Thread regarding ConocoPhillips layoffs

An Outsider's Perspective

I work for a vendor that works for ConocoPhillips. I find a lot of the comments here to be bitter and insulting, but given the circumstances, I suppose that is to be expected.

I thought I'd give a different point of view to the dilemma that has affected so many of you. For obvious reasons, I, and my company, shall remain anonymous.

First, COP is one of our biggest customers. A couple of years ago, they were the biggest, but in spite of our competitive pricing and excellent service record, COP decided that we needed some competition. So be it.

COP is a pretty difficult company to work for, from a vendor's point of view (and, yes, I've talked to several other vendors). It is a company that is run by committee. Nobody can make a decision, and they are constantly changing their collective minds. It makes it very difficult for us to prepare for jobs when the specifications change every day, or perhaps several times per day. I've had procedures sent to me that list 8 or more engineers for a given project, along with 4 approval signatures, yet the procedure was full of mistakes. COP can't wipe it's ass without a 50 page procedure. It's ridiculous!

It may be of interest to current employees that my company doesn't give as large a discount to COP as we give to other companies. This is specifically because of the sheer number of job changes and last minute job cancellations we have to put up with. Everyone has a problem once in a while, but with COP, it happens a couple of times per week. Now, when I post a COP job on the schedule board, our crews joke that it's just another 'imaginary Conoco job' that I post to make the boss think we're busy.

Just today, they cancelled a job that was sent to me yesterday. No problem, COP called in two more jobs that they forgot to schedule yesterday. I don't know of any other oil & gas company that has so many planners & schedulers, yet about the only thing they can schedule is lunch and vacations.

One thing that I've noticed is that many of the office staff lack commitment to their jobs. Just stop by the office on a Friday and the parking lot is empty. Employees are far more worried about their 3-day weekend than getting anything done. (Note, the 3-day weekend is nice, but I think it really hurts productivity because people spend so much time planning their mini-vacations instead of working). I don't see this mentality at other companies, major or little independent. I do believe that most of the field people are pretty dedicated to their work.

As for those that have gotten the axe, well, I'm sorry. However, it's NOT the end of the world. I've lost jobs, too. You just move on. It sounds like some of the younger folks are devastated about it. Remember, you were looking for a job when you found the one at COP, you can man up and find another. Keep in mind that Conoco was NOT looking for YOU when they hired you, they were looking for a warm body to fill a vacancy. Don't take it personally. The company doesn't love you and, a year from now, many of your former co-workers won't remember your name.

Will ConocoPhillips survive? Who knows? I hope so, but they will need a major shift in their management philosophy in order to do so. Dump the team concept, hire people with genuine leadership skills and let them lead. Put individuals in charge of projects and hold them accountable. Don't put so many people on each project. It doesn't take a team of a half dozen engineers to do a plugback/recompletion of a well, especially when they've done dozens of similar jobs in the same field. Dump the political correctness and diversity bullshit. I had lunch with a group of COP engineers a couple years ago and the senior engineer made a point about what a wonderfully diverse group we had at the table. FIVE countries were represented! I nodded, but I couldn't help but think how much more effective they could be if they could only TALK to each other!

Well, it's getting late. Best wishes for a brighter future to all of you!

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| 4082 views | | 26 replies (last ) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+EKqpEOr

26 replies (most recent on top)

Nailed it. This is what is wrong with COP. Nobody who is paid to make a decision will do so. They rely on process and committees to protect them. Not really sure how we stay in business when our drilling costs are 22% higher than our competitors and we take 40% longer to do things.

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Post ID: @foyl+EKqpEOr

The perception of ConocoPhillips exceeds reality. ConocoPhillips paid dearly for the perception but the resources would have better served reality. Individuals capable of making decisions were laid off for the most part due to extreme risk aversion. The management focus is on process and not outcome. Reports were printed on a daily basis only to be trashed on a daily as the recipient team long ago ceased to exist. No one individual could make the decision to stop the reports.

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Post ID: @8zsw+EKqpEOr

This is all right on. We are control system provider that has worked with most major producers for decades. I just had my first experience at COP, I too have always heard the stories, never paid much attention but now I've seen it.

Our project has large economic value,. It has a near instant return on investment, in operational cost dollars! It flew through 3 levels in 3 days!. Once we hit engineering, we went into 7 months of repetitive and irrelevant questioning, then finally, it evolved into nothing. To date we've likely spent 3x the original project's cost, for nothing! It's not cancelled but it's not happening and I'm pretty sure it's not going to happen. What?

COP people, like anyone, are typically nice, normal and truly care but the decision makers seem incapable of making a decision, for whatever reason, preferring not to be accountable for anything. The reality sure doesn't match COP's "Leader in the Innovation of Energy" message, it's almost laughable but the image is a little bit too disturbing.

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Post ID: @8gtl+EKqpEOr

Conoco was famous for process and group decisions. Phillips had its own problems too. What the poster describes is a culture from heritage Conoco.

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Post ID: @6rbi+EKqpEOr

As a former COPer who left voluntarily well before The Purge, this is spot on. I've worked in Exploration, Appraisal, and Development groups in several BUs and the attitude is consistent. To those who are upset about being laid off: never fear, there are much better companies, inside and outside of O&G, where you are empowered, valued, and allowed to make decisions without the oversight of 20 middle-managers. AND no bullshit forced rankings.

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Post ID: @6apw+EKqpEOr

Will there be more human resources reduction for CoP??

