Thread regarding SAP layoffs

.....The Price we Pay......

Our Board has now found that there is more success in cutting than in growing and we now will get a steady diet of job cuts as the investment community demands more and increased returns.

I believe we can trace this new business plan of job cuts to: (i) a poor M&A process and (ii) misguided product portfolio. Over the past 20 years or so we have integrated about 30,000 employees from the acquisitions with no regard to consolidation, duplication or geographic location. At the same time we have invested heavily in products to where it is over saturation. Have a look at what we now have available for our customers https://help.sap.com/docs/all-products. This only represents what is currently available and does not include the hundreds of products shelved and closed. Think about the wasted development costs and even worse the lack of focus on products that our customers want vs taking a gamble on anything and everything.

This is what happens when we regularly shift L1 management in and out of key positions where everyone gets their turn at the roulette table and no one is really qualified for the position they hold and then somebody new appears with the next great idea.

So now, the job cuts will be the "new normal" here and those of us who have worked hard for SAP and made our careers here will live month to month not knowing if we will have a job next month.

This is the price we pay for the wrong paths this company has taken over many years.

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| 1238 views | | 4 replies (last July 31, 2024) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1tFrLUrS

4 replies (most recent on top)

Cut with SAP ©

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Post ID: @7vaw+1tFrLUrS

Let's be honest, all Bill Mc was doing with all of these acquisitions was buying "customer lists". It was all about trying to get the existing customers of these companies to buy more product.

If there was more to his strategy than just this, it would have been fine. But there wasn't.

SAP bought all these companies and then failed both the SAP employees as well as the acquired companies employees by not properly going through legitimate integration process that would have yielded the appropriate number of employees at the end of such process. But this was not was Bill was about - he was all about Sales, and nothing more.

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Post ID: @3ozm+1tFrLUrS

But one thing we forget - SAP acquired some great cloud companies who were able to rapidly gain market share before being acquired. The problem is that SAP destroyed what made those companies successful- the creativity and spirit that drove innovation! Yes SAP acquired companies but effectively only retained the IP and not what made those companies special. It’s that unique combination of great technology, truly solving a business problem, and employees feeling part of a shared mission to transform the business that made these companies great - and SAP methodically dismantled every last particle of what made those companies successful.

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Post ID: @3dky+1tFrLUrS

Tech industry is "expanding" vs "contracting". Years ago SAP enjoyed the barrier of the excessive cost of entry which kept many would be competitors out of the Market.

This has all now changed. Go on any industry listing of Tech Companies today in business and it is amazing how many there are today.

SAP made a fatal mistake over the last 20 years and attempted to "buy" its way into new technologies and neglected to properly manage its "own house" to keep pace with the ever changing market.

So today the company will solve its problems by cutting itself apart piece by piece, never really knowing if the pieces they cut today might be tomorrow's breakthrough and now all of our competitors will absorb the competent people we let go and they will be the SAP of tomorrow.

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Post ID: @1bko+1tFrLUrS

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