Programmatic M&A: The Growth Strategy Most CMOs Ignore
Programmatic M&A is a structured approach to acquisitions where a company makes multiple smaller, repeatable deals over time, each targeting a specific capability, market position, or customer base, rather than betting everything on one transformational transaction. Done well, it compounds. Done poorly, it becomes a distraction with a balance sheet problem attached.
For marketing and commercial leaders, the question is not whether M&A is a finance function. It is. The question is whether marketing has a seat at the table when acquisition targets are evaluated, and whether the go-to-market implications of each deal are being thought through before the ink dries, not after.
Key Takeaways
- Programmatic M&A compounds value through repeated, smaller deals rather than single transformational bets, and marketing readiness determines whether that value is realised or eroded post-close.
- Most acquisition failures trace back to go-to-market misalignment, not financial modelling errors. The commercial integration plan matters as much as the deal structure itself.
- CMOs who engage early in target evaluation, specifically around brand, customer overlap, and channel fit, prevent the expensive rework that happens when marketing is brought in after signing.
- Market penetration strategy and acquisition strategy are not separate conversations. Programmatic M&A is often the fastest route into a new segment when organic growth would take years.
- The brands that execute programmatic M&A well treat each acquisition as a go-to-market experiment, not just a financial transaction, and they build the playbook as they go.
In This Article
- Why Programmatic M&A Is a Marketing Problem, Not Just a Finance One
- What Makes M&A “Programmatic” and Why the Distinction Matters
- The Go-To-Market Failure Mode Nobody Talks About
- How Marketing Should Evaluate an Acquisition Target
- Building the Go-To-Market Integration Playbook
- When Acquisition Is the Right Growth Move and When It Is Not
- The Role of the CMO in a Programmatic M&A Business
- What Good Looks Like: The Programmatic M&A Marketing Maturity Model
Why Programmatic M&A Is a Marketing Problem, Not Just a Finance One
There is a version of this conversation that happens in every boardroom. The CFO presents an acquisition target. The CEO likes the revenue multiple. Legal reviews the contracts. And marketing gets a call three weeks after signing asking how quickly they can rebrand the acquired company’s website.
I have been in that call. I have also been the person making it. Neither position is comfortable.
When I was running an agency that grew from around 20 people to over 100, a meaningful part of that growth came through acquisition. Not always formal M&A in the corporate sense, but absorbing capabilities, teams, and in some cases client books. What became clear quickly was that the commercial integration, the marketing integration, was where value was either created or destroyed. The financial model could look clean and the operational handover could go smoothly, but if the go-to-market story was confused, if the positioning of the combined entity was muddled, if the acquired team’s clients did not understand what they were now buying into, the deal underperformed.
Programmatic M&A amplifies this problem because the pace is faster. You are not doing one deal every five years and spending eighteen months on integration. You are doing multiple deals across a rolling window, each one requiring a coherent commercial narrative that fits into the parent strategy without cannibalising existing revenue or confusing existing customers.
If you are thinking about how acquisition fits into a broader commercial growth plan, the Go-To-Market and Growth Strategy hub covers the full range of levers available, from market penetration to product expansion to channel strategy.
What Makes M&A “Programmatic” and Why the Distinction Matters
The term gets used loosely, so it is worth being precise. Programmatic M&A describes a repeatable, systematised acquisition model where deals are sourced, evaluated, and integrated using a consistent framework. It is the difference between a company that acquires opportunistically when something interesting comes up, and a company that has a defined acquisition thesis, a pipeline of targets, and a proven integration playbook it applies each time.
The companies that execute this well, and there are not many of them, treat each acquisition the way a good marketer treats a campaign. There is a hypothesis. There is a defined outcome. There is a measurement framework. And there is a post-mortem that feeds the next iteration.
The companies that execute it badly treat each deal as a one-off. They rebuild the integration playbook from scratch each time, make the same positioning mistakes, and wonder why the expected synergies never quite materialise.
From a growth strategy perspective, programmatic M&A is most commonly used to do one of four things: enter a new geographic market faster than organic growth would allow, acquire a customer base that would take years to build from scratch, add a capability that fills a gap in the existing offer, or remove a competitor from the field. Each of these has different marketing implications, and conflating them is where a lot of companies go wrong.
The Go-To-Market Failure Mode Nobody Talks About
When acquisitions underperform, the post-mortem usually points to cultural misalignment, integration complexity, or overpayment. These are real factors. But in my experience, the more common failure is a go-to-market failure that nobody named as such at the time.
