If it's to cut employees, sell assets and hope for a quick turnaround on oil prices while stringing the investors along with an artificially high dividend, then the end is near. The company is cash poor and the assets are in a buyers market. On the current path, Chevron will be carved up and the majority of the employees that are left will not be absorbed into the buyer's organization. Look at what's going on in Conoco in the San Juans and Canada to get a feel.
I don't think Chevron leadership cares anymore about its employees, or its share holders or the company itself. And they don't have the right stuff to fix the problem. They will make timid moves and collect their bonuses and stock options and bleed the company until the end - and retire very wealthy.