steering Systems, a JV manufacturer of automotive components, followed a policy of “equal communications” with Successful alliances pay a lot of attention to communication—not just during the launch phase, but throughout the life of the venture. each of the parent companies (TRW Automotive and Koyo Seiko). When Arvind Korde, CEO of the JV, needed to communicate facts or issues to one parent, he always copied the other parent, thereby promoting openness and trust. And Korde and his team were quick to react to problems. One year into the venture, the JV was on the verge of securing its first customer, which exposed the parent companies’ difference of opinion around pricing. TRW, which was focused on profitability more than growth, argued for higher margins and prices. Koyo Seiko sought to build market share and maximize the scale of its global relationship with key Asian customers. “This was a real turning point for the JV,” Korde recalls. “Despite our early success, I wasn’t sure we would make it out of there alive.” Korde called an off-site meeting of his management team in which they experienced what he calls a “coming to Jesus” moment. In that session, the management team crafted a new vision for the JV and a constructive approach for resolving the conflict. Achieving Loose-Tight Governance Besides managing the parents’ goals and expectations, the launch team needs to focus on building an effective governance system for the JV or alliance. An appropriate structure should allow the JV management team to make timely decisions while providing the parents with sufficient oversight to protect their assets. During the deal phase, most companies focus on the composition of the board, the parent companies’ veto rights, and the conditions for termination of the venture. But effective ongoing governance requires more than contractual agreements. Without the right launch planning, the typical JV contract is a recipe for disaster because every major decision is subject to board approval, which requires the agreement of both partners. The default process for resolving disputes is often, “Talk some more.” This usually results in strategic deadlock between the parent companies, followed by erosion of the synergy created by the deal and, often, termination of the venture. The launch phase is the time to go beyond the lines and boxes and address how decisions will be made and disputes resolved. To find the right balance between giving the JV enough autonomy and granting the parents enough control, companies should do the following: Apply rigorous risk management and performance tracking. Some companies grant the venture management team so much autonomy that it borders on negligence. This was the case in a billion-dollar industrial JV that combined similar business units to increase scale and reduce operating costs. During the launch phase, the partners failed to create adequate oversight mechanisms. Three years into the alliance, the U.S. partner was dismayed to discover that the JV had incurred a $400 million debt without ever having gone through either parent’s capital-budgeting process. In a second JV at the same company, one parent found that the venture was delivering an annual 3% return on invested capital, a figure well below its targeted rate of 14%. The JV was not part of the standard corporate-planning and strategy review forums and was never subject to the same level of scrutiny as the wholly owned businesses. In the wake of Sarbanes-Oxley, companies have increased their attention to transparency, risk management, disclosure, and performance management in their wholly owned businesses. But our research shows that companies don’t evaluate the performance of their JVs as diligently as they do their wholly owned businesses with equivalent assets. That’s a mistake; parents need to treat their ventures and their wholly owned units similarly. This means, for large joint ventures, putting in place an audit process like the ones used at the best public companies, including an active audit committee and external auditors focused solely on the venture’s economics. It means building a strong finance organization inside the JV to make sure that the board and venture management have the critical information they need to do their jobs. And sometimes it means including the JV in at least one parent’s annual or semiannual corporate review, thereby ensuring transparency. Streamline decision making. Of course, some corporate parents go too far and implement governance systems that stifle entrepreneurship and create dysfunctional bureaucracy. During the launch of a $4 billion natural resource JV, the parent companies created a large board with subcommittees intended to be heavily involved in—but not accountable for—the day-to-day operations of the venture. All major decisions required multiple subcommittee and board meetings, interspersed with additional fact-finding efforts by the JV management team. Since each subcommittee met only four times per year, the time it took for the JV to make a decision became a distinct competitive disadvantage. As a result, profitability declined, frictions among the parent companies and the venture’s management escalated, and the parents had to completely restructure the JV’s governance approach. Companies can avoid this governance trap by implementing a loose-tight governance model. (See the exhibit “The Loose-Tight Approach.”) In this approach, the partners identify the venture’s most important governance processes (for instance, setting strategy, allocating resources, or determining pricing) and then designate the appropriate degree of parental involvement for each. As a general rule, parent companies operating through a JV board should play an active role in the three governance areas critical to driving financial performance and protecting shareholder interest: capital allocation, risk management, and performance management. The parents should generally limit their