Thread regarding ExxonMobil Corp. layoffs

The company made me burn out, then laid me off

As a mid career employee, I was laid off in early December. I was not surprised given my low ranking over the past few years. But now that I have had a month to process it all, I can't help but reflect on how I was trapped in a hopeless mental cycle from playing the ranking game that eventually lead to burnout symptoms: decreased work satisfaction, feelings of helplessness, and worst of all, cynicism. This isn't another 'bash EM management' post, but more to reflect on my own experiences within the company, and maybe some of you can relate, in order to bring myself some closure.

I wasn't always this cynical. Early in my career, I had a lot of energy, enjoyed my work, and ranked fairly well. I enjoyed my job and learning from the really smart people I worked with, as well as mentoring the newer employees. I found as the years went by, each CL 'promotion' seemed to make life more miserable. One assessment cycle after I transferred to a new group, I was ranked in Q5 - and I'll never forget the words from my new supervisor: "in this company if you just do your job, you won't make it." Basically at my level, more was expected - I needed to not just do my job, but continuously find step out projects to even be considered an average employee.

Every year after that seemed to repeat itself over and over again. Get ranked Q5, commit to doing better throughout the year, no negative feedback throughout, write the best PADP I had ever written full of achievements and improvements, then get ranked in Q5 again. A few years of going through this cycle slowly beat me down, as I was gradually experiencing the signs of burnout.

Sign 1: Decreased satisfaction and sense of accomplishment

I was getting told "good job" all year, even getting recognition rewards for my work, only to get ranked low at the end of it all. It tells me that absolutely NONE of my work I did all year was appreciated. I quote from Linkin Park "I tried so hard, and got so far, but in the end it doesn't even matter". Any future work I did didn't feel important. Any "good jobs" from managers started to feel fake, and any completed project started to feel empty as I know I will get ranked low despite finishing it. Imagine coming in to work day in and out just for March/April to roll around to spit on everything you've done all year.

Sign 2: Feeling trapped and helpless

The interchangeable reasons for my low ranking every year seemed arbitrary and left me feeling helpless. One year it was "you need to be more of a leader". Then next year it was "you didn't do enough work". Each year I would try to rectify the previous year's issue, including taking on projects to show that I have improved, only to be hit with the other reason the next. No specifics on why I was ranked low either, each year it was just "relative to your peers". Even the "performance improvement plan" I went through one year felt like a monthly update meeting with my supervisor and wasn't designed to help me improve performance at all. Each PIP meeting, my supervisor would nod his head with approval of my progress (even nodding off one meeting!), then rank me low again. The systems in place really made me feel like no matter what I did, there was something wrong with me and there was nothing I could do about it. I felt like a kid that was kicked down in the playground by a bully, then having him tell me that he will let me up if I shine his shoes for him, then kick me down again as I try to get up after doing so.

Sign 3: Increasing cynicism

I had become extremely cynical about the organization and started to see the bad in everything. Every time an email from leadership came out preaching how important mental health and compassion was, I would scoff at how hypocritical they were by putting me in this mental prison. I found how incredibly ironic they keep emphasizing teamwork and collaboration, and yet they would rank us against each other based on how well we worked together. And as part of the "culture change", they want the workers to be more trusted and have more autonomy on decisions, yet I still have to go through countless peer reviews, mini peer reviews, and pre-peer review reviews, and get make sure there is absolute consensus before any decisions are made. It just felt like my time was just spent playing the system to make people happy instead of doing any actual work.

Not to mention they want people to "fail fast" or "learn from mistakes" - but if you put a fail fast learning on your PADP, that is a fast way to ensure you get a failure on your ranking cycle. I remember the time when they put up a "learn from mistake" story of Thomas Edison on the front page of the intranet and how he failed 10,000 times before he invented the lightbulb. NEWSFLASH: If Thomas Edison worked for EM, he would have been MLRP'd pretty quickly for making so many mistakes!

