Chevron will release it's bright and shiny new management plan on the October 31st earning call for the quarter ending Sep 2016. The concept has been talked about here and all through Chevron but it now has very specific backbone. It is going to mean many more layoffs and of the 181 people working on "Project Propell" only 17 members of the team work directly for Chevron (Less than 10%). The other members are from BCG, Steptoe & Johnson, McKinsey & Company and the Brattle Group. For NA and SA here is the main takeaways that have been accepted by the company/board in principle and will be executed by January 1st..
° Chevron will centralize leadership/decision making/strategic planning for all BU's in Houston. The BU will have a small execution field team.
°This model makes 80% of all BU jobs expendable. One all encompassing finance group with field lieutenants at the BU. This is the example in the business plan for Project Propell.
°Investment decisions will focus extremely hard on internal ROI ( For us who I worked at other companies this is normal, at Chevron politics can make a 5% ROI beat a 35%, if a person is "Liked". Chevron has hired several key 3G capital assets managers to help secure better decision capability.
°Chevron will use unconventionals for increased production over the next 5 years and then with all of the work at the end of those 5 years being NOJV.
°Bane was secured on an emergency basis to help stabilize Chevrons debt concern. Both plummeting ratings and cost as rates rise.
°As one of the SVP's working for one of the above consulting firms elaborated, Chevron will be nothing more than an investment bank with BU's competing for capital.
°Chevron will only compete in oil in the unconventional plays over the next 5 years, no natural gas or Natural Gas Liquids. ALL of Chevrons Marcellus and Utica average is for sale. No asset spent at AMBU for 5 yrs.
°Midcon will have 24 rigs, all NOJV running by 2020 for oil.
°Chevron will reduce all internal consulting services (Think ETC) by 2018.
I will have more info on this over the next 4 weeks. The takeaway is as hard as the market is I believe Chevron is becoming the most unstable from an employee standpoint. But you will see a few more thousand gone in 6-9 months.