Thread regarding ExxonMobil Corp. layoffs

What’s Changed?

This post from 2021 on Reddit. What’s different now? has there been ANY improvement?

Sh---y culture and a massive push from leadership with an initiative called TMTS (transforming manufacturing technical support). Essentially they are taking engineering jobs at sites and their research center in Houston and outsourcing the work to tech centers in Malaysia and India. Individual contributor roles are basically being outsources.

In addition to that, people are fed up with the arbitrary forced ranking system. Basically people are ranked in a bucket from 1 to 5. Last year they changed the way that people are ranked from at least having some sort of safety net on how far you can drop in performance. I.e 1/5 to 2/5 only to now being theoretically able to go from top to bottom. If you are in the bottom bucket, you are forced into a PIP with little chance of passing and essentially being fired. When you are placed on PIP, you either get the option to take PIL for 3 month salary to resign or go on the plan to potentially pass/fail in 3 months.

Last year when the virus hit and crude prices suffered. Company publically announced they had no layoff plans yet moved their forced PIP target from 3% to 8% mainly targeting long term highly paid employees forcing many out with only 3 month severance. New hires suddenly got put into a new group (typically unranked until the 2nd cycle) where they were fired on the spot. Many I know that were let go had less than 6 months experience. Then they removed the 401k in October and it has still not been returned with no timeline to returning either. This was all before the public layoffs that they announced with literally the lowest severance payout when comparing to all the other integrated major oil companies. This company is a very top heavy organization with what is considered a protected class of employees (managers). Pretty much only technical individual contributors were let go with either layoffs or PIP.

Last year, in December when all those notified that they were being laid off, the board awarded themselves restricted stock bonuses for the year similar to their compensation from the previous year. In no way did they try to reduce their compensation while saying headcount and 401k reductions were required.

This year in march, they announced no layoff plans again yet kept the 8% PIP target again. To add salt to the wounds, HR required a mandatory training for all employees on the spinned benefits of the PIP program and how it improves the relative company performance and how 90% of employees that took the PIP passed last year while convienetly leaving out the stats on those that opted to take the PIL or left before completing (many of the older people did just that).

Because of all the headcount cuts and shifting of work, many of us have just picked up vastly more work without any sign of cutting low value work tasks. Because of shrinking company, many are no longer moving and seeing career growth. Many have been stuck in unnecessary roles for 2 years now.

The CEO is currently doubling down on the only oil strategy with many seeing the companies strategy of greenwashing environmental issues as not planning for the future. Many in the company do not feel valued, overworked, do not see a long term future of this company and completely untrusting of the current performance system.

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| 1907 views | | 9 replies (last ) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1nlnX8ye

9 replies (most recent on top)

Full on in self-destruction mode not waiting for major incident.

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Post ID: @1asz+1nlnX8ye

The amount of self-congratulatory posts on LinkedIn from current EM employees leads to a lingering suspicion that they’re trying to project how great they are to outside recruiters.

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Post ID: @vxi+1nlnX8ye

Did not mention that ranking process is rigged for chosen persons with Executive sponsorship to fill the top rank spots, get assigned the best jobs, get rescued from any bad projects, and any Supervisor not assisting rocket the chosen to the top are bullied and intimidated.

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Post ID: @ydd+1nlnX8ye

Which subreddit?

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Post ID: @rgc+1nlnX8ye

What's changed since 2021? They brought back the 401k match after a year, and gave a compression raise YE 2022 due to inflation and presumably to help slow attrition. They've implemented hotdesking everywhere for non-execs and have increasingly put pressure on everyone to work 100% time at the office, though in practice a lot of people still work a hybrid schedule. Outsourcing/low cost TC hiring continues and appears to be accelerating. They are also pulling in more experienced hires and annuitants to try to fill technical gaps left after layoffs and attrition. EMHC has a bit of a ghost town vibe. The culture isn't as achievement oriented as it used to be - a lot of people still work hard, but there's an undercurrent of general indifference that wasn't as obvious before. Stuff is starting to break more regularly, with more infrastructure and IT problems presumably due to less maintenance. Even though a lot of the change has been making things worse, most people left are basically tired of complaining and hearing complaints, so there's just less of that than in 2021/2022.

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Post ID: @wwb+1nlnX8ye

Just when we think morale cannot go any lower, our highly compensated CFO pushes Hotdesking to save money when we set record profits.

I am sure she is not leading by example on Hotdesking. She even has reserved parking.

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Post ID: @pkx+1nlnX8ye

Good summary then and accurate today.
Of course general employee morale is much lower today.
This company is just one major incident away from self-destructing.

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Post ID: @liy+1nlnX8ye

Tldr

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Post ID: @vut+1nlnX8ye

Awesome summary of the sc-m pond

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Post ID: @kbh+1nlnX8ye

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