Here is what it looks like in practice. A company acquires a smaller competitor with a loyal customer base and a clear market position. The acquirer’s instinct is to fold the acquired brand into the parent brand quickly, because maintaining two brands is expensive and confusing. Marketing gets tasked with the rebrand. The acquired customers, who chose that brand for specific reasons, start receiving communications that feel unfamiliar. Some churn. The revenue assumptions in the deal model start to look optimistic. The acquisition that looked like a market penetration play becomes a customer retention problem.
I watched a version of this play out with a client in a category where brand loyalty was high and switching costs were low. The acquirer moved too fast on brand consolidation, underestimated how much of the acquired company’s retention was driven by brand affinity rather than product quality, and spent the better part of two years trying to recover the customer base they had effectively paid to acquire and then pushed away.
The fix is not complicated in theory. It requires marketing to be involved in the due diligence process, not just the post-close integration. That means understanding the acquired company’s customer composition, their reasons for buying, their relationship with the brand, and their likely response to change. Market penetration analysis is a useful frame here, because it forces the question of whether the acquisition is genuinely expanding your addressable market or just consolidating existing demand.
How Marketing Should Evaluate an Acquisition Target
Most CMOs are not involved in sourcing acquisition targets. That is a realistic starting point. But the ones who add the most value in a programmatic M&A context have built a framework for commercial evaluation that they can apply quickly when a target comes across their desk.
There are five questions I would ask about any acquisition from a marketing standpoint.
First, what is the customer overlap, and is that a feature or a bug? If the acquired company serves the same customers you already serve, you are buying concentration risk, not growth. If they serve adjacent customers you cannot currently reach, that is a genuine market expansion. The distinction matters enormously for how you model the revenue upside.
Second, what is driving retention in the acquired business? Is it the product, the brand, the relationships, or the switching costs? If it is primarily relationships, those relationships sit with people, and people leave in acquisitions. If it is switching costs, you have a more durable base to work with. If it is brand, you need to think carefully about what happens to that brand post-close.
Third, how does the acquired company’s positioning interact with yours? Do they compete on the same dimensions, or do they occupy a different part of the market? If the positioning overlaps significantly, you have a cannibalisation problem to solve. If it is complementary, you have a portfolio story to tell.
Fourth, what channels does the acquired company use to generate demand, and are those channels ones you understand? I have seen acquirers assume they can migrate acquired customers onto their existing demand generation engine and underestimate how different the acquired company’s channel mix was. A business that grew primarily through word-of-mouth and community does not automatically respond to paid media. Forrester’s intelligent growth model is worth revisiting here, because it distinguishes between growth that comes from existing customers and growth that requires new market development, and acquisitions often blur that line.
Fifth, what is the realistic integration timeline for marketing, and what does the acquired business look like to customers during that period? The in-between state, where the acquired brand is neither fully independent nor fully integrated, is where churn happens. The shorter that window, the better. But shortening it requires having the integration playbook ready before the deal closes, not after.
Building the Go-To-Market Integration Playbook
The companies that execute programmatic M&A well do not reinvent the wheel with each deal. They build a repeatable integration playbook and refine it over time. From a marketing perspective, that playbook needs to cover four areas.
Brand architecture is the first. Before any deal closes, you need a clear decision framework for how acquired brands are handled. Do you absorb them into the parent brand immediately? Do you run them as separate brands under a holding structure? Do you use a transitional co-branding approach? There is no universally right answer, but having no answer is the most expensive option.
Customer communication is the second. Acquired customers need to hear from you quickly, clearly, and in a way that reassures rather than unsettles. The instinct is often to lead with the acquirer’s brand story. The smarter move is usually to lead with continuity: what stays the same, what improves, and what the customer needs to do, if anything. If the answer to the last question is “nothing right now,” say that explicitly. It reduces anxiety and reduces churn.
Demand generation alignment is the third. The acquired business has a pipeline. It has prospects in various stages of consideration. It has marketing programs running. Deciding quickly how those programs interact with your existing demand generation infrastructure, rather than letting them run in parallel indefinitely or shutting them down prematurely, is one of the highest-leverage decisions in the first ninety days.
Measurement and attribution is the fourth. This is where I see the most confusion in post-acquisition marketing. Revenue that was already in the pipeline gets attributed to the acquisition. Churn that was already occurring in the acquired business gets attributed to the integration. Neither is accurate, and both distort the learning. Building a clean measurement baseline before the deal closes, so you have a genuine pre and post comparison, is worth the effort. Tools that help with behavioural and engagement data, like Hotjar, can be useful for understanding how acquired customers interact with your digital properties post-migration, though the data needs to be interpreted carefully in a transitional context.
