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Key Considerations for Merging Data After an Acquisition
Cybercon Services Knowledge LogPosted on by Rick Backus
Merging data after an acquisition is complex and high risk. Use this practical checklist covering strategy, governance, security, architecture, testing, change management, and post-merge optimization to integrate systems with confidence.
M&A data integration: aligning people, process, and platforms.
1) Strategic and Organizational Alignment
Define the integration strategy—full merger, partial consolidation, or coexistence (system of record vs. system of engagement).
Establish ownership & governance—who approves mappings, business rules, and transformations?
Prioritize by impact—start with mission-critical domains (customers, financials, inventory, employees).
Identify overlaps—duplicate customers, vendors, products, or territories.
2) Data Inventory and Assessment
Catalog systems & sources—ERP, CRM, HRIS, data warehouses, file stores (SharePoint/OneDrive), etc.
Profile data quality—completeness, consistency, accuracy, timeliness.
Compare data models—field types, constraints, relationships, reference data.
Align entity definitions—what “Customer,” “Product,” or “Revenue” means in each org.
3) Mapping and Transformation
Field-to-field mapping—schema alignment, data types, naming conventions.
Standardization—dates, units, currencies, country/state codes, time zones.
Master data harmonization—declare the authoritative system per entity.
Deduplication & identity resolution—matching rules, survivorship, golden records.
Business rule reconciliation—KPIs and calculations (e.g., margin, lead stages) must match.
Iterate—capture feedback, refine mappings and rules.
Decommission legacy—only once stability and completeness are verified.
Common Pitfalls
Underestimating time for data cleanup and dedupe.
Missing documentation of legacy logic and reference data.
Ignoring dependencies (BI datasets, Excel macros, workflows).
Rushing testing or skipping UAT.
Not planning for historical/archived content.
Bottom line: Successful post-acquisition data integration balances people, process, and technology. With strong governance, clear mappings, disciplined validation, and thoughtful change management, you can turn fragmented data into a unified, trusted asset.
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