interventions in more operational processes—such as staffing, pricing, and product development—where the JV needs independence to ensure competitiveness and market responsiveness. The Loose-Tight Approach Once a high-level governance road map is in place, the launch team needs to translate it into practical decision-making processes that are consistent with the parent companies’ formal and informal governance and influence structures. There are many ways to do this, but one effective approach is to map out each governance process, showing how information and decisions flow through the JV and parent companies. For example, a request for capital could originate within the JV’s manufacturing organization and be formally submitted to the board for approval. But the way the process might work in practice is for board members to survey the CFOs at each parent company to make certain that the proposal meets their individual capital-expenditure requirements and then convene an informal discussion with one or both parent CEOs to make sure they’re aligned. By mapping out both formal and informal decision-making processes, you can reduce the time and effort it will take to approve major initiatives. Managing the Interdependencies For practical reasons, most JVs depend on their parents to provide ongoing access to capital, people, intellectual property, raw materials, and customers. Both tangible and intangible contributions from the parents determine their actual return on investment. But much damage can be done if the details of those contributions aren’t worked out during launch. For instance, if transfer prices (the internal fees that one group charges another for a resource or a service) are not set appropriately, Parent A, who provides a resource to the joint venture, has an opportunity to supplement its returns “off the books” of the JV. When Partner B sees this happening, it uses the information to justify holding back its committed contributions, creating a loop of partner suspicion and distrust. Winning JVs start to address economic interdependencies as soon as an agreement looks likely in order to avoid launch delays and the loss of millions of dollars in potential synergies. They make sure that the launch team contains appropriate expertise and authority to resolve important economic issues. Specifically, successful ventures do the following: Dedicate resources to resolve interdependencies up front. The process of sorting out who will provide what to the joint venture is time-consuming for everyone involved. In one high-tech consolidation JV, the partners spent 10,000 man-hours over four months determining precisely which services and resources each parent would provide the JV and constructing service-level agreements that specified transfer pricing, access rights, and other critical terms of the deal. The work can’t be postponed just because it is contentious and resource intensive. According to one JV executive we spoke with, “Shared services are often a critical part of determining total venture economics and how the value is distributed between the partners.” In the high-tech consolidation JV, the partners formed a small transition services team that identified the economic interdependencies across the 20 launch teams. This group established criteria for The launch team needs to challenge—and limit wherever possible—the interdependencies between the parents and the JV. determining which services the JV would purchase from the parents. It then documented the shared resources and services and collaborated with the purchasing and finance teams to price each shared service. Challenge and limit interdependencies. One of the most valuable tasks of the launch team is to challenge—and limit wherever possible—the number of interdependencies between the parents and the JV. Working teams in the high-tech consolidation JV initially generated a list of more than 1,000 dependencies upon one parent—that parent was slated to provide administrative services, component purchases, and shared research facilities, among a slew of other resources. Recognizing that a heavy load could create unmanageable complexity down the road for the parent company, the launch leaders challenged virtually every line item on the list. Eventually, they whittled it down to just 300 services that the parent would provide the venture in the first year and less than ten services in the second year and beyond. Once a list of shared services is finalized, the launch team must develop transparent and honest methodologies for calculating transfer pricing. This is critical for maintaining trust down the road. A 50-50 telecom joint venture depended on one parent for 90 different shared services. Two years into the JV, a strategic review revealed that this partner was allocating its corporate overhead and other nonshared costs to the JV, thereby creating significant profits for itself while hampering the venture’s ability to set competitive prices and make a profit. The partners did renegotiate transfer pricing, but the distrust that was created continues to plague the venture. To avoid this situation, the launch team should agree at the outset on the methods for allocating costs, specifying which operating costs should be included (for instance, customer billing or maintenance) and the basis upon which to allocate each shared cost (for instance, per subscriber, per region, per dollar of revenue). The launch team should also establish a way to benchmark the parents’ internal pricing and quality of service against those of outside vendors and suppliers. And the launch team should specify a path for resolving contentious economic issues. Parent companies need to move outside their comfort zones when devising an organizational structure for their JVs. Finally, the JV should be linked to the corporate review and planning cycle of at least one of the parents, reducing the odds that important economic issues will fall between the cracks and require 