SAP's Golden Parachute
[shutterstock_744038299]
Blog Last and Least

SAP’s Golden Parachute

During the annual press conference held at SAP headquarters this week, CEO Bill McDermott and CFO Luka Mucic made some interesting statements. However, they did fail to provide a reasonable strategy for SAP’s uncertain future.

For the second time in SAP history, CEO Bill McDermott and CFO Luka Mucic have to pull the rope on the golden parachute. Golden parachute is a nickname for a program designed to make employees retire earlier to achieve cost savings.

McDermott’s “Cloud First” strategy and the numerous rash and expensive acquisitions (do I even have to say Qualtrics at this point?) have brought SAP to its knees. More than 4000 employees are to leave the company. The most recent figures predict tumultuous times.

Did Bill McDermott wreck Hasso Plattner’s life’s work?

Fact is that McDermott’s cloud strategy has cost the company a lot of money. If hyper scalers reduce their cloud prices and expand their service portfolio even more, there won’t be any room left for SAP.

Who will buy Rimini Street and Suse Linux to provide seamless SAP service for server, storage, database, and applications including maintenance and support? AWS, Google, Microsoft, Telecom, Alibaba, IBM, Huawei… the list of possible buyers is endless, but SAP is nowhere to be seen.

With Qualtrics, cloud, interoperability (or, as SAP dubs it, Indirect Access), Hana and all the (mostly still not finished or refined) products like S/4, BW/4, and C/4, SAP’s future remains uncertain.

The sensible thing to do would be to take a step back and reconsider current strategies. But Bill McDermott and Luka Mucic are apparently not the sensible kind. They rather let their employees pay for their mistakes. This means a long overdue reorganization and, as already mentioned, the almost infamous golden parachute.

However, Bill McDermott is not done yet. To show how strong and powerful SAP still is under his leadership, he wants to continue investing in technology. Machine learning, IoT, artificial intelligence, blockchain and, of course, quantum computing… it’s not like the SAP community has any other problems to solve, right?

Source:
E-3 Magazine February 2019 (German)

About the author

Peter M. Färbinger, Editor-in-Chief

Peter M. Färbinger is Editor-in-Chief and Publisher at E-3 Magazine, B4Bmedia.net AG, Munich, Germany. He can be reached at pmf@b4bmedia.net

Add Comment

Click here to post a comment

Sign up for e3zine´s biweekly newsbites

Please do not use administrative mail adresses like "noreply@..", "admin@.." or similar as these may get blocked for security reasons.

We use rapidmail for dispatching our newsletter. By signing up, you agree that the data you have entered will be transmitted to rapidmail. Please take note of their terms and conditions and privacy policy.termsandconditions.

Our Authors