Just got to say after today’s call I am even further deeply disturbed by the recent reduction in force news and the decision to offshore even more roles. What hurts most is not just the loss itself, but the way it has been handled with hollow statements, rehearsed empathy, and a complete disregard for the emotional and financial impact on the people who have carried this company forward year after year.
The messaging has been especially damaging. Being told directly or indirectly that this is happening because we are “not talented enough” is insulting and demoralizing. It rewrites reality to justify decisions that are clearly driven by cost, not capability. Many of us have consistently delivered, adapted, and gone above and beyond, only to be discarded so leadership can protect margins and increase their own compensation.
What makes this even harder to stomach is the lack of accountability at the top. Instead of honest transparency, we are given narratives that deflect responsibility and place blame on the workforce. That erodes trust, dignity, and any sense of psychological safety that once existed here.
This process has left me feeling disgusted, disregarded, disillusioned, and genuinely border line depressed. It signals that well-being, loyalty, and human impact are secondary to short-term financial gain. No amount of scripted empathy can undo the damage caused by decisions made without care for the people affected by them.
If accountability were truly being applied, the focus would be very different. The damage done by poor strategic decisions, failed or poorly integrated mergers, repeated missteps at the executive level, and public embarrassments that have eroded trust in this company’s leadership has had a far greater impact than the amazing work of the people now being let go. Add to that the mishandling of serious issues like the data breach, which exposed weaknesses in oversight and leadership, and it becomes painfully clear that this is not a talent problem at the individual contributor level.
I needed to say this because silence feels like complicity, and pretending this is acceptable would be a lie.
I want to end by saying thank you to the individual contributors who truly made Blackbaud a special place to work.
It was never the branding, the slogans, or the executive messaging that made this company what it was. It was you. The people who showed up every day, supported one another through impossible workloads and constant change, shared knowledge freely, and genuinely cared about doing the right thing for our customers and for each other.
The talent, dedication, and heart I’ve seen among individual contributors here is something leadership can never take credit for, no matter how much they try to rewrite the narrative. You carried teams through poor decisions you didn’t make. You absorbed the fallout from mergers you didn’t ask for. You protected customers and each other in the aftermath of failures that were never yours to own.
Working alongside you has been the bright spot in all of this. You made hard days bearable, successes meaningful, and this place feel human despite everything stacked against it. I am grateful for the collaboration, the kindness, the humor, and the quiet resilience that never showed up on a balance sheet but mattered more than anything else.
No reduction in force, no offshoring decision, and no executive spin can erase the impact you’ve had or the value you bring. Wherever you go next, you carry that with you. And I hope you never doubt that you were the best part of this company.