Thread regarding ExxonMobil Corp. layoffs

My Reasons to Quit – What are Yours?

For the ‘Best of the Best’ hired from top programs, this is no longer a company to plan a career with. If you are stuck with 20/30+ years under your belt, then maybe I can see why to try your luck to survive a few more years. But, for the top talent younger folks 5/10/15 yrs, it would be insanity to stay here for a miserable job year-after-year.
Here are my reasons, what are yours?

1-This industry has no growth ahead and maybe not even a long-term future. Energy change is going to sweep Europe and NA earlier than Exxon would like to admit.
Exxon is going to be the last one to change, and my bet is it will be too late by then driving Europe and NA asset prices into the ground. Will be forced to sell to lower cost operators / shutdown with employees part of sales / closures.
For employees, this means sword of layoffs over your heads year after year, miserable work environment with individual contributors taking the load of 2/3/4 lay-off positions while layers of management are not impacted, or at least stagnated salaries and no growth as compared to already stingy history of last few years.

2- Miserable Forced Ranking. Unless you are in the top-10% consistently, the forced ranking process works with all its might to sideline you sooner or later. This can be 5, 10 or 15 years from now but is inevitable. The magic happens as the ones ranked down gradually from year to year are left to work the less desirable jobs available, which further drives down their rankings, until you are working the most miserable jobs available in the last 10/20 years of your career. People around you know that and treat you like a 3rd class citizen, day-in and day-out. You may still be doing a perfectly fine job for your role, but in the “Relative Ranking” world of Exxon you are considered and treated worthless for your level of experience. Can you imagine waking-up with this miserable feeling every day for the last 10/20 Yrs of your career?
Unfortunately, lay offs and aggressive performance separations in the last year mean that this is even going to be worse going forward! Most are going to drop in future years to find the new bottom 5-8% every year to continue the cuts as the oil&gas business shrinks.

3- It is an understatement that the culture is toxic. Managers are trained to believe that pitting employees against each other is “healthy competition” and in their minds is the definition of driving performance. Ranking / Assessment system drives everything important for you including roles offered, salary, RSUs etc. But most importantly it drives how people behave, talk and treat you....every day!
Your colleagues are driven to be selfish with daily mindset to get ahead in the rat race.
Everyone is focused on getting material for their yearly assessment, which for Managers means steal / take credit of their workforce's accomplishments to maintain their own ranking, and blame every issue on the reporting employees to maintain their ranking.

4-Incompetent Leadership. This company’s current leadership is driving this company into the ground. Competency of this leadership is evident by:

  • You have to be a buffoon to handle layoffs and employee separations in a way like our leaders, which has alienated even the top performers in younger age groups. Just please announce a percentage, and within a couple of weeks layoffs maybe the lowest ranked 15%?? Seriously, Singapore employees only told this week who is gone? And now the next assessment cycle starts for next year. How much more stress can you dump on the employees?
  • The latest company management has dropped even the previous fake proclamation of caring for employees interests. The employee loyalty built over decades by previous leaders, has been destroyed mindlessly in 1-short year.
  • Layers upon layers of managers still exist. Can our executive leaders not spend a day really reviewing all org charts and really making things efficient? No…..just layoff the individual contributors and dump all work on the few left. Then bombard them also with requirements for them to find efficiencies, spin wheels benchmarking, coordinating with offshore organizations with poor quality of work, etc. etc. etc.
  • Worst of the worst business decisions, absolutely horrendous investments in Shale and Kearl, inability to buy any capacity at multiple opportunity cycles of rock bottom asset prices in the last 10-yrs, etc. etc. etc.
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| 4751 views | | 19 replies (last ) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+19Ky056M

19 replies (most recent on top)

One of the best posts I've seen on this forum. 100% accurate, couldn't have said it better. Disgraceful place to work. Run for the hills!

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Post ID: @5ear+19Ky056M

Excellent post. One of the best descriptions I have seen on the forum.

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Post ID: @4zct+19Ky056M

Can someone copy paste this on LinkedIn, Glassdoor, Indeed.....

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Post ID: @2ewz+19Ky056M

1ibf+19Ky056M In reference to the beauty competition post - How arrogant of Woods. I can’t stand that guy and don’t think anyone else likes him either. He has zero charisma and likability in my humble opinion. I don’t see what propelled him upwards. This is all really unbelievable. What an -

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Post ID: @1mlm+19Ky056M

@hrk+19Ky056M 100% incorrect, management lies in “the best pay and compensation packages”. I promise you this.

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Post ID: @1gzv+19Ky056M

Reason all you need is when you are not treated right.

Better pay with better culture elsewhere.
Equal or less pay with better culture.

EM culture is toxic. I can feel it in the air. People’s arrogance and entitlement. I hate it. I have no desire to spend the next 35 years if my life in a heck hole like EM.

