What 11 Acquisitions Taught Dom Hawes About M&A cover art

What 11 Acquisitions Taught Dom Hawes About M&A

What 11 Acquisitions Taught Dom Hawes About M&A

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

From the outside, M&A can seem like a clean transaction – a new parent company, a logo change, a cheerful announcement.

But inside? The reality is messier. Integration. Culture clashes. Reporting headaches. And a long list of decisions that determine whether the deal actually works.

Dom Hawes has lived both sides. After his own agency was acquired (badly), he went on to build Selbey Anderson – a marketing services group backed by private equity, designed from day one to scale through M&A.

In just 30 months, he led the acquisition of 11 agencies, growing the group to £22M in revenue. In this episode, he pulls back the curtain on how that actually happens – and what too many people get wrong.

Here’s what we dive into:

  • Why leadership – not just profit – is the #1 factor Dom looks for in an acquisition
  • The red flags that make him walk away (including founders who say “I’m not a numbers person”)
  • What makes integration hard – and how to avoid derailing morale
  • The systems decision Dom regrets – and how it made integration and reporting harder later on
  • How to be “sale-ready” in today’s tougher market

Whether you’re looking to sell or simply sharpen up your ops, this one’s a must-listen.


Additional Resources:

Follow Dom Hawes on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dominichawes/

Check out Selby Anderson: https://selbeyanderson.com/

Follow Harv on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/harvnagra/

Get the key takeaways from the podcast in your inbox. Subscribe to The Handbook: The Operations Newsletter: https://www.scoro.com/podcast/#handbook

This podcast is brought to you by Scoro, where you can manage your projects, resources and finances in a single system.

No reviews yet
In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.