11th-hour intervention. Building the Organization Parent companies may need to move outside their comfort zones when devising an organizational structure for their JVs, adopting a staffing model, and designing incentive plans. There is a tendency in many JVs that combine existing organizations to select a familiar organizational model—either a regional one, if the parents are contributing assets from different regions, or a product-division structure, if each parent is contributing different products. This simple approach allows each parent to protect its turf and minimize organizational disruption—but it also dilutes the potential effectiveness of the new organization. If the parents try to preserve the status quo, they risk reducing the synergies between them. And let’s not forget that companies are often attracted to the JV structure precisely because of their need for a new model and mind-set to compete in a new business. The creation of a joint venture is an opportunity to unfreeze the organization. Beyond the issue of formal structure, a successful JV launch requires taking the following approaches to staffing and incentives. Choose your organizational model carefully. There are three basic organizational models for joint ventures: independent, dependent, and interdependent. The independent model, pursued by companies such as Carlson Wagonlit Travel and Marathon Ashland Petroleum, lets companies create new and often more entrepreneurial cultures. The independent JV typically has an entirely separate reporting structure from the parents, its own facilities, and the freedom to source from external as well as internal suppliers. This model allows venture management to have greater focus and unity of purpose, but it also requires the venture to establish and maintain separate HR systems. This can make it harder to recruit potential managers who would prefer the wider career opportunities offered by the parent companies. Some companies go to the opposite extreme and create dependent JVs. This type of JV operates as a business unit of one parent and uses that parent company’s incentive systems and HR policies. BP and Mobil used this approach when creating two JVs in their downstream European oil businesses: The refining venture operated as a BP business, while the lubricants venture operated as a Mobil business. The advantages here are opposite those of the independent JV. There is no need to create a separate HR system for the venture, and the managing parent ensures that the venture’s high performers get equal access to promotion opportunities within the wholly owned businesses. But the dependent model limits the JV’s ability to share people and skills with the nonoperating partner and gives that partner less influence in the JV. The third model, the interdependent JV, is tough to execute but is by far the most commonly implemented structure. Members of the management team maintain links to their original corporate parent. They remain on the same compensation plans, anticipate future career moves back to the parent, and sometimes have dotted-line-reporting relationships to an executive in their parent organization. The interdependent model protects career paths and offers maximum flexibility, but it can be complex to manage and can perpetuate divided loyalties. In one billion-dollar global media JV, the management team remained culturally divided into U.S. and German camps two years after the venture’s formation. This interdependent JV was operating in a mature sector, and the partners had agreed to rotate the senior positions between them every three years—which created a questionable career path for those deciding to stay at the JV. To make matters worse, the venture was functioning at a significant talent disadvantage. Those managers who performed well were repatriated back to the parents, while those with mediocre performance remained at the venture. This JV was further bedeviled by unclear reporting relationships. For example, a senior-ranking German manager in the JV routinely communicated privately with a senior board member from the German parent (who was his former boss). As a result, the JV CEO had to treat his second in command as a board liaison rather than a direct report, making it difficult to hold his feet to the fire on performance issues. Unfortunately, this is not an isolated case. Many JVs are held back because they offer the wrong incentives and are unclear about accountability. And the problems are not limited to the senior management team; they spread throughout the venture, even back to the support staffers who remain with the parent organizations. The disadvantages of the interdependent model can be mitigated if the JV CEO is empowered to write performance reviews and to make all hiring and firing decisions; if all parties agree up front on performance criteria; if a minimum tour of duty is established within the venture, typically three years; and if the parents aren’t allowed to poach from the venture until that tour of duty is up. Make people want to join the team. Regardless of the organizational model, the launch team must create a compelling value proposition that makes good people want to join the team. For start-ups, the excitement of building something from the ground up is often sufficient to attract motivated players. In difficult turnaround situations, the compensation upside might be essential (lower base pay but higher bonus or stock options than in the parent companies). Personal considerations cannot be underestimated. Everyone wants to work for a motivational leader, and selecting a CEO who inspires loyalty is the best way to build a strong new business. This is especially important in interdependent JVs, where personal loyalty to the JV CEO can help unite the management team and overcome the employees’ natural affiliations to one parent or the other. The physical proximity of key members of the JV management team is also important for accelerating