When organizations enter a merger or acquisition, leadership focuses on valuation, cultural fit, and long-term synergy. But M&A success also depends on the physical environment, such as how people work, where they work, and whether buildings and assets remain fully operational throughout the transition.
Facility teams ultimately determine how smoothly two organizations can integrate and how reliably the combined enterprise can support its people from Day 1.
Key takeaways
- Facility insights are essential for identifying M&A risks early and reducing uncertainty
- Unified workplace systems improve data accuracy, accelerate decision-making, and strengthen compliance
- Standardizing drawings, occupancy data, and asset information lays the groundwork for confident integration
- Workplace continuity depends on reliable booking tools, clear communication, and consistent hybrid operations
- BMO’s transformation shows how unified worktech turns complexity into clarity during acquisitions
The story of BMO, a leading North American bank with 4,500+ employees across more than 50 locations, illustrates this clearly. After acquiring Bank of the West (BOTW), BMO inherited a large, complex portfolio with inconsistent drawing standards, different methodologies, and limited cross-organizational visibility.
By standardizing data and consolidating their space planning workflows in Serraview by Eptura, they transformed uncertainty into clarity, which is exactly the type of resilience organizations need during M&A transitions.
How FM impacts M&A readiness
Facility teams influence M&A readiness long before Day 1 arrives. Their insights provide decision-makers with a realistic understanding of how the combined footprint functions and what will be required to keep operations running smoothly.
Executives depend on FM teams for foundational questions such as:
- How many buildings, floors, and workpoints are in scope?
- What condition are the facilities in?
- How does hybrid work influence usable capacity?
- Which locations should remain open, consolidate, or close?
Without this clarity, leaders risk making strategic decisions, related to consolidation, expansion, or lease commitments, based on incomplete or outdated information.
BMO experienced this challenge early in their acquisition. BOTW’s floorplans and drawing standards differed significantly from BMO’s, limiting their ability to analyze occupancy or future planning scenarios.
By partnering with Eptura to unify data and add 60 BOTW floorplans into their system, BMO established a single source of truth that accelerated governance, planning, and decision-making.
Identifying hidden cost and risk
Some of the most consequential risks in an acquisition are physical and operational, not financial. Facility teams are often the first to uncover liabilities that affect integration timelines and post-deal cost forecasts.
Common hidden risks include:
- Deferred maintenance or aging infrastructure
- Overlapping or underutilized leases
- Compliance gaps in safety, permitting, or inspections
- Unclear asset replacement needs or lifecycle costs
- Data inconsistencies that distort planning assumptions
BMO faced several of these challenges during their transition, including inconsistent data methodologies and limited visibility into occupancy and space allocation. These gaps made it difficult to standardize reporting or evaluate the true condition of the inherited portfolio.
Their solution was to consolidate 1.3 million square feet in Serraview and align 5,000 workpoints under one unified framework—reducing risk by ensuring everyone worked from accurate, consistent information.
Operational continuity planning
Even during periods of major organizational change, employees still expect a functioning, safe, and predictable workplace. Facility managers uphold this continuity and ensure essential operations remain stable.
Operational continuity depends on FM teams managing:
- Building systems (HVAC, security, access control, utilities)
- Inspection and compliance schedules
- Vendor coordination and service-level agreements
- Hybrid workplace tools and space booking systems
- Move planning, onboarding spaces, and workplace transitions
Any disruption during the integration period can affect productivity, employee morale, customer service, or regulatory standing.
This is where unified workplace systems, like Eptura Workplace, play a critical role. They maintain consistency across booking, wayfinding, occupancy insights, and space usage, ensuring employees have a seamless experience even as the organization undergoes significant change.
For BMO, this meant adopting a system that could scale. As Tera Oswald noted, the team discovered new ways to use the Eptura platform as integration progressed, enhancing continuity and reducing friction during a time of transformation.
Facility data during due diligence
Due diligence relies heavily on operational data, especially data tied to real estate, space, and assets. Accurate FM information shapes deal valuation, transition timelines, and post-close integration planning.
Executives require clear visibility into:
- Asset inventories and lifecycle timelines
- Occupancy patterns and hybrid usage
- Maintenance histories and potential backlogs
- Lease commitments and renewal exposure
- Environmental, safety, and compliance requirements
- Space readiness for incoming teams or consolidations
If this data is inaccurate or incomplete, deal modeling becomes less reliable and operational risks grow exponentially.
During the BOTW integration, BMO discovered that without standardized drawings and unified processes, they could not produce reliable occupancy or planning metrics. By consolidating their data into Serraview—and referencing consistent space types, standards, and organizational mappings—they created an accurate, trustworthy dataset for portfolio decisions.
For many organizations, this kind of due-diligence insight is also supported by Eptura Asset, which centralizes asset condition, lifecycle status, and compliance reporting to ensure nothing slips through the cracks.
Lessons from past M&A transitions
Organizations across industries—and BMO’s experience in particular—highlight several consistent lessons about FM’s role in M&A.
- First, operational alignment must begin early. When organizations standardize workplace systems and data prior to Day 1, they reduce confusion and accelerate integration
- Second, high-quality facility data is a crucial risk mitigator. It reveals hidden costs, clarifies consolidation opportunities, and prevents compliance gaps
- Third, continuous communication between FM, IT, HR, real estate, and legal teams ensures that the physical environment supports the broader goals of the transition
BMO’s success also underscores the importance of disciplined project governance. Their partnership with Eptura included alignment workshops, weekly status reviews, and clearly defined data requirements—all of which preserved momentum and minimized disruption. The result was a unified portfolio capable of supporting strategic planning across millions of square feet.




