@bs Concur has not been fully integrated with SAP, and I am thankful for that. We have managed to keep most of our culture intact. Concur has continued to succeed despite the lack of investment since the acquisition.
What I have noticed is that the “closer” Concur gets to SAP, the worse things get. The imposition overly burdensome internal rules and policies that slows us down and often originating from some major misconduct (Or worse) within SAP.
I’ll also mention that the SAP executives that have landed here, have been multiply untalented journeymen. They added nothing, nothing to Concur. We exist despite them, the boards & whatever slimy a-holes that have Concur reporting up to them.
I’d also remind you that the original intent was for Concur to continue to operate with a large amount of autonomy from SAP. Yes, things change, but consider the original plan before you make a statement about how long its taken for Concur to “merge” with SAP.
Additionally, it is not uncommon for acquired companies to have their own separate structure. Particularly, if the new parent company is unfamiliar with the business model, products and marketplace. All of which, SAP didn’t and doesn’t understand about Concur. My preference is for Concur to be spun off by SAP. The relationship has only extracted from Concur, and filled the void absolute meaninglessness.