How has the current economic situation – i.e. the 2023 bank collapses – affected collaboration between operating partners, portfolio support and deal teams? What are private equity firms’ latest technology best practices around data & analytics, cybersecurity and AI?
These were the hot topics in the latest BluWave-hosted PE Operating Partners’ forum March 21.
Jeff Steinhorn of Gridiron Capital LLC, Anthony Di Leva of Marlin Equity Partners, and Pejman Pourmousa of Sumeru Equity Partners joined our BluWave as panelists for the virtual event.
SIGN UP for the next Operating Partners Forum
Here are some highlights of what was discussed.
Panelists discussed how collaboration between operating partners/portfolio support and deal team members is crucial for navigating crisis situations like the recent bank collapses. With major banking announcements over the past week, how are private equity firms pivoting and working with deal team members? Also, what specific tactics, frameworks, or programs do firms have in place to execute value creation plans efficiently when working with deal teams?
There are two main ways these teams collaborate: unstructured and structured.
For unstructured collaboration, operating partners get pulled into deal teams when they have industry expertise in a target company the deal team is evaluating. This ad hoc collaboration provides valuable insight but lacks consistency.
For structured collaboration, each operating partner runs a Center of Excellence (COE) covering their area of expertise. The COEs meet monthly to share experiences and best practices, providing a consistent approach to ensure all portfolio companies receive adequate support.
At some firms, the teams operate jointly as one team. This tight-knit collaboration helps the teams act quickly and decisively.
For formal engagement, the teams:
COEs and generalists work closely together in several ways:
In crisis situations like the recent bank collapses, the teams worked together intensely to ensure portfolio companies were protected:
SIGN UP for the next Operating Partners Forum
Technology is rapidly changing and now considered table stakes for implementing value creation plans. Private equity firms and portfolio companies are investing heavily in technology to become more agile, secure, informed and automated.
Read More: Centralized Data Management: Business Intelligence & Analytics
Firms have invested a lot in technology strategy over the past few years. They are watching numbers in real-time, like bookings and financials, so they have insights to glean from the numbers rather than rehashing them in meetings.
One firm uses a main data warehouse that is updated monthly for portfolio company reviews. Here’s how they use the warehouse:
Firms are finding that most portfolio companies now have Business Intelligence (BI) and Analytics titles, so they created COEs, which meet regularly and share best practices between companies.
They also work with third-party developers to build data warehouses and dashboards in the BI tools companies already have within 3 months.
This allows the private equity firm access in a time-saving rather than “big brother” way. It allows them to look at and discuss the same stats rather than just presenting numbers.
Read More: Business Intelligence Automation: What is it?
Cybersecurity is now considered table stakes, requiring investment every year rather than a one-time effort.
One firm mentioned that it conducts two surveys to build and distribute to each portfolio company, identifying hot spots and red flags to prioritize remediating.
Attacks cannot be prevented, so they aim to ensure companies have the basics in place. simpler tools and technologies are better. Perfection is impossible, so continuous education and improvement are necessary.
They also work with third-party firms to audit portfolio companies. Here are some of their findings:
One firm has a COE that holds 2-3 cybersecurity talks each year. They require an annual mandatory survey/checklist to ensure basic cybersecurity needs are met and an annual cyber audit. They also have U.S. Cyber Command experts on their board of advisors to provide guidance.
AI and ML are not heavily used yet among firms, though portfolio companies want to learn more about them.
“Lower-hanging fruit” that can be implemented in 48 hours is preferable to big implementations. Examples include:
Most private equity firms are exploring how to leverage AI and ML to save time on routine tasks and gain efficiencies, but adoption remains limited. Some examples of how AI is being used:
SIGN UP for the next Operating Partners Forum
This event was conducted with the Chatham House Rule in place.
WHAT TO READ NEXT