Mergers and acquisitions often look clear on paper. There is a strategy, a plan, a timeline. The lawyers have signed the contracts. The leadership has shaken hands. But on the shop floor? There, uncertainty rules. Questions. Resistance. And sometimes a silence that is worse than protest.

Organising a company merger event is the moment you break that silence. The moment you do not only tell people that two companies are joining, but let them feel it. The moment people from both organisations meet, find recognition and start a new chapter together.

It is one of the most challenging events there is. Because the emotions are real. Because not everyone is happy. Because identity is on the line. But that is exactly why it is so valuable. A good merger event can be the difference between an integration that drags on for years and one that gets off the ground in months.

Why change communication needs more than a presentation

At a merger or acquisition, communication is the first thing leadership thinks of. And rightly so. But communication often gets equated with an email from the CEO, a Q&A document and a town hall meeting. That is informing. That is not connecting.

The problem with information alone: people hear the words, but do not feel the change. They understand the strategy, but do not feel part of it.

A company merger event handles this differently. It creates a shared experience: a moment where both organisations come together, not to watch a presentation but to take part in something together. That shared moment becomes an anchor point, the start of a joint story.

Change experts call this a 'transformative moment': an experience so strong that people adjust their behaviour and attitude through it. A good merger event is precisely that: the moment when resistance turns into curiosity and 'them' turns into 'us'.

The sensitivities: dealing with identity loss and resistance

Not everyone is happy with a merger. For some staff it feels like loss of identity, of autonomy, of the company they once chose. Those feelings are real and deserve recognition, not denial.

A common mistake at merger events is acting as if everyone is enthusiastic. A stage full of leaders telling how brilliant the future will be, while the room is packed with people who feel uncertain about their job or position. That creates distance, not connection.

The better approach: acknowledge the emotions. Do not open the event with the future vision, but with the present. Name that change is unsettling. That candour earns you trust.

Create room for dialogue: small group conversations, joint assignments and informal moments where people discover that the 'other' is also a colleague with the same concerns and ambitions.

The programme: from uncertainty to shared energy

A merger event calls for a programme with a deliberate build. You do not start with the finale; you build towards it.

Opening: recognition and context. Start with an open story. Why this merger, what changes and what stays the same? Ideally have someone speak who is credible — not necessarily the CEO, but someone who speaks the language of the shop floor. Keep it short: 10-15 minutes.

Connection: get to know the other side. Design an interactive block where people from both organisations work together. A challenge, a game, a workshop: something that compels collaboration and conversation.

Substance: sketching the future. Only now do strategy, vision and ambition come into play. But do not present this as a dry slide deck. Visualise it. Make it tangible. Let staff fill in for themselves how they contribute to the future.

Close: a shared moment. Close with something everyone does together. Think of a shared meal, a toast or a musical moment. It does not have to be grand; it has to be heartfelt.

Practical: timing, venue and audience

The timing of a merger event is strategic. Too early, when nothing is concrete yet, it raises more questions than it answers. Too late, when people have been in uncertainty for months, the effect is gone. The ideal moment: shortly after the official announcement, when the broad outline is clear.

On venue: choose a neutral location on purpose. Not the head office of company A, not the office of company B. An external venue on neutral ground prevents the feeling that one party is 'a guest' of the other.

Budget: expect €100 to €250 per person, depending on venue, programme and size. A merger event for 150 people at an external venue with a full programme quickly costs €20,000-35,000. Allow 6-10 weeks for preparation. Involve a core team from both organisations in the programming.

Why a merger especially calls for an agency

A merger event is perhaps the hardest type of event to organise in-house. Not because of the logistics, but because of the politics. Who organises it, which company 'leads' and what is the right tone?

An external agency is neutral by definition. We do not belong to company A or to company B. We can ask questions that are too sensitive internally. We can design a programme that does justice to both identities without taking sides.

At Live Impact we have experience with merger events, acquisition gatherings and transformation events. We know these events are different from a staff party or a kick-off. The energy in the room is different. The stakes are higher.

We always start by listening. To leadership, but also to the shop floor. On that basis we build an event that does not run away from the difficult questions, but gives them a place.

Frequently asked questions

Can Live Impact help organise a corporate event?

Yes. Live Impact is a concept agency for corporate events. We help with the complete process: from first brainstorm and concept development to venue selection, programming and production.

Whether you're planning a staff party, conference, kick-off, anniversary or client event: we think along. We ask sharp questions and make sure the result stays with people.

Get in touch via hello@live-impact.nl or call +31 85 401 40 14.

Read our full article on organising a corporate event →

How much time do you need to organise a corporate event?

Start at least three months ahead. For large events (300+ guests, complex production), six months is more realistic.

The organisation runs in four phases. First lay the foundation (12 to 10 weeks before the date), then concept and partners (10 to 6 weeks). Then the detailed work (6 to 3 weeks) and finally execution plus aftercare in the last 3 weeks. Popular venues and artists are quickly booked up in autumn.

See the full phasing in our article →

How do you write a good brief for a corporate event?

A good brief contains at least six elements. They are: the objective, the target audience, the number of guests, the preferred date, the budget and prerequisites (venue, dietary requirements, travel time).

Write it on a single A4. Share it with your project team and your agency. Without a brief, everyone works from assumptions. That delivers a messy result.

Read the full article with all brief elements →

What is the difference between a corporate event and a staff party?

A staff party is specifically for staff: internal, familiar, and the mood is looser. A corporate event is broader and can be a staff party, but also a conference, kick-off, anniversary or client event.

The difference lies in the approach: a staff party is about celebrating and connecting. A corporate event can also serve strategic goals, such as knowledge sharing, brand positioning or culture change.

More on organising a corporate event →

What does it cost to organise a corporate event?

A corporate event costs around €200 to €500+ per person ex. VAT for 250 to 500 guests. For 500 to 1,000 guests, expect around €150 to €400+ per person. For 1,000 to 2,000 guests, expect around €125 to €350+ per person. For more than 2,000 guests, expect around €100 to €300+ per person. All amounts excluding VAT, including venue, catering, entertainment and production.

The exact budget depends on the type, the venue and the programme. The brackets above indicate the range for an average corporate event.

Read our full article on organising a corporate event →

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