team building. The value in creating a strong management team and a motivated staff is obvious. It’s equally important to get the staff inside the parent companies on your side. Two groups are worth special attention. The first is the handful of parent company managers who possess distinctive skills that need to be transferred to the joint venture, such as R&D, product marketing, or manufacturing process design. The second is the broader set of employees performing day-to-day work for the JV, who continue to reside in a parent company. Obtain commitments from parent company staff. Top-performing companies recognize that skills are transferred by people, not by processes or contracts. Failure to acknowledge this can be costly. For instance, a global consumer goods company held a 50% stake in a partner in a developing country; the resulting JV was looking to the global partner to transfer some of its operating and marketing expertise into the developing-country partner’s underperforming beverage business. The JV requested from the global partner two or three people highly skilled in emerging-market branding and marketing. The parent offered very limited support from its developing-country gurus; instead, it sent a marketing executive who had spent most of his career in North America. Lacking access to crucial skills, the JV couldn’t prop up the declining brand and failed to capture half of the expected synergies, or around $450 million. Getting sufficient time and attention from a few topflight people is often critical to a JV’s success. Managers at the parent companies often assume that these individuals will contribute their magic to the venture regardless of formal allocations or incentives. To be certain that these valuable players do inject their crucial know-how, the JV launch team needs to identify them right away and create mechanisms to involve them heavily in the first six to 18 months of operations. For example, the CEO of a successful U.S.–Japanese JV spent two weeks during the first month of the venture in Japan finding local managers who truly understood what it would take to build a world-class manufacturing line in the United States. He then persuaded the managers to come to the States for up to a year, where they could have a direct, immediate impact on the layout and operations of the new plant. Once the skill holders are identified, successful companies create formal contracts for them that define their levels of commitment to the JV (usually 50% or more of their time to ensure focus and accountability) and the metrics by which their performance will be evaluated and rewarded. The launch team also needs to create incentives for parent company employees who spend less than half their time on the JV—for instance, sales reps, administrative staff, and others—so that they are motivated to provide strong support. For example, two software companies recently created a JV to combine the field sales capabilities of both parent companies. The JV’s products would be sold through the venture itself, as well as through both parents. To rally disparate salespeople around this goal, the sales and marketing launch teams focused on developing rules of engagement for all three sales groups (product pricing and positioning, and the management of joint accounts); defining incentives for all the salespeople; and developing mechanisms for building and transferring product knowledge among the sales forces—a critical issue, since the JV would be developing and manufacturing the products.• • • Launching a world-class joint venture is complex and demanding. Research shows that it can, in fact, be more resource intensive than postmerger integration or internal business start-ups. Best-inclass companies manage to do it well, sometimes over and over again. They execute the classic launch tasks (organization building and project management) well. They also maintain an intense focus on issues like strategy, deal economics, and governance that most companies assume have About the Research To better understand the challenges of JV launch, we and our colleagues in McKinsey’s postmerger management and alliances practices interviewed 50 executives who were directly involved in the launch of 25 joint ventures across the globe. (The interviews took place in 2002 and 2003.) The ventures represented assets or revenues in excess of $300 million, involved some degree of operational integration, and covered a range of industries: automotive, consumer products, electronics, energy, financial services, pharmaceuticals, and telecommunications, among others. The companies were based in the United States, Europe, Asia, and emerging markets. Most of these JVs were two to five years of age—old enough to have a track record of performance but young enough for executives to remember launch details. Over the past decade, we’ve interviewed more than 500 executives about their alliances and have advised more than 1,000 companies on alliance strategy, structuring, launch planning, and restructuring. We also have conducted several studies (in 1991 and 2001) of alliance success rates and the factors associated with success and failure. Our definition of an alliance covers a broad range of collaborations involving shared risk, rewards, and control. These include equity joint ventures where a been discussed and resolved up front. When executives understand the unique demands of joint ventures, and invest in early planning, the rewards can be enormous. As one manager summed it up: “If you get launch right, the rest almost takes care of itself.” A version of this article appeared in the February 2004 issue of Harvard Business Review. separate company is created; contractual alliances (with or without equity stakes), such as exclusive marketing or distribution arrangements; and joint marketing agreements. While this article focuses primarily on joint ventures, many of the findings apply equally to deep contractual alliances.