At some point my low performance was probably justified because I was exhibiting all the signs of burnout - procrastination, withdrawing by not attending work socials, dialing into meetings but mentally checking out... etc. I was tired, and it didn't even matter anymore.
At this point, all happiness had been drained from my life. Work hours were lifeless, and evenings and weekends were spent dreading the upcoming work day. And as a mid career employee with still a ways to go, there was no end in sight to the pain. A few months ago, I couldn't take it anymore and told my family I wanted to quit. However, as EM had just made cuts in Australia and Europe, my wife had advised me to wait to get laid off instead - it was probably coming.
As December rolled around, I was at the point of hoping to get laid off. Work had just become all about the next ranking cycle - but the thought had struck me...what if I don't get laid off? That means wasting another year of my life working pointless projects with no passion, only to get told I s—. I feel EM had stolen a few years of my life already, I couldn't stand to give another. But as I sat in the Zoom call with my supervisor and she told me that I was unfortunately getting let go, I felt nothing but...relief. For the first time in a long time, I can look to the future and feel free. No fearing the March/April hunger games to roll around, no more waking up and feeling like your life is being wasted, no more cynical triggers - I finally have my life back.

The last month, I started to enjoy life again. I started to pick up a lot of passion projects, re-started a lot of hobbies that I previously had no energy for, and learning new skills as my technical skills I have learned at EM has really pigeon holed me. I still keep a pulse on what is going on from these forums (how hard is it not to after working here for so long?), and can't help but think about how tough the next year would be for those who survived. I know morale was already pretty low prior to the layoffs, and I know for myself that if I had survived the layoffs, my mental state would not have. I hope for the best for everyone still in there.

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| 7942 views | | 34 replies (last January 7, 2021) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+18KLVUFE

34 replies (most recent on top)

Amazing insights!

I am in a different O&G company (starts with S), but was also placed in the bottom bucket a while ago and could never get ever so be out due to vicious management. I am certain the upcoming layoffs will set me free though.

The fake appreciation is soul s—ing, exactly how the poster described. Or having to align with clueless !diots over and over again just to make them feel important. Looking forward to being let go!

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Post ID: @3bko+18KLVUFE

I am holding on only due to working from home. I am actually getting work done instead of constantly being interrupted in the office. I also don’t have to hear the ongoing nonsense (mostly office politics) in the halls or in the open areas where most of our desks reside. I will admit that when we are asked to go back to the office, I will have a hard time readjusting...

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Post ID: @2wfm+18KLVUFE

Sick, sick, sick culture and I somehow survived nearly 37 years of it to retire. Anybody that has the temerity to defend that culture needs to examine their soul...if they still have one.

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Post ID: @2qdo+18KLVUFE

@1cel+18KLVUFE

Life is short. I’m going to work 20 years and enjoy 35+ years of retirement. #fire

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Post ID: @1wik+18KLVUFE

Yes

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Post ID: @1lih+18KLVUFE

I’ve worked for other companies and there are equal to and better paying companies with much, much healthier environments than Exxon. I’m not sure how it’s perpetuated by people who work there that it’s “the best”, whatever that means. Some companies are better than others in specific areas, but it’s impossible to be the best in everything. The arrogance is so thick that you can cut it with a knife. Sure there are also other companies like this but I can only think of one other, and it’s not a major.

My first impression and experience with Exxon was at a Q&A at my college. The Exxon employee called on a person for a question. The audience member asked what they wore to work. The Exxon employee completely ignored the question. It was extremely rude. Not sure I’ve seen something more rude in a professional setting. There was no reason for the employee to react that way, there was nothing in the way it was asked or whatever that would cause someone to go well maybe they had a reason to react that way . No. To determine if a culture is right for you this is a good question. It can tell you if a place is uptight and stuff or more casual and relaxed. How they answer the question is equally important. This first impression has proven to be true many times over. It captured the attitude of the company. This is Differ g and worst than many other companies.

So go in peace, but hold firm in your thoughts and experiences. Don’t let anyone change your mind. You are the one who formed your thoughts based on what you have experienced and what others have as well.
I am not wishing good luck, because we should not live life to chance but should optimize life based on decisions. Instead of good luck, let’s seize the day. Those who forcefully advance will take destiny into their own hands.
Go in peace, but never forget. Let’s learn how to be better people by this by not perpetuating the treatment and attitudes we have seen from Exxon and all of corporate America.

