top of page
Procurato Logo

New acquisition? Evolving your business? Restructuring? Now’s the time for a contract review.

Updated: Apr 15

It’s been almost three years since the start of the pandemic. During that time, and since, organisations have been forced to rethink their operations. Whether that’s through turning to digital solutions to meet remote working and customer demand, merging with or acquiring new businesses to fill gaps that have been found, or needing to restructure or sell certain parts of the business to become more efficient and/or effective.


As with most sectors throughout the pandemic, insurers have been quick to adopt new technologies and are actively buying, funding, or partnering with companies that provide product innovation and greater agility. And in addition to the large M&A activity – in 2021 over 400 mergers and acquisitions in the insurance sector were completed according to Clyde & Co’s Insurance Growth Report(1) - insurers and reinsurers have also been looking at niche offerings that can strengthen their core proposition. And beyond the big strategic buy outs and sell offs companies are also looking to strengthen their position by structuring themselves to become more efficient in the wake of new client demands. Quite simply – transformation has become big business in the sector.


These activities are designed to bring significant opportunities and contract negotiation/renegotiation is one of them.


Regardless of whether a business is being sold, bought or restructured the process to review contracts or spend in general are similar and require a strong understanding of both benchmarked data and how a contract is structured.


boardroom with rows of empty chairs

Image Source: Unsplash


How to start a contract review

There are several considerations when looking at your supplier base as you implement significant changes to your business.

  • Firstly – what contracts are there and who are they with? If it is a M&A deal this is required from both businesses so you can compare like for like on the services provided.

  • How much is being spent on supplier services? Are the services provided comparable to what your new needs are or will negotiation for new terms be required?

  • Can you locate the physical contract? From our experience it’s surprising just how many companies can’t, given that there could have been years of extensions and confirmations via email chains. This means you may need other documentation such as those email chains that confirm changes to terms, side letters which include addendums to contracts or invoices that indicate spend.

  • What termination agreements are in place for your suppliers? Does the supplier have a clause in their contract which allows them to change their agreement if the company they are supplying is bought out or merges?

  • If you’re looking to terminate a contract when is the right time to do so? Clauses could include early contract exit charges which outweigh savings made if terminated too early.

  • In a buyout situation how straightforward is it to renegotiate terms if one supplier is supplying both companies?

  • Do potential new suppliers meet the host company’s regulatory and compliance requirements? Do you need to do your due diligence on new suppliers?


Hand holding a pen about to sign a contract

Image Source: Unsplash


From an M&A perspective

There are some additional considerations to be taken into account if your business is being bought or merged or indeed if you are the buying company.

As part of the conversations that form the structure of M&A deals are the synergies that will be made which could be up to a 20% reduction in contract cost. These synergies are not unexpected – for example, you wouldn’t want to be trading through two platforms.


This means there’s the not so small matter of identifying all the suppliers of the purchased company and deciphering their contracts to review against your own to ensure you’re getting the best deal in line with the strategic objectives of the purchase.

In most cases an acquisition will fall into two parallel buckets:

  • A transitional services agreement (TSA) where essential services such as IT are provided by the selling company for a fixed period. This allows both the buying and the selling company to use the same suppliers ideally with the same service level agreements.

  • Non TSA agreements. Ultimately lower priority services such as subscriptions or reviewing contracts which either need to be terminated or renewed under the new company.

TSA’s tend to be critical contracts which need a confirmed decision of future service within 12 – 24 months. If the buying organisation does not review these contracts within the timeframe, they’ll need to negotiate an interim deal which will often prove costly. In some cases, the selling company could force the buying company’s hand to stop working with that supplier leaving them exposed to huge risk.


Alternatively, the two organisations could have the same supplier delivering the same service which brings some different scenarios:

  • The service and cost are comparable – discussions will be required to increase the service.

  • The service and cost are fair given one company may be larger than the other and will need more services – discussions will be required to broaden the scope.

  • One of the companies could be on considerably unfavourable terms – and if that’s the buying company on those terms then a difficult conversation needs to take place.

Negotiation is going to be an essential part of these discussions and it’s worth noting that when there are two suppliers in the fray one is at risk of losing significant business which could have a knock-on impact on their revenue and workforce. Therefore, it’s important that contracts are terminated properly and fairly. After all, you never know if you will want to work with them in the future.


There’s much to consider regardless of the organisational change that you’re making and it’s not easy to manage it all in-house from both a resource perspective and often an emotional one. Are you comfortable negotiating with suppliers who you’ve come to know well? Will you be prepared to let a long-term supplier go because other suppliers can provide a more cost effective and productive service?


It can be challenging and that’s where Procurato can help.



Procurato logo



The Procurato Way

The team at Procurato have several years of procurement experience in the insurance industry and have developed tried and trusted methodological approaches using state of the art technology and experienced negotiation skills to ensure that your organisational transition will flow smoothly with your supplier base.


We’ve worked with numerous clients who have either bought or sold parts of their business and helped them to identify synergies and savings opportunities, to deliver them quickly and maximise efficiencies. In addition, we have helped organisations with significant transformational change whether that’s through the introduction of new technology or reducing overheads.


Our team of experts will source all the contracts and associated information and upload it into our supplier contract management system. From the big IT and trading platform contracts to the smallest of marketing subscriptions we’ll categorise and tier all the contracts prioritising activity and identifying any risks such as a contract which has a termination clause when a change of ownership occurs.


With your original business case at the forefront of our activity we’ll work with your teams and negotiate and have any difficult conversations with your suppliers leaving you free to continue to manage the relationships on good terms.


If you’d like to find out more about how Procurato could help you organise your supplier network following significant change please contact us.

126 views0 comments
bottom of page