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Joint Venture Dealmaking: Pathways to Negotiating a 50:50 Ownership Split

By Jason Kolsevich | Tuesday, August 9, 2016 | Joint Venture Dealmaking

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080216_Insight_Image_opt.jpgJOINT VENTURE NEGOTIATIONS pose many unique challenges to dealmakers. One common challenge is how to achieve an equal ownership split when the parties’ contributions are inherently unequal. In many two-party deals, such as Royal Dutch Shell-Cosan, Bosch-Siemens, GE-Mubadala, TNK-BP, and Samsung-Corning, creating a 50:50 joint venture is a core requirement for one or both parties. But initial valuations don’t always support such a split due to differences in the scope and scale of contributed assets or businesses, disagreements on the valuation of hard-to-value intangible contributions (e.g., local regulatory contacts, brand reputation, trademarks, etc.), or inability to share information about black boxed intellectual property contributions. When valuations diverge, three things can happen:

Both parties can accept an asymmetric ownership model (e.g., 50.1:49.9, 51:49, 52:48; 55:45; 60:40), according to the initial valuation; The disadvantaged party can fight for a higher valuation (e.g., where intangibles or IP is involved), while the advantaged party demands a majority interest, according to the as-is initial valuation. This often results in prolonged negotiations, deadlock, and termination; Or, both parties can mutually seek to re-balance contributions in a way that supports equal ownership. This is often underscored by a belief that equal ownership helps to create goodwill, alignment, economic parity, and a natural incentive to cooperate over the long-term.

Download: Developing Joint Venture Deal Options >>

Typically, parties opt for choice three. And this leaves dealmakers searching for ways to reach 50:50 ownership while providing fair consideration for unequal contributions. The purpose of this note is to introduce 10 potential pathways to do just this (Exhibit 1). Exhibit_Joint_Venture_Dealmaking_50-50_Ownership_Split.png

To illustrate, consider the true-up mechanism – the first of three common pathways. Prospective JV partners can negotiate a true-up mechanism, either as an upfront true-up payment (i.e., a direct cash equalizing payment or disproportionate initial capex contribution) or a post-deal payment (i.e., an asymmetric dividend, distribution, or future capex requirement). This is what Merck and Sanofi-Aventis negotiated in a deal to consolidate their respective animal healthcare businesses into a JV equally-owned by the two companies. The enterprise value of the Merck business was $8.5 billion versus $8 billion for the Sanofi-Aventis business. To address the gap, Sanofi-Aventis made a true-up payment of $250 million plus other contributions to reach a 50:50 ownership split. The JV would have been the largest company of its kind in the world had regulatory and other challenges not blocked the deal from moving forward.

Liberty Global-Vodafone also used a true-up mechanism, in their JV deal to create a national unified communications provider in the Netherlands (i.e., video, broadband, mobile, and B2B services). These partners anticipated this deal would realize synergies with estimated NPV of €3.5 billion after integration costs, or a run-rate savings of €280 million per annum by the fifth full year of operations. While the partners negotiated a 50:50 ownership split, the valuation of their contributed assets did not support such a split. Based upon the enterprise value of each business, and after deducting €7.3 billion of net debt from Liberty Global, Vodafone was still short €1 billion. To true-up this valuation gap, Vodafone made a one-time payment of €1 billion to equalize its ownership stake in the JV.

