Dear Growth Guru,
Following three rapid-fire acquisitions, I’m now leading a team of 50 reps across three different time zones with three different CRM setups and, worst of all, three different “winning” mentalities.
One group is aggressive and outbound-heavy; another is purely “relationship-based.” We are tripping over each other in the market, double-calling accounts, and killing our brand. How do I unify this mess?
Merged in Manchester
Dear Merged,
You aren’t a Sales Director right now; you’re an Integration Architect. The biggest risk in an M&A scenario isn’t “system overlap” or “redundancy,” it’s Identity Protection. Every one of those legacy teams thinks their way is the “true” way. They view your “unification” as an attack on their historical success. You are trying to force a marriage between three people who didn’t even want to go on a date.
The Fix: Create a ‘New North Star’ Stop trying to pick a “winner” between the three legacy cultures. When you choose Team A’s CRM and Team B’s sales process, you create a “Winners and Losers” dynamic that breeds resentment. Instead, you must design a V3.0 Playbook that makes all legacy systems look like museum pieces.
The Strategy: Audit the “Impact to Admin” ratio across all three teams. Take the outbound rigour from your aggressive team, the account management excellence from your relationship-heavy team, and the technical solution-selling from the third. Package this as the 2026 ICT Growth Blueprint. You aren’t “merging” old ways; you are “launching” the new way.
The Bottom Line: A “Frankenstein” team only stays scary if you let the limbs move independently. You need a single source of truth, one CRM, one commission structure, and one “Standard of Excellence.”
As we’ve said before, your “edge” isn’t in your ability to manage the spreadsheet; it’s in your ability to lead the people those numbers represent. Stop looking backward at what these teams were, and start defining what this new powerhouse is. If you don’t unify the identity, the market will do it for you, by choosing a competitor who actually knows who they are.



