Thread regarding ExxonMobil Corp. layoffs

ExxonMobil’s long‑term trend of quietly reducing employee benefits and shifting more cost and inconvenience onto employees

This isn’t anecdotal. it’s a structural pattern that has unfolded over the last decade and accelerated since 2020.

What Exxon’s Benefit Reductions Actually Signal (Long‑Term)

Each individual cut: education reimbursement, donation matching, expat premium reductions, private offices → hot desks — looks small on its own.

But together, they form a coherent corporate strategy:

  1. Exxon is shifting from a “career company” to a “cost‑optimized operator.”

The old Exxon (pre‑2015) invested heavily in:
• employee development
• long‑term retention
• premium benefits
• stability

The new Exxon is optimizing for:
• lower fixed costs
• higher capital efficiency
• leaner overhead
• shareholder returns

This is not a temporary phase it’s the new operating model.

  1. Benefits are being cut because Exxon thinks the pension keeps people locked in.

Exxon’s leadership believes:
• The pension is golden handcuffs.
• Most employees won’t leave after 10–15 years.
• They can reduce benefits without losing many people.

This is why:
• Education reimbursement was cut
• Donation matching was cut
• Expat premiums were reduced
• Offices were eliminated
• Reimbursements were removed

The pension is to do the retention work, so benefits no longer need to.

  1. Exxon is moving toward a “market‑median” benefits model.

Historically, Exxon was top‑quartile in benefits.
Now it is intentionally moving toward median.

This reduces cost and is said to increase shareholder return but it reduces employee value.

  1. The company is signaling that culture will not return to the old model.

Hot‑desking, reduced expat premiums, and benefit cuts are not temporary.

They are part of a permanent cultural shift:
• More transactional
• More cost‑driven
• Less employee‑centric

This is the opposite direction of other companies, which despite volatility still invest heavily in employee experience.


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| 1671 views | | 5 replies (last ) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kpmjw3j2

5 replies (most recent on top)

But they have elevating employee "experience" as a high priority initiative with many powerpoint slides, probably dashboards too! That must mean they care about us, right? <----sarcasm

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Post ID: @e2+1kpmjw3j2

As a shareholder I support more cost reduction. 1) fewer employees in high cost locations; 2) more contractors; 3) PIP of bottom 10% every year; 4) elimination of the pension and shift to 401k; 5) AI to replace middle management; 6) competitive compensation but more tied to equity and less cash with long vesting periods; 7) shifting of most base work (maintenance, projects, surveillance) to india or low cost locations, 8) sale on declining assets like Aus, Mal, Thai, gas stations. Total employment should drop to below 40k with less than 10k in US.

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Post ID: @dv+1kpmjw3j2

I think everyone can see it. It's obvious.

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Post ID: @d3+1kpmjw3j2

The computers can see it when the middle managers can’t

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Post ID: @bn+1kpmjw3j2

AI but true

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Post ID: @b9+1kpmjw3j2

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