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Post ID: @3vgr+EKqpEOr

That's not true. I know several Americans and Canadians that speak fluent Australian. ;)

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Post ID: @2xgo+EKqpEOr

Anonymous | Post ID: @EKqpEOr-2gms

In COP offices outside the US and Canada, I have seen no American/Canadian employees making an effort to learn the local language (Bahasa Indonesian, Arabic, Kazakh, Russian, etc.).

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Post ID: @2czd+EKqpEOr

Such a good summary " Vendor | Post ID: @EKqpEOr " - thank you for writing this - this is why I keep coming to this site, most of posts are junk but every once in a while I see a gem like this

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Post ID: @2mqh+EKqpEOr

This is spot on!!! It's frustrating for the employees, too. At least for the employees that actually want to do their job.

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Post ID: @2iri+EKqpEOr

"Yup... All vendors are always on time and on budget, if there not, it must be the client's fault or bad weather. I have never heard of a case where the owner's engineers and technical staff had to come in after the install to make it work, it's always done right the first time. When i go to site, they are always giving it a 110%, you never see them sitting in the trailer or truck doing nothing.

There are problems on both sides of the fence..."

Not saying that my company or our service is perfect, but it is very good. We're a family owned business that has managed to go head-to-head with the largest service companies in the business. Our equipment failure rate is less than 5%, and we're on time. We bend over backwards to satisfy customers demands. Today, we had a crew offer to work their scheduled day off (tomorrow) to cover a COP job that 'planning the company man (sorry, that's an 80+ year old term for 'Project Lead') to supply a time and road directions; and an engineer to provide logs and other data that's been forgotten or is incorrect. Not only that, I have to drive across town to pick this stuff up because the company man is too lazy to get it himself.

With other companies, ONE person can set up a job, provide all the well info, charge codes, etc. at the wellsite. Is it really that hard for COP to do it? Sorry to be so critical, but COP just makes it difficult to get anything done efficiently. There's really no reason for this.

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Post ID: @2koz+EKqpEOr

In the Calgary office they go to great lengths to be identified as a employer that values diversity. I have a few people in my group that can not speak a word of English... The worst part of all, they make zero effort to even learn the language. This has caused major issues in team cohesion and QC.

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Post ID: @2gms+EKqpEOr

My group looked like a United Nations meeting. And they were NOT the most qualified.

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Post ID: @1gme+EKqpEOr

The issue with diversity at ConocoPhillips is not that management does indeed look for the best qualified candidate so long as the best qualified candidate is a white male.

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Post ID: @1nfv+EKqpEOr

I am an ex-CPC. The post is damn right on accountability and mis-management issues. Disagree on the diversity comment. You are looking the best regardless the race or sex.

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Post ID: @1yzs+EKqpEOr

@EKqpEOr-dmi

Agree on your points, but ConocoPhillips DOES have a Veterans org, just so you know

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Post ID: @1rkr+EKqpEOr

Dead on indeed and that is coming from an employee. That's spot on how the inside is ran.

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Post ID: @sjp+EKqpEOr

Totally agree on the diversity BS. Couldn't believe that COP formed a LGBT club to go along with all the other BS clubs. Never saw COP form a US Veterans club! What a shame.

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Post ID: @dmi+EKqpEOr

Sounds a lot like CVX, go figure

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Post ID: @eka+EKqpEOr

The poster is DEAD ON with a few of his points. Wayyyyyy too much process and wayyyyy too many cooks in the kitchen on most pieces of work. He/She is also correct about the 'don't give a shit attitude amongst office employees'. However, should they? I'm an Ex-COP alum, jettisoned after 2 years with the company at a 2 rating and all that other BS. All my projects were on time and below budget, significantly outperforming my peers. I was even promoted in the months before being laid off. My question to the board - does any of it even matter? How do you go on treating the company like anything BUT an ATM? Why does anybody working for the company give a shit - there is no reason to, as high performers were let go. Remember hard work gets you nothing more than MORE HARD WORK. It is just a F'n job - plan you're mini vacations, they're a lot more fun than working. Like the poster said, the company doesn't notice you anyways and considers you as noting more than a seat filler - why should you ACT like anything more then?

As for diversity, I've never understood the big push anyways. Supposedly (despite all evidence to the contrary) the company is looking for the BEST people, not 'those who fit a gender/race/sexuality quota'. If I need 10 people I don't care if the 10 best are White Men, women, Purple haired Asian lesbians - we're told companies are looking for the BEST, so why not hire the BEST, diversity be dammed.

Apologies if I offended anybody - rant over

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Post ID: @lma+EKqpEOr

Yup... All vendors are always on time and on budget, if there not, it must be the client's fault or bad weather. I have never heard of a case where the owner's engineers and technical staff had to come in after the install to make it work, it's always done right the first time. When i go to site, they are always giving it a 110%, you never see them sitting in the trailer or truck doing nothing.

There are problems on both sides of the fence...

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Post ID: @lcv+EKqpEOr

I was a contractor at COP for more than four years and I agree 100%. COP is about 15-20 years behind the other major oil companies with regards to their accounting systems and document imaging. There's a lot of great people working there but the dinosaurs in management need to go.

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Post ID: @dic+EKqpEOr

There is a lot less diversity when layoffs happen. And considering that COP operates in several countries, it needs diversity to smoothly work in some of the countries.

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Post ID: @ggg+EKqpEOr

excellent post .. Not surprised to see this happening though..

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Post ID: @sjh+EKqpEOr

You are absolutely correct!

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Post ID: @aiw+EKqpEOr

I am on board with the original post with the exception of the diversity statement. The company continues to be clueless as to the concept of diversity. A diversity presentation a few years ago was attended by 200 new hires and two HR managers.

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Post ID: @uxi+EKqpEOr

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