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Post ID: @1vxd+18KLVUFE

I’ve worked for other companies. Not every oil/chemical company is like Exxon. Competitors Shell and Chevron among others have different employee business models/culture. Validate it anyway you want, but there are companies that pay equal to and better than Exxon with much, much healthier environments. Anyone that has a job now should be thankful however and be thankful for the opportunity to learn. My first experience/impression with Exxon was at my college with a Q&A from someone recruiting. A audience member asked the Exxon employee what was the dress code for work. The employee 100% totally ignored the question and moved on. To understand this during Q&A time the employee called on the audience member to ask their question, then ignored them. There was no reason to ignore this. The person wasn't a heckler or whatever else you may use to excuse the employee. No. It was extremely rude.
The answer is simple as: “well it depends on your function. If you work in a refinery or on a rig then you will use fire r—dant clothing while in the plant/unit boundaries. In the office, business casual or business dress. Executive wear is business dress.” Then give some examples For better clarity to let them know what it is and what it is not, you know hey it’s not jean friendly or whatever else they may think. Some companies are lax, and higher ups wear jeans and non business wear. It is telling of the culture when compared to different companies and how they answer the question is also telling. It’s a way to tell uptight and stuffy vs lad back and open. This first impression rang true. It is exactly how Exxon is. If you are young in your career at Exxon I recommend making a goal to get out. Do it with a plan, not by a random job. Make sure you know what you are liking for in terms of culture and career, then build your potential list off of that. Limit things that happen by luck, and maximize things that happen by choices you make. So no I won’t say good luck, but I will say seize the day. The violent take it by storm.

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Post ID: @1nau+18KLVUFE

I played the game, towed the company line, did plenty of s—ing up to supervisors and survived the ranking system (and yes, as I approached 65 years old my ranking dropped which caused me some concern). I did this for nearly 4 decades until I retired It was well worth it. I raised a family and fully funded a retirement. The trade off is now +20 years (God willing) of continuous days off.

Based on the posts below, some of you might need to toughen up. No company will ever love you especially in an industry that is currently shrinking. If you’re going to stay in this industry you’re going to most likely do as I did plus continuously look for the ‘next job’ in this depressed industry.

Go in pease.

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Post ID: @1cel+18KLVUFE

I can vouch for accuracy of post by Op, as well as many supportive responses below. Not if, but when EM kicks you to the curb and forgets everything you have done for them over an entire career. Finally had a couple of very senior level execs admit that it wasn’t anything you do or don’t do, it was just how the system is designed to work for all but the very very few that make it to the top. Even VPs get kicked to the bottom of their rank list with age. Yes, having been made wealthy over the years by EM certainly softens the blow for managers, but it still takes away their dignity and accomplishments. You know the rules now that have been kept secret for years, so decide if EM is worth it for you. You have a decent shot at a very well funded career and retirement, but you may not feel very good about yourself or your career if job satisfaction and legacy are important to you.

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Post ID: @sjx+18KLVUFE

@pnh+18KLVUFE

I get gift cards every year for excellent work, then kicked to the bottom during ranking. Happens without fail. I’m glad to be out of the abuse cycle.

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Post ID: @xiz+18KLVUFE

@pnh+18KLVUFE This seems to have been a strategy for the last five years to lower ranking or cut people.

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Post ID: @pov+18KLVUFE

@snx+18KLVUFE What do YOU do?

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Post ID: @yne+18KLVUFE

Ditto.

Also, a lot of survivors need to stop feeling superior. Many of those laid off aren’t low performers. Wrong place, wrong time. And quite a few who were laid off didn’t go into the fetal position. Some of us are even going to leave the rat race and enjoy early retirement.

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Post ID: @tqu+18KLVUFE

Excellent and helpful post, OP.
Verbalizes many aspects of career I felt, but had not put in clear thought.

Many thanks and best to all.
Try to find some positive 'group feeling' out there - broader the better.
Golden rule good start.

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Post ID: @oga+18KLVUFE

What exactly did most of you people do? What does working on "projects" even mean? Sounds to me like most of you were creating TPS reports/presentations all day. Thats not actually "work."

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Post ID: @snx+18KLVUFE

Good summary of a career with EM, even for those in middle management and for those not always in bottom of rank list. Wears you down over time and nothing is ever quite good enough. Always at risk of dramatic drop in ranking by simply ending up with the wrong manager or daring to say no to an advancement opportunity that you don’t want.

That’s why so many boomers appear as they do. They simply want to crawl across the age 55 retirement threshold and be done. Most have made significant contributions over career, but are worn out and sitting at bottom of rank list by design.

Yes, the money is good and is enough of an incentive for many to hang on. But OP paints an accurate picture for what it will be like for almost everyone that sticks it out at EM. Early career folks need to seriously consider this reality and decide if the sacrifice and risks are worth it for them. This is not the place to be if you want long-term job satisfaction and security.

Most mid and late career folks feel stuck in the system due to pension, lack of outside opportunities, unrealized incentive comp for some, etc. And they know they will end up completely humiliated and disgraced at end of career by design, so it is a difficult position for them as well.

