We can all agree that SAS won’t fund the continuing education of its employees. SAS does offer occasional training courses, but those have never been sufficient to maintain competitive skills.
“Salary gets you 8 hours of honest work, not a blank check.”
That’s right. SAS gives you a job; that’s all. If you want a career, that requires extra hours to keep your skills sharp.
Competitors for your job live in third-world countries. So you can’t compete on price. If you won’t compete on skills, why should anyone hire you?
This point is particularly pertinent to SAS, because the likely acquirer is a company like Broadcom or private equity. They will seek to maximize profits from the declining revenue stream. Unlike the owners of SAS, those companies don’t hesitate to layoff and outsource. That’s their business model.
Many SAS employees believe they are entitled to a 35- or 40-hour week — because that’s all they’ve ever known. They don’t understand that this was a temporary anomaly, made possible by a company that for decades held a #1 market position.
Those business conditions are no longer true. The company will be sold. When that happens, all employees will move from the walled garden of SAS to the harsh competition of the Real World.
In the Real World, if you keep your skills sharp, you can have a career. If you don’t, others will.