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Post ID: @1aau+19Ky056M

Yeah EM is steadily becoming irrelevant. Feb 2020 Darren Woods went on CNBC and called clean energy / green investments by other majors like Shell and BP a “beauty competition”. He’s projecting hard. DW/EM have an incredibly cynical strategy of basically hoping we don’t transition the energy systems and assuming everyone else is as full of s*** as we are (meaningless scale algal biofuels as one example). Anyone who is smart and relatively early in their career should abandon ship since these guys have zero plan to stay relevant in the future Energy system.

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Post ID: @1ibf+19Ky056M

I have been working 12 hour days because they fired so many people. I am not exaggerating. It s—s. Looking for a new job.

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Post ID: @1ljx+19Ky056M

When I was younger, I did not dream to be with this company. I was hired off of college where some EM recruiter fooled me. With all that has happened last year, I got to some serious self-retrospection and now pursuing my real interests and what will make me happier going forward. And so I quit.

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Post ID: @owv+19Ky056M

My reason to quit? I am a worker bee and for the past months, I have been working 10 hours on average daily. My offshore counterparts don't seem to work as hard which is unfair. I am now burnt out and have enough of this. I am calling it quits! OP thanks for your post, it motivates me more to seek other opportunities outside.

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Post ID: @mcr+19Ky056M

Very well written, thoughtful post OP. Great job.

Provided clarity to those on the fence.

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Post ID: @tlu+19Ky056M

I for one was surprised last week when the global projects senior VP retired they were eliminating the role and his direct report just will carry on as President. Prior org never made sense to me but positive and unexpected development.

On the flip side I would rather be part of a growing not shrinking organization. There will be fewer opportunities for promotions within the slowly dying company and collapsing org structure.

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Post ID: @vyk+19Ky056M

@siy+19Ky056M

I am a first line supervisor and certainly don’t feel like I am going to be secure and milking it to the end. I expect no raise anytime soon. I’ve never received RSUs. I worry every year about ranking and being fired.

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Post ID: @gug+19Ky056M

Once the trust is broken and there is no purpose beyond ensuring our leaders line their pockets, it’s definitely time to leave.
I tried to make my objections heard for years, the same kind of stuff Engine 1 has said these last few months, and I’ve only been more ostracized and frustrated.
After 10 years, i finally decided to break this toxic relationship and landed a new job. Hiring bonus, relo allotment, 6% matching, immediate vesting, same vacation plus 2 extra days of vacation per year, week split between working at the office and working from home, better healthcare plan at a lower cost, no forced ranking, comparable pay plus performance bonus, and the piece of mind of working in a place that’s not evil and not in the Houston swamp.
It feels good to break the golden handcuffs.

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Post ID: @eyw+19Ky056M

My biggest disappointment was thinking I worked for an ethical company....when, in fact, I just work for a ‘legally compliant’ company. That difference is lost on a lot of managers, who think their actions are ethical.

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Post ID: @yhe+19Ky056M

Agree this is a good synopsis. Lengthy as is. But alot to cover.
My only objection would be to the 'best and brightest' intro.
That's the shill they used to get us on board.
A confidence game.
I'm 5 years in and seen enough, me.

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Post ID: @ndw+19Ky056M

Spot on - forced ranking has really caused me to burn out. Every day it felt like I was just working towards something to put on my PADP, only to get ranked low again. Even went to my supervisor and told her that my work felt like it was not appreciated. Next year to 'show appreciation' for my work I got a $100 gift card...only to get booted to the bottom again. Talk about mixed messaging.

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Post ID: @ltq+19Ky056M

Completely agree with OP. EM is becoming slowly but steadily irrelevant. Granted they are too big to fail in the near term, but they are nonetheless failing, and will likely fade away over the next 2-3 decades. The most likely scenario is that they will become a low cost supplier of natural gas and polyethylene, while the demand for fossil fuel based products peaks over this decade and slowly declines. DW and his friends right down to first line supervisors and “leaders” are going to milk it for as long as they can and retire well, so they have no incentive to reinvent or adapt. There is no reason to believe Neil Chapman will do anything differently. Unless EM gets external and real leadership, which is also unlikely given the board’s support for the current regime, the decline is most likely irreversible. In this scenario, EM does not need any research or technology organization in the long term, except possibly to make algae commercials. Anyone who does not expect to retire within the next 10 years should think hard about their future at EM. even if demand for fossil fuel products recovers in the near term, EM will not do well, because it is very poorly managed. There will be a price to pay for the management’s incompetence.

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Post ID: @siy+19Ky056M

I'm bookmarking this one. It is the most objective, truthful, well written posts I've seen yet. OP is spot on. As a shareholder and someone very near retirement, I'm glad to hear the Company is getting down to business and i trust they mean it. All the horseshit management programs and arrogant big money days are hopefully long behind us. Treating people like pieces on a game board and expecting them to take it because of the best compensation packages in the industry are now a distant memory. Itll take some time to keep shaking the trees and running people off in different ways, but, it's not a rocket science business. They'll come to a new equilibrium, hopefully for the better.

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Post ID: @hrk+19Ky056M

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