The Leadership only knows one way to 'grow' - and that's to slash expenses. It works in the short term, until you cannot service your clients any more, and you end up selling of bits and pieces to prop up the business and satisfy Wall Street, while you milk it dry, and then dump the husk and move on.
When your largest single expense is wages, your target is always people. As you move more and more from Innovation and Ideas, to Service and Support, you start to lose the 'NEW' things that you could sell at a premium, and you have to compete more and more on price. History shows this time and time again. Eventually, the new shiny expensive thing becomes a commodity, and other people can make it cheaper and faster. In order to stay at the top, you have to keep inventing new shinies...which means you need to keep your experienced, talented, innovated individuals. You cannot write instructions on how to come up with the next big thing. You cannot 'process' your way to a new idea.
Without that NEW thing, all you can do is drive for "efficiency" - deliver tomorrow what you deliver today, but for less than you spend today. For while, that works as there is always some dead wood that needs trimming. Meanwhile, your clients are expecting you to be more efficient (its often baked into the contract), and all your competitors are claiming they CAN deliver the same thing cheaper. Start to miss your deliveries, and your client will figure there is little to lose for trying the competition.
For while it works, but unless you invest that efficiency back into the company, and drive to find those new markets, new shinies, new approaches, eventually you end up where there are few efficiencies left to take, and things start to slip. Think honestly. What has DXC come up with in the last 5 years that is unique in the industry ? What sets it apart from all the competitors ? So, you have nothing new, and you're already struggling to deliver on what you've already promised, your only option is to offer an even lower price, and hence make less money, which will mean even less reinvestment, more missed deliverables...
There aren't many turnaround stories that have happy endings.
Apple (who dropped the Newton and came up with the iPod/iPhone/MacBook, but before that were essentially bankrupt)
IBM (In 1993, they pushed into Tech Services, and positioned themselves as a one-stop shop for business tech)
eBay (growth had stalled, mostly due to competition from people like Amazon. Invested heavily into mobile shopping, retailer partnerships and Paypal)
Priceline (was on the brink of being delisted as a NASDAQ stock - eliminated booking fees, pushed into higher margin markets, invested heavily internally to expand internationally).
All required investment, innovation and vision. Let me know if you think we're doing any of those things. Wall Street is finally seeing the inevitable spiral of reducing revenue, reducing assets, narrowing profit margins, lack of innovation, etc. It's been 4 years, the promised 'growth' has not happened, eventually there is no 'upside' for the vultures and they'll abandon Mike. He's no Steve Jobs or Lou Gerstner. He'll be replaced by a new mouthpiece, who'll promise big, reorganize, sell of bits until eventually they succumb to the same inevitable spiral.
As the old joke goes....prepare three envelopes.