When I first started serving on the BPAC in 2015, Rich Spring was in charge, enthusiastically welcomed all of us, and promised this would be a new BPAC. It would not be like those in the past where Sage acted as if they were interested. He delivered on that promise - until he was gone. I looked at the agenda from that initial meeting in September 2015, and the only people still with Sage are Jennifer Warawa, Scott Munro, Jim Emerick and Joo Sohn. 10+ others who spoke or attended are no longer with Sage. Through 2016 Rich's promise was kept by the successive Sage management, many who are also gone now. We did have a significant influence on the final roll-out pricing of Payroll and 100c. We did get advance notice on almost everything - albeit perhaps only 1 day to 1 week in advance.
This new BPAC, which had its first meeting October 2017, includes mostly new players from Sage, and they have not been on top of things in terms of informing us in advance or seeking our opinions as we experienced previously. I'd like to say it is by design, but that would be giving management too much credit. In reality, they are as out of control as sales operations continues to be. My personal opinion of the issue is that Stephen Kelly set himself up as Global CEO making all other business unit Presidents subservient to him and resulting in a lack of strong leadership, specifically in North America, where this is critical. So we end up with a collection of Keystone Cops in the US with no real direction except to increase revenue. The single exception is Jennifer Warawa, for whom I continue to have great respect, but she is not in a functional position that allows her to take charge.