What We Know

Workday just announced its new CEO, and, well, he isn’t really new at all. Aneel Bhusri is returning as CEO after two years as executive chair. The move follows a turbulent period for enterprise SaaS stocks, with Workday shares down more than 20% year-to-date (2026) and significantly declining since the start of 2025, dropping by approximately 39% as of early February 2026. This isn’t the first time a founder has stepped back into the role of CEO, with classic examples including Steve Jobs, Jack Dorsey, and Howard Schultz (among others).

During Carl Eschenbach’s tenure, Workday pursued an aggressive, acquisition‑led strategy to accelerate its AI roadmap, buying a wide range of AI platforms across integration, talent, learning, and agent orchestration. While this expanded Workday’s surface area and competitive intent, the company is struggling to fully integrate these assets, enable partners at speed, and translate M&A into clear differentiation amid rapid market shifts. As competitors such as Oracle and SAP move fast with tightly integrated stacks and partner mobilization, Workday is facing growing execution risk, slower data platform maturity, and pressure both up and down the market.

As Aneel Bhusri retakes the helm, Workday’s near-term challenge is proving that it can gain global market share for its non-HCM product lines, integrate and simplify its stack after all the acquisitions, and compete in an enterprise software market being rapidly reshaped by AI expectations. This change occurs against a backdrop of multiple workforce reductions, including a 1,750-employee cut (8.5% of the workforce) in early 2025 and an additional approximately 400-person reduction in February 2026, primarily in non-revenue-generating roles, emphasizing resource realignment to fund AI and product development.

Is this a permanent change? Thus far, there’s no indication otherwise — with commentary focusing on continuity and stability.

What Workday Customers/Prospects Should Do

Workday customers should view Aneel Bhusri’s return as CEO as a signal of strategic consolidation rather than radical change. The company’s direction — toward AI, agents, Data Cloud, and a more open platform — is unlikely to reverse. What will change is the emphasis on execution discipline and architectural coherence. Customers should expect fewer speculative bets, more scrutiny on what actually ships, and a renewed focus on preserving Workday’s historical strength: stability and a unified core, even as the platform expands beyond HCM and finance.

At the same time, customers should be clear‑eyed about the risks. Much of Workday’s AI vision depends on integrating a growing set of acquisitions and opening the core through the Data Cloud, which is not fully enterprise‑ready yet. There is real potential for integration drag, uneven partner readiness, and UX disruption as new AI interfaces are layered onto mission‑critical systems. Organizations should be cautious about committing to roadmap promises without clear GA timelines, dependencies, and support models.

This is also a moment for customers to be more assertive. They should push Workday for explicit integration roadmaps that clarify what is truly native versus loosely coupled, when acquired capabilities become part of standard workflows, and how Data Cloud underpins AI features. Customers should demand proof of value in production — not demos — including references, operational metrics, and clarity on governance, SLAs, and supportability. As pricing models evolve toward consumption, customers should also protect themselves commercially by insisting on predictability and phased adoption.

An overarching market observation is that, as AI continues to put pressure on the enterprise applications market, vertical specialization will become a key differentiator and increasingly crucial — and this is where Workday has traditionally been weaker relative to newer and smaller vendors that offer massive industry depth. Workday needs to hear this direct feedback from industry customers, who should continue to advocate for solutions to real industry-specific challenges in product community conversations and strategic discussions with Workday account and executive teams. These interactions eventually lead to direct input to product engineering teams.

If you have any questions about the Workday ecosystem, please reach out to me here for inquiry or guidance sessions.