The second pathway is staged funding or earn-ins. This is where one partner funds their share over time, rather than upfront, based on the venture achieving certain milestones or incurring certain expenses. Cyberkinetics-Neurometrix was a 50:50 JV to develop products for treating nerve injuries. Not only did Cyberkinetics contribute intellectual property and know-how, it also agreed to license a key piece of technology to the venture that resulted in a higher initial valuation than its partner. To compensate, Neurometrix agreed to fund the first $2 million of program costs, and any required funding beyond the initial $2 million was to be shared equally, according to the 50:50 ownership split. However, dealmakers should consider one caveat to staged funding and earn-ins: Whether the partner holds their full 50 percent ownership stake to begin or accretes that ownership stake over time, in line with their capital contributions, is a matter for negotiation.

The third pathway – contingent payments or earn-outs – is a variation of staged funding or earn-ins. Rather than allowing the 50% partner with a higher valuation to defer their funding obligations, an earn-out enables that same partner to collect asymmetric economic flows from the venture over time, regardless of equal ownership stake. Companies often structure deals with earn-outs when the valuation of certain contributed assets is highly uncertain. Take EVO-PKO as an example: EVO Payments bought a 66% stake for $113.5 million in PKO Bank Polski’s eService merchant acquiring business. As part of the 20-year JV agreement, the partners planned that eService would expand into other countries in Central and Eastern Europe, a possibility which would significantly increase the value of its contributed merchant acquiring business. Accordingly, the agreement provided eService with an earn-out opportunity based on future performance.

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Reaching 50:50 ownership split is a common challenge. Luckily, there are many ways to skin the cat.

The Deal Wheel Five Core Analyses

The author would like to thank other members of the Water Street Partners team, upon whose original thinking this article is based.

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JV Negotiation Tips

When you want to negotiate the terms of a successful, win/win Joint Venture, there are a few basic guidelines that I have learned through the years that will help you to optimize the opportunity and maximize the chances of a successful Joint Venture that can lead to many more. More importantly, with the right approach you can build and maintain a good, solid relationship, whether the JV is successful or not!

First, do a lot of homework on the type of business you’re dealing with, its unique problems, profit margins, challenges, back end and resources. You can use the Internet, speak to the competition, read industry publications and talk with company employees, vendors and customers. Also, speak to fellow Joint Venture Forum Members at your locals meetings, on the Internet and on your Members Only Conference calls. Six degrees of Separation means everybody knows people and you’re looking for contacts that can fast-track your information collection and due diligence.

Next, do serious research on the person you’re dealing with. Naturally, you should be negotiating with the decision maker. What is his or her “Hot Button”? What do they really, really want? What keeps them awake at night? What are their values, hopes, dreams, fears and aspirations? WHY do they want what they say they want? How much and what will it take to really get their undivided attention? You need to craft and personalize the JV to take full advantage of this knowledge to offer the ultimate benefit, a deal which is too good to be refused.

Is this person knowledgeable about the mindset required for a successful JV? Give him JV information to prepare his mind. Suggest he joins the DollarMakers JV Forum / attend a DollarMakers JV Broker Bootcamp. Members have also realized the efficacy of giving then a copy of my book, Joint Adventures, to read in preparation to the negotiation.

Also, make sure you reduce the cost and risk on both sides to the absolute minimum, as well as the time required to make it work. Do this by leveraging existing resources instead of creating / buying / building new ones. That way, if things don’t work out as expected, nobody loses and the relationship remains strong, without resentment or regret.

Get the opinion of at least two respected mentors / Mastermind Partners / Fellow JV Forum Members before presenting your case to your potential JV partner.

Finally, put everything in writing. This clarifies issues and responsibilities, duties, payments, time of payment, conditions and expectations. You could also mention the fact that things might not work out as expected, and what will occur under those circumstances. Clear communication is essential.

Always be positive, relaxed and unattached, and be prepared to walk away from any JV if you’re not comfortable or if the return on investment is not deemed worth the time and effort it requires, always bearing in mind the big picture. This attitude will strengthen your position.

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TRUST! And standard learning mechanisms

Cultivate a trusting relationship

Negotiating JVs differs from negotiating mergers or acquisitions because the end goal is a sustainable, ongoing, trust-based relationship, not a one-time deal. Not surprisingly, a significant portion of our survey’s respondents indicated that the level of honesty and trust between the parent companies had a significant impact on the partnership’s overall success (Exhibit 2).

