Redaptive’s “Energy as a Service” model is fundamentally deceptive and operates more like a scam than a legitimate business. They promise customers energy savings, but the numbers are misleading. They create a “theoretical baseline”, a fancy way of saying they guess how much energy a customer would have used without their help, but they set this guess unrealistically high. Then, they install sensors or equipment and claim the customer is now using less energy compared to that inflated guess, showing “savings.” In reality, the actual energy use often doesn’t decrease - it’s just a numbers game on paper, not genuine energy reduction. To make matters worse, they sell expensive equipment, like sensors or lighting systems and bundle them with services through a financing trick called “no CapEx.” CapEx means the upfront money a customer would need to buy equipment outright. Redaptive tells customers they don’t have to pay this upfront cost, but instead locks them into long-term payment plans that hide the real costs. It’s like buying a car with a loan that has hidden fees and high interest, you end up paying way more over time, but it’s dressed up as a “smart deal.” Customers often end up with equipment that doesn’t deliver the promised savings, stuck paying for something that doesn’t work as advertised.
Leadership knows these savings are exaggerated but pushes forward anyway, focusing on signing more deals to keep investors happy and secure the next round of funding. This “growth-at-all-costs” mindset prioritizes looking successful over being honest, they’re more interested in flashy presentations for investors than fixing the core problems in their model. The company is heavily dependent on constant external funding, burning cash rapidly to keep up appearances. If investors stop pouring money in, which could happen if the truth about their savings claims comes out, Redaptive won’t have the cash to keep operating. It’s like a house of cards waiting to collapse, and recent actions make this even clearer: Redaptive recently fired its entire tech team, including the CTO, in a move that screams instability and desperation.
This mass firing of the tech team and CTO points to several alarming issues. First, the company is likely facing a cash flow crisis or intense investor pressure to cut costs. Tech salaries are expensive, and leadership may view the tech team as a “cost center”, meaning they don’t directly bring in money, even though they build the tools Redaptive claims to rely on. Firing the CTO suggests they may have resisted these cuts or disagreed with a new direction, so leadership decided to “reset” by removing them. It’s as if Redaptive is saying, “We can’t afford to build anymore, let’s stop pretending we’re a tech company.” Second, the firing could stem from a failed product or platform, like their core data platform Redaptive ONE. If this platform, meant to monitor energy use and show savings, delivered inaccurate data, flawed dashboards, or led to client complaints, leadership might have scapegoated the tech team for “execution failure.” They may now plan to abandon the platform entirely, outsourcing it to third-party contractors or using off-the-shelf tools instead, essentially admitting, “Our platform doesn’t work like we said it would, and someone has to take the fall.”
Third, firing the tech team signals a shift away from being a tech-enabled business to a “services-only” or asset-light model. Redaptive may really just be a finance and operations company, installing equipment and offering financing rather than a true tech innovator. By cutting the tech team, they’re admitting, “We don’t need a tech team to pretend we’re a software company anymore, let’s focus on project delivery.” Fourth, the firing could reflect internal power struggles or misalignment. The CTO might have pushed for innovation, platform integrity, and data privacy, while the CEO or investors demanded cheaper, faster tools that look good to sell, even if they cut ethical corners. If the CTO lost this battle, the entire tech team became collateral damage, signaling that “leadership doesn’t align, innovation lost, and compliance might be at risk.”
Fifth, the tech team’s removal is a sign of financial or ethical distress. There’s a risk of exposure like energy savings being misrepresented, client data manipulated, or platform performance falsified , and the tech team have been seen as a liability. They knew too much, resisted cutting ethical corners, or asked hard questions about metrics, so leadership decided, “Let’s remove the team that might blow the whistle or slow us down.” Finally, this move is a pre-bankruptcy housekeeping or preparation for an asset sale. Companies often downsize “non-core” units like tech teams to reduce liabilities before insolvency or a merger, and removing the CTO cleans up the C-suite for better optics. It’s as if Redaptive is saying, “We’re either getting sold or going under, let’s trim everything that won’t show up on a profit-and-loss sheet.” When a company eliminates its entire tech DNA, it’s not a pivot, it’s a panic response. It might look good to investors in the short term by cutting costs, but long-term, it signals no innovation pipeline, no competitive differentiation, and no internal trust in leadership’s vision.
Given this downward spiral, more teams are likely at risk of being fired next. Sales teams are in immediate danger, as they’re being blamed for deal failures caused by the company’s deceptive model, and their high salaries make them a target in a cash flow crisis. Customer success teams are also at high risk, as they’re on the frontline of growing client dissatisfaction and could be scapegoated or cut as a non-essential expense. Operations teams might face cuts if project volume drops, while finance and marketing teams could be downsized to reduce overhead or limit exposure to financial distress. These teams should be on high alert for layoffs, as Redaptive’s focus on cost-cutting and preparing for a potential sale or shutdown signals more instability ahead.
The internal culture is already toxic and unstable, and these firings only make it worse. Frequent layoffs, reorganizations, and secrecy around project failures crush employee morale. A culture of blame-shifting leaves middle and lower-tier employees exposed when deals collapse or customer complaints escalate, while leadership evades accountability. For example, if a customer realizes the energy savings aren’t real and cancels a contract, the sales team or engineers get blamed, even though the problem stems from the company’s flawed model. Suppliers and vendors are treated poorly too, Redaptive squeezes them by demanding lower prices or faster delivery while misleading them about project details, like promising a big contract but then cutting the scope halfway through. This creates a ripple effect of frustration, as suppliers struggle to meet unrealistic expectations with little transparency. Employees, suppliers, and customers all end up caught in the crossfire of a company that’s more focused on appearances than integrity.
Leadership and HR are unprofessional, setting a terrible example. As the saying goes, “the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree”- their lack of professionalism shapes a culture where some employees also develop inflated egos and limited expertise. Many staff members are there just to put on a good show for potential buyers and investors, not to deliver real value. Employees are treated with little regard for their well-being, overworked, and undervalued, while the company operates more like a scam than a legitimate business. Redaptive is unlikely to survive long once its deceptive practices are fully exposed, and when that happens, everyone involved, employees, investors, suppliers - will feel the fallout.