My experience at SAS was mixed. I had some great managers, and some terrible ones. I gave each of them my best work and best advice. Some viewed advice as a threat to their authority, and became defensive and hostile. I got blamed, and punished, and gaslighted — as did many others.
If good managers were in the majority, I’d have hope yet for SAS growth. But in my experience, a majority were incompetents or sycophants. The good ones must compromise with the rest.
This group’s record, over the past 30 years, is clear. We had the premier product for analyzing data. The amount of data in the world exploded, driven by the Internet. Yet during that glorious opportunity, this group actually managed to shrink the company.
The faces have changed, but the mix of managers has not. So I see no path to change.
I expect a sale sooner rather than later, because a) it makes no sense to hold a declining asset, b) a software company is a difficult asset to inherit, and c) it can’t be fun to preside over these layoffs.
If it were my call, I’d view a 2025 IPO as my fallback strategy, and I’d be talking to interested buyers right now.
(OP)