The challenges facing OpenText stem largely from the ill-advised acquisition of Micro Focus—an overvalued, ego-driven decision that has strained financials, distracted from core innovation, and diminished shareholder confidence. Rather than taking responsibility, the CEO has deflected blame by removing key executives, with further disruption expected.
Up to 1,500 layoffs are anticipated by fiscal year-end, framed under “Centers of Excellence” and the “Better Together” narrative—initiatives that have yet to deliver tangible value. Employees are mandated to return to offices even when their teams are remote, resulting in inefficient virtual meetings and wasted resources. Travel budgets remain limited for most, undermining collaboration across global teams, while a select few continue to travel frequently.
Despite financial headwinds, the CEO maintains a lifestyle at odds with corporate austerity—flying private through a fractional jet membership, traveling in luxury vehicles, staying in premium hotels, and dining exclusively at high-end establishments. This disconnect between leadership behavior and company reality continues to erode internal trust and external credibility.
The board’s passivity has enabled underperformance at the highest levels. The reappointment of Savinay Berry, despite his prior failures and reputation, further illustrates a troubling lack of judgment.
Ultimately, all of these failures rest with the CEO. The strategic missteps, operational breakdowns, and cultural erosion are the result of decisions made at the top. Yet the board has allowed Mark to deflect accountability, terminate others, and avoid consequence. That must change. The board must take decisive action: terminate the CEO for cause, without severance, and remove golden parachutes from all ELT contracts. Stakeholders deserve accountable leadership, not protected failure.