When Acquisition Is the Right Growth Move and When It Is Not
Early in my career, I overvalued the bottom of the funnel. I assumed that capturing existing intent was the same as creating growth. It is not. Growth requires reaching people who are not yet in market, not just converting the ones who already are. I think about this in the context of M&A too, because there is a version of programmatic M&A that is genuinely additive and a version that is essentially expensive customer harvesting.
The additive version is where the acquisition opens a market, a segment, a geography, or a capability that the acquirer could not realistically reach organically within a competitive timeframe. The customer harvesting version is where the acquisition consolidates existing demand without expanding the total addressable market. Both can be financially rational, but they have very different implications for how you resource the integration and what you expect from marketing post-close.
If the acquisition is genuinely market-expanding, marketing needs to think about how to activate that new market, not just retain the customers that came with the deal. That means new messaging, potentially new channels, and a clear hypothesis about why those customers will respond to what you are offering. Growth tooling can support this, but the strategy has to come first. Tools without a clear thesis just generate noise faster.
If the acquisition is primarily consolidation, the marketing job is retention and margin protection, not growth. That is a legitimate objective, but it should be named as such. Framing a consolidation play as a growth play leads to misaligned expectations and the wrong resource allocation.
Forrester has written usefully about the structural challenges companies face when their go-to-market model does not match the nature of the market they are entering, particularly in sectors where buyer behaviour is complex and relationship-driven. Their analysis of healthcare go-to-market challenges is a good illustration of what happens when the acquisition thesis and the commercial reality diverge.
The Role of the CMO in a Programmatic M&A Business
If your company is running a programmatic M&A strategy and the CMO is not in the room during target evaluation, that is a structural problem worth raising. Not because marketing should have veto power over deal decisions, but because the commercial viability of the deal depends on questions that only marketing can answer well.
The CMO’s job in this context is not to be an enthusiast for every deal. It is to be the person who asks the uncomfortable questions about customer retention risk, brand dilution, and go-to-market complexity before the deal closes rather than after. That requires a level of commercial credibility that goes beyond campaign metrics. It requires being able to speak the language of revenue, margin, and market share, and to connect marketing decisions to those outcomes directly.
I have judged the Effie Awards, which are specifically about marketing effectiveness rather than creative quality. The campaigns that win are the ones that can demonstrate a clear line between marketing activity and business outcome. The CMOs who earn a seat at the M&A table are the ones who can do the same thing in a commercial conversation: connect their function’s contribution to the financial logic of the deal.
That connection is not always obvious, and it is not always comfortable to make. But it is the difference between marketing being a downstream execution function in an acquisition and being a genuine value driver in the deal thesis.
There is more on how commercial and marketing strategy interact across the full growth lifecycle in the Go-To-Market and Growth Strategy section, which covers everything from market entry to scaling and channel development.
What Good Looks Like: The Programmatic M&A Marketing Maturity Model
Companies at the early stage of programmatic M&A treat each deal as a standalone event. Marketing is reactive, integration is improvised, and the playbook is rebuilt from scratch each time. This is where most companies start, and there is nothing inherently wrong with it if the deal frequency is low. But as deal pace increases, the cost of improvisation compounds.
Companies at the intermediate stage have a documented integration playbook, but it is primarily operational rather than commercial. They know how to migrate the website, consolidate the CRM, and handle the rebrand. What they have not yet systematised is the commercial narrative: how to tell the story of each acquisition to different audiences, customers, prospects, partners, and employees, in a way that is consistent, credible, and compelling.
Companies at the advanced stage treat programmatic M&A as a marketing capability in its own right. They have a defined acquisition narrative that evolves with each deal. They have a customer communication framework that is tested and refined. They have a measurement approach that separates the contribution of acquired revenue from organic growth. And they have a CMO who is involved in deal evaluation, not just deal execution.
Getting from early to advanced does not require a massive investment. It requires discipline, documentation, and a willingness to learn from each deal rather than treating it as a one-off. The companies that do this well are not necessarily the ones with the biggest M&A budgets. They are the ones that take the commercial integration as seriously as the financial integration, and they start that work before the deal closes, not after.
Growth hacking in the traditional sense, rapid experimentation across channels and tactics, has its place. But programmatic M&A is a different kind of growth engine. It requires patience, process, and commercial rigour. The principles of structured growth experimentation still apply, but the unit of experiment is a business, not a landing page.
About the Author
Keith Lacy is a marketing strategist and former agency CEO with 20+ years of experience across agency leadership, performance marketing, and commercial strategy. He writes The Marketing Juice to cut through the noise and share what works.