Exhibit 2 Success and failure in joint ventures often hinge on trust and communication Positive initial meetings are important to establishing trust, but planners need to do more. Regular and ongoing business and social interactions with critical parent leadership-team members, including management off-site events and frequent, engaged board meetings, can help maintain trust and communication, reveal the breadth of motivating factors that influence a partner, and nurture a strong relationship even after negotiations conclude. As one energy executive observed, it is frequently only after many hours together in a “smoky room,” spread over the days, weeks, and months of negotiation, that the true motives of potential partners become clear. Understanding partner motives and securing mutual commitment to a deal beyond its financials will help ensure that all parties share the same expectations of ongoing JV operations.

In our interviews, numerous executives expressed concern about nontraditional objectives that may be motivating potential JV partners. These include sharing capital to upgrade facilities, achieving a relationship with a previously inaccessible third party, or increasing employment opportunities for a specific region. Such objectives often work to the disadvantage of a JV partner, as managers at a global conglomerate discovered. They negotiated a deal with a regional player that included transferring core technology into the JV in order to qualify for lucrative government contracts. Conglomerate executives at first applauded the deal, though the planners expressed concern that their partner’s motives might not be consistent at all levels of its organization. The venture subsequently reached a tipping point when, during an industry conference, the regional company’s senior executives boasted that they would start selling products based on the global conglomerate’s technology, but at a fraction of the price. This forced deal teams on both sides to revisit the partnership’s objectives to reaffirm the relationship’s durability.

Negotiators who understand a partner’s motivation, business needs, and capabilities well before closing a deal will be better positioned to establish a strong, candid relationship with shared, explicit expectations. Thorough research can highlight things that wouldn’t necessarily surface during negotiations but that could affect the partner’s involvement with the JV. For example, one energy company avoided a potential misstep after scrutinizing a partner company’s relationships with distributors before coinvesting in a local manufacturing operation. That analysis made it clear that the partner company’s CEO intended to use his own distribution company to exclusively channel products into a lucrative sales territory. After the energy company escalated its concerns, its partner moved ahead with the venture anyway but did not use the CEO’s distribution company.

Standardize processes and learning mechanisms

Unlike dedicated M&A teams that develop negotiating skills over multiple deals, JV teams tend to change from deal to deal, often due to shifting team-member roles and responsibilities or low JV deal flow. That creates little institutional memory around key processes, approaches for managing critical issues, and even partnership-specific negotiating skills. All of these things can be proactively managed, even if deal terms cannot.

Yet our survey of JV practitioners found that less than a quarter have a JV design-and implementation playbook—the kind of simple tool that most companies with M&A programs have had for years to reduce strain for the internal team and to ease discussions with potential partners. Without that kind of institutional knowledge, inexperienced teams often see JV negotiations as zero-sum games; they rigidly calculate wins and losses on every negotiating point. That leaves them with little flexibility to appreciate the needs of a partner interested in entering into a commercial agreement or reaching consensus on the terms of a mutually beneficial JV. The result can be a weak or ineffective deal. For example, one global company faced challenges investing in a regional JV because it focused too emphatically on legalistic deal terms to protect its own interests. That created an adversarial tone in the negotiations and undermined the collaboration needed to allow both companies and the JV to succeed. It also prolonged the process, to the frustration of the JV partners.

For most JVs, long-term success also requires an agreement process that is transparent and follows patterns of conversation established from the outset. At its core, this simply means communicating with all parties about how, when, and what to communicate. The eventual pattern of communication may vary from deal to deal, and not all parties will like it. That’s OK. Just laying it out keeps expectations aligned, focuses conversations, and reduces time-consuming delays. Otherwise, internal approval processes can cause bottlenecks, and not having the right people in the room can bring momentum to a standstill.

