The strategy: Invest in the faster-growing, higher-margin business and divest slower-growth and lower-margin ones, even if that means selling legacy businesses.
Not an easy task, even if executives, like those at Merrill Corp., know it must be done. Yet Merrill, which made its name specializing in printing of regulatory and other corporate paperwork, is now centered on a digital suite of data services for the mergers and acquisition industry.
The culmination of the change will be when the longtime St. Paul-based company moves to a new corporate headquarters next spring in downtown Minneapolis.
Chief Financial Officer Tom Donnelly has worked in his fair share of turnaround and growth situations during his career, but said it's a whole lot more fun to be working in a growth environment.
Merrill was a publicly traded company for 13 years before going private in a 1999 deal worth about $500 million. It floated another IPO in 2007 when revenue was $790 million but eventually withdrew that offering.
Those times are ancient history to the current management group led by Rusty Wiley, a former IBM executive, who joined the company as CEO in 2014. Wiley stocked his management team with software executives including Donnelly, who has a long history with local technology and software companies including OptiMine Software Inc., Digital River and Net Perceptions.
Merrill's central product, the DatasiteOne software, has been around since 2002, but it took a lot of reinvention to make it the centerpiece of a growing venture. The product allows both sides of an M&A transaction to electronically share documents in a secure setting.
Since Wiley took over, Merrill has divested nine business lines. The strategy was a risk. The businesses brought in the majority of revenue, even if they were not growing as fast as DatasiteOne.