Does anyone know if any Sr. Mgmt. has been laid-off? I haven't heard of any so far. The mgmt at SWN was extremely top-heavy prior to yesterday.,,and apparently even more so now. I read another post that Mueller's pay and bonuses over the past few years of his tenure was around 50-70 million...around the same amount this lay-off is projected to save. So Meuller is apparently worth 1,100 employees! He should feel so proud ! I'm not certain about those numbers, but they sound about right and I wouldn't be surpised if they were spot-on. And what about the other members of executive mgmt that jet around the country reading prepared speeches like politicians that really add no true value to the company? Even sadder, this could have been diverted! Perhaps a 20% max staff reduction and cost cutting at all levels such as travel, continuing ed, conventions, software licenses, and the list goes on and on. I completely agree that CEOs and executive mgmt deserve good salaries. Most of them have worked very hard to get to their position, BUT their pay has increased so disproportionately to the regular joe professional that it defies logic and ethics on all levels. It makes no sense that one of these prima donnas should make 20 times what a good engineer, geologist or geophysicist makes when they are actually adding value by picking great locations, designing cost-effective drilling programs, and implementing these programs with precision, safety and common sense. It's not just engineering and G&G either. I have worked with some of the finest landmen and folks from other disciplines at SWN as well. We were damn good and we earned our paychecks! It just makes me sick thinking about these fine professionals possibly losing their homes, not being able to afford a college for their kids, or simply depleting their emergency funds and savings when the top execs pull in $2MM per year (or whatever) for putting on a suit and taking their friends to lunch and make mission statements and having philosophical discussions about the SWN formula.
As an employee that was let go yesterday, I loved the formula. I also loved SWN and most of the employees/professionals I worked with. I also saw a change in the corporate "climate" at SWN when we moved to the new building. The building move also coincided with the commodity price drop. The company had to do something drastic. Apparently the senior execs and BoD's decided to cut only the lower level staff only (as if we were the only problem) and not consider themselves at all for cost reduction or change any of their expensive behaviors that add virtually no value to the company OR holding themselves accountable for several poor decisions they made. They temporarily put a Band-Aid on the problem for SWN yesterday, but didn't stop the bleeding.