Thread regarding Chevron Corp. layoffs

Layoffs shouldn’t be this frequent

I think we need to be asking what decisions in the last 5 years have brought us to this point, where did we go wrong with those decisions, and who should be held accountable. The rank and file are responsible for executing the vision of upper management, but when their vision is investments that don’t pay out, it’s the bottom tier than gets the axe. MW still makes an unreasonable amount of money and has a job; why? Why did the board approve him to work beyond mandatory retirement? Why is employee pay and benefits being squeezed when executive compensation is at all-time highs?

Layoffs happen, but we did this four years ago. It shouldn’t be this frequent if we had leadership making good investments and being held accountable.

Bumping this up so it’s not lost in replies. Source: @ozu+1ul86Q2b

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Post ID: @OP+1um7oVGh

16 replies (most recent on top)

Every 4 years is frequent in your view? Just wow. That would be a luxury in many other industries they have a layoff round every qtr every year.

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Post ID: @1tho+1um7oVGh

There are bigger forces at play than current management. Any CEO can look like a star in a rising industry.

Managing a declining industry is very difficult and these guys are showing that the are not up to the task. Any big oil CEO (except XOM) is looking inept today. This bring the next question, why the big money then?

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Post ID: @1jnw+1um7oVGh

MW et al doesn't care what we think about their decisions or management style. They are in charge. Their goal is to ensure that the dividend is paid and any fluctuations in the stock price can be explained away. All the churn that goes on at the bottom is not on their radar screen. I believe that MW and MN think they can run the place all by themselves using ChatGPT to fill in any of the blanks.

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Post ID: @1hmm+1um7oVGh

To answer the original question: what has changed is the inability of MW's management team to continue effective and strategic investment ... emphasize "effective"! During the 2005 to 2020 period, Chevron was hiring galore to build a portfolio that was the envy of our competitors. Now, they are the scourge of the industry. MW has shown himself to be a nice guy in the wrong position. So, Chevron is suffering. Glad I retired in 2020! That said, unless management changes, Chevron is going to be in a different boat within 10 years. DEI and woke programs have shown themselves to be an anchor around employees necks, and all those high-priced consultants have been a boon for them but a laughing cartoon for Chevron management.

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Post ID: @1grq+1um7oVGh

Every position should be filled by the best qualified, most experienced candidates. Everyone else should be sacked as not required

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Post ID: @1igv+1um7oVGh

@1feh Really?! How about focusing on actual business and not woke initiatives and dei? How about putting the best people in positions because they’re the most qualified, not because of the optics or who they’re related to.

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Post ID: @1cke+1um7oVGh

New to oil and gas, huh? All the OG COs are like this, all the time. Every problem is met with over reaction. A culture borne from bo-m/bust anxiety, and insecurity/toxic professional fomo from executives. I’ve worked at, or with, several - and we’re all the same.

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Post ID: @1ura+1um7oVGh

It would take careful thinking and effort to improve our performance system and elicit meaningful feedback. This is a lot like work for upper management, they want to avoid anything dirty like that. It's easier to hire a consultant and make a grand change than to make thoughtful iterative improvements that will make a difference. Ray Dalio is probably the best thinker out there, I wish our managers would read and understand what leadership entails, it's not just meetings and kissing the next levels a-s.

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Post ID: @1plv+1um7oVGh

Our strategy is “let’s try some shìt”.

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Post ID: @1xuo+1um7oVGh

It’s the only lever they know, and it’s the only lever they have.

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Post ID: @1feh+1um7oVGh

Chevron is top tier pay especially from Covid, will cut down fat

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Post ID: @cfm+1um7oVGh

It's not a bug. It's a feature.

Chevron is too undisciplined to fire or promote based upon performance. So they promote everyone along, deserving or not.

Layoffs afford the opportunity to cut people who should have been fired or who have salaries which have outgrown their contribution.

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Post ID: @dae+1um7oVGh

Exactly where is the layoff at this time and how many were let go?

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Post ID: @via+1um7oVGh

Like the human body, a fat middle is not good for survival.

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Post ID: @dou+1um7oVGh

That is why you are not CEO op!

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Post ID: @whw+1um7oVGh

It's the only lever MW knows how to pull. His history is clear on that.

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Post ID: @lag+1um7oVGh

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