“It is very difficult to prune the necessary problem employees en masse… The future cannot prove to be as merciful if SAS is going to survive.”
Rather than pruning problem employees, current policies achieve the opposite. SAS has bought out or laid off hundreds of its most experienced employees. SAS incentivized hundreds more to leave by attrition — some of its most capable, by definition: capable of finding a better job.
This is clearly not a plan for growth, but a plan to cut costs by eliminating the most expensive employees
If the company is sold, likely buyers are companies like Broadcom or private equity that specialize in acquiring declining software revenue streams. Such buyers always do mass layoffs, retaining just enough staff to milk the declining revenue stream. In that event, SAS will not survive in its current form.
If the company IPOs, that’s a huge cash injection, so in theory, whoever acquires control could invest that cash for growth. Most growth investors would prefer to invest in the latest hot AI startup, not in SAS. But an IPO is probably the best hope for SAS to survive.
In the meantime, SAS owners continue to show loyalty to their employees, retaining many in spite of their poor contributions, incentivizing others to leave by choice, and minimizing the necessary layoffs. For most SAS employees, life would be a lot harsher out in the Real World.