M&A IT divestiture — carve-out, separate, retire cleanly.
M&A transactions almost always trigger IT-asset disposition: redundant servers post-merger, divested-business-unit kit, carved-out subsidiaries' IT estate, separation of shared infrastructure. We support both buyer-side and seller-side disposition, with evidence packs that fit deal-closing audit requirements.
What we handle in transaction-driven retirement
- ♦ Post-merger redundant infrastructure — duplicate ERP servers, duplicate networking, redundant DC capacity.
- ♦ Carve-out subsidiary IT — a business unit being divested with its own IT estate.
- ♦ Pre-deal IT separation — shared infrastructure split between continuing and divested entities.
- ♦ Stranded-asset disposition — kit no longer used by either party post-transaction.
- ♦ Brand-change retirement — kit bearing the old company's branding retired or rebadged.
- ♦ Headcount-reduction kit retirement — laptops returned during separation programmes.
M&A engagements run under tight NDA from day one.
Transaction-related ITAD often runs while the deal itself is confidential. We default to enhanced confidentiality: project codename rather than parties' real names in operational comms; named-individual access lists; no marketing case-study use of the engagement; deal-closing-only public reference (if any). Our standard NDA accommodates these constraints without redlining.
For sell-side support, we coordinate with the deal team's data-room discipline — what IT-disposition evidence goes in the data room, what stays with the seller's compliance team, what the buyer receives at closing.
An M&A IT divestiture week-by-week.
Week 1. Engagement letter under deal-team NDA. Project codename established. Asset-list intake from the seller's IT-asset-management team, scoped against the deal's transaction-perimeter document.
Week 2-3. Asset-list reconciliation. Per-device disposition decision: returns-with-deal, retires-with-seller, retires-with-buyer, destroyed-and-logged. SoW drafted to fit deal-closing checklist.
Week 4-6. Pickup window. NIST 800-88 destruction at our facility. Per-job Certificate of Destruction issued under project codename.
Week 7. Deal-closing evidence pack delivered. Both buyer and seller receive the documentation appropriate to their side of the transaction perimeter.
Maxicom Singapore — frequently asked
Can you operate under deal-team NDA before transaction announcement?
Yes — this is the default for M&A engagements. Codename-only operational comms; named-individual access lists; no public reference until both sides agree.
Who pays — buyer or seller?
Either, depending on the transaction structure. Often seller pays for the seller-side retirement; buyer pays for the buyer-side acceptance audit. Sometimes the deal allocates ITAD spend between both sides per a defined formula. We'll structure the SoW to fit.