By George Bradt,Senior Contributor
Copyright forbes
Crew leader
Executive onboarding into a new leadership role is always intense. Doing it while simultaneously leading the integration of an acquisition is exponentially more so. It’s a double hot landing: no time to orient, massive expectations from multiple sides, and a spotlight that never dims.
But crucible moments like this can also be opportunities. Done right, you set the tone not just for your own leadership but for the future of the combined company. Done wrong, friction multiplies, silos deepen, and the acquisition fails to deliver on its promise.
The key? Recognizing that you’re leading two convergences at once—and embracing an approach that emphasizes inspiring, enabling, and empowering, rather than just directing. If you try to muscle through, you’ll stall. If you focus on pulling people together and unlocking their collective ability to evolve, you—and the organization—will thrive.
Convergence Always Comes First
Any time a leader lands in a new company, there’s an initial convergence. Your job is to align with the organization—its culture, people, and strategy—while rallying them around you, helping colleagues understand who you are and why you’re here.
Layer on an acquisition and you add a second convergence: aligning two organizations into one. That means reconciling cultures, processes, systems, expectations, and—most importantly—people.
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Treating convergence as a one-time exercise leads to surface-level unity and deeper fragmentation. Instead, think of it as weaving disparate threads into a single, shared fabric. It requires patience, clear communication, and humility.
Then You Evolve
Convergence doesn’t mean stasis. Once the parts come together, real growth happens in evolution. The best integrations don’t just paste Company B onto the side of Company A—they create something better than either on its own.
That lesson applies equally to how you, as a new leader, show up. You don’t just “fit in.” You evolve with the company, and the company evolves with you. Each strengthens the other, moving toward a higher-order version of the organization.
This dynamic reset is why the dual convergence of new-leader onboarding plus acquisition integration can be so powerful. You’re not weighed down by legacy thinking. You can use the intensity of the moment as a catalyst for meaningful change.
The Mistake Leaders Make: Directing Instead of Empowering
The natural temptation in moments of pressure is to double down on control: to tell people what to do, manage every decision, and insist on compliance. You’re new, the acquisition needs to “work,” and everyone is watching.
But integration is too big and complex for one leader to force through. Cultures don’t merge because someone commands it. People don’t trust because a memo says so. Performance doesn’t improve by fiat.
The only way forward: inspire, enable, and empower.
Inspire. Paint a compelling vision of where the integrated company is going and why it matters. People must feel part of something meaningful, bigger than themselves, and better than what came before.
Enable. Provide clarity and resources so people can succeed together. Integration won’t stick unless teams can harmonize processes, reduce redundancies, and speak openly.
Empower. Leaders don’t integrate companies—people do. Empower individuals at all levels to make decisions, take ownership, and drive the shift.
Practical Steps For Leading Two Convergences At Once
Accelerate Trust-Building. Trust is the currency of convergence. Build confidence quickly—listen deeply, recognize contributions, and follow through. Your credibility will anchor the integration.
Go Beyond Org Charts. Integration is about networks, not just reporting lines. Map informal power structures on both sides. Connect influencers across boundaries.
Balance Symbolism And Substance. Early symbolic moves—joint town halls, co-branded initiatives, cultural rituals—signal unity. But you also need tangible changes to systems, structures, and incentives.
Segment The Journey. Don’t try to do everything at once. Win early on a few high-impact fronts, then sequence the bigger work. Think of convergence and evolution as phased journeys, not overnight shifts.
Set The Tone On Culture. Culture is “how things get done around here.” Clarify the non-negotiables for the future and then model them—relentlessly.
Leading Through Fire
Joining a new company while leading an integration is the leadership equivalent of being dropped into the middle of a forest fire. You can’t stop the flames. You can’t fight everything at once. But you can lead people to come together, adapt, and grow stronger in the heat.
Remember: it’s always convergence first, then evolution. And you can only achieve both by inspiring, enabling, and empowering others—so they, in turn, own the integration journey.
That’s not just how you survive a double hot landing. It’s how you turn it into liftoff.
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