Standardized processes are especially helpful once a deal is under way, when adapting and restructuring can strengthen a partnership and increase financial returns—as long as the relationship is strong and the process has clearly allowed for adaptation. One aerospace partnership ensured all parties continued to agree on the goals of the JV by contractually committing to a standardized annual evaluation process. This included valuing each partner’s contributions to ensure that the risks and rewards for each partner remain consistent with the original objectives of the deal. In the event that one partner’s contributions did not match the other’s, the terms of the agreement required the lagging partner to increase its contribution. Together with a management team in which the CEO position is swapped on a regular basis, both partners have been able to maintain a decades-long relationship.

With so many companies planning to increase their JV activity in coming years, it’s worth investing the time in negotiations and planning to ensure the value of these ventures.

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GOAL

Form a successful joint venture.

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Seven Stages

01 Identify

Identify strategic logic and drivers. It is very likely that an organisation and its JV partner(s) have adopted two different marketplace approaches in terms of how they compete. One company may be competing on the basis of economies of scale; another on the basis of a low-cost offer, another on the basis of branding and marketing flare, another on the basis of sales and servicing — and yet another on its product features and design or some combination of each in different compositions. These differences in the strategic logic of each firm permeate all aspects of practices in each organisation, affecting the way decision-making is executed and what is considered an operational priority. These differences can be either complementary or a hindrance to the alliance. It is critical to understand the strategic logic operating in each organisation for the success of the venture. To succeed, a JV must clarify the important drivers for the joint venture over and above the profit potential.

02 Valuate

Valuate each firm’s product architecture. If each company in a JV breaks down its individual products and offers to customers, the component parts could potentially be repackaged into a new (and very attractive) offer to customers. For two firms to do this, it is critical to understand the possible effects of each component on the new product mix of the JV because of potential changes in the business environment as a result of the recombination of components. This will help each firm to forecast better, reflect the evolving nature of the JV business and set the right expectations of volumes and terms of agreement. Furthermore, this process provides critical insights and boundaries for protecting the intellectual property of each firm. This evaluation may lead to adjustments in the product architecture itself and may open up new avenues of other possibilities as a by-product.

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03 Construct

Construct an effective operating structure. Each organisation in a JV normally separates and aggregates its operating activities (also called the operating model) in unique ways and for a myriad of reasons. For example, one credit card company may have the chargeback activity as part of its disputes resolution department and another firm may have the two separated.

Every organisation also has different ways of prioritising and measuring its effectiveness. These operating values are recognisable when operations managers see ‘doing a good job’ as some combination of volumes produced, standardisation, flexible staffing, quality standards met, customisations produced, repeat orders and so on. It is important to understand these differences in the organisations that make up the JV to ensure workable agreements, recovery of services, setting up the right measures and responses.

04 Define

Define the new business model. The firms in a JV must define the nature of the new venture including the proposition to the customer, the channels and relationship management, the value chain, the structure and roles, investments, income, costs and payments, success factors and the timetable for delivery. This agreed-upon new business model provides the backdrop for the legal and financial frameworks that will be the true borders of the joint venture.

05 Create

Create an economic system that will work for all. Key players in the JV must build a congruent economic system that includes a risk-adjusted cash flow model, break-even analysis, unit costing and economic value-added rationale for the new business.

06 Ensure

Ensure that all negotiations are win-win. For each player in a JV, the art of negotiating joint ventures (just as in mergers and acquisitions) is to know yourself, know what is important to you and know your limits and boundaries — then go on to have some knowledge of the same for your counterpart. The goal, at all times, must be for no firm in the JV to feel that it is losing by engaging in the new commercial union.

Negotiations conducted in this way help to give a very clear picture of the aspects important to both businesses and the potential partners’ priorities and operating latitudes. Moreover, the negotiations should provide for rapidly evolving models (particularly financial ones) to represent the consequences of new decisions and actions, not only during negotiations but also as the JV grows and evolves.

07 Shake hands

Shake hands and lock arms. The contracting phase of a JV represents the formal contractual agreement underpinning the JV and is carried out by commercial lawyers. Yet, for all good joint ventures, behind every contract on paper is a strong relationship between the different players. And it is this relationship — as much as it is the contractual terms and conditions — that truly solidifies the JV as its strength and mettle are tested in the marketplace.

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ARCTANGENT!

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