OP, Thanks for an honest and accurate post.

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Post ID: @rqu+18KLVUFE

My most recent supervisor was great about quickly letting us know if we did something incorrectly. I respected him/her tremendously for that.

However, the previous supervisor would wait until the review meeting to say that you did XYZ incorrectly 6 months ago, with that being the first time you had heard about it. One year he/she emailed everybody with a list of very specific dates/times over the entire year where we had to explain what we were doing. I’m talking 15 minute time frames. It was ridiculous. From that point on I spent quite a bit of time each day documenting and time stamping everything I did. I would not get caught in that trap again.

My last few years (save the past 6 months with layoff talks) were the best I had at the company, both personally and professionally. I had good reviews, cards written to me by management thanking me, gift cards given to me for completing projects ahead of schedule, and other rewards for my hard work. So when the layoffs came last month, I knew it wasn’t because of my skills and performance. It was something else, over which I had no control.

My December was great, as a I got to breathe, relax, and enjoy my family. I will miss my co-workers tremendously, but not the leadership. But, there’s nothing I can do about that, so I won’t focus on it. Here’s to a much better 2021. Good luck, folks!

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Post ID: @pnh+18KLVUFE

KO's are a joke too. You can't be truthful in them because they are not always treated as confidential. I wrote one and the supervisor printed it out and gave it to the person for whom I wrote it. WTF?!?!? How do I know this? because the person told me!! Unbelievable!

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Post ID: @qjc+18KLVUFE

ExxonMobil is the abusive partner in this relationship and keeps throwing money at you to stay until they find a younger more attractive partner.
You as the employee stay in hopes the partner will change but never does.

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Post ID: @mna+18KLVUFE

This is why XOM prefers to hire new graduates straight out of college. They can be indoctrinated to. The company Environnement and have no clue there might be something better. Supervisors use to be groomed, but it has become the goal of many to achieve “ status” with no idea what a leader is. Nor do many even care about the mental health = performance issue in the corporate world. The PIP is the stick and the money the carrot. The constant threat of lay-off is the stressor used to get more done in less time.
A real leader is a mentor.

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Post ID: @mrg+18KLVUFE

@eqx+18KLVUFE

The problem is training of the supervisors? You don't say!

How about how most supervisors haven't a clue what you do nor have they ever been in a position to understand what work is being completed beneith them. It blows my mind how most supervisors in this company are zero help when problems arise. I bunch of dead weight to the company aside from making sure that paper is being pushed.

This company seriously needs to get rid of the management layers (and useless performance assessments) and move to a group lead type supervision if it's goal is to becom the lowest cost provider.

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Post ID: @etl+18KLVUFE

A big failing of the feedback process is people in general don’t know how to give good feedback. More training should be provided in this area and not just got supervisors. IKOs often give useless feedback, if you are asked to provide feedback take it seriously.

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Post ID: @eqx+18KLVUFE

Done.

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Post ID: @vhq+18KLVUFE

Thanks for sharing this. Most of the Supervisors / Mangers are puppet and not qualified enough. They are not leader to stand for their people. Only want to s— bosses back. Thus, no matter what you do, how efficiently you work to improve your performance incompetent Supervisors won’t give you good feedback. Worked for many companies with different smart leaders and respected them and vice versa. This is the first time I feel that I should slap this Exxon Supervisor. When unqualified person got power they like to do that.

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Post ID: @ach+18KLVUFE

It hurts to be rejected. It’s hurts. I feel like we’re not prepared for how the real world is. It hit me in the side of the head! I was naive and thought people were nice and good. When I went to work a few years in, I realized that I was not in “Kansas” anymore. People can be mean. I’ve witnessed mobbing, character assassination all that stuff. Work is not as professional as I expected at all. Once I said something in defense of a guy who was being talked about by his coworker. Then the talker turned on me! I have severe trust issues. I honestly don’t think I can make it to retirement.

I wish they would grade operators and do the forced ranking with them. Also include managers.

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Post ID: @arx+18KLVUFE

A big issue and you nailed it, is that there are managers who are not exact in what it takes to excel. I’ve seen with my own eyes performance curves be fit to match people instead of allowing the curve to fall where it may. This is true everywhere, and also it’s not always true. The truth often is that people’s quantitative performances are about the same and qualitative factors differentiate. If someone is taking on more work and quality is the same yeah it’s gonna bump them up. But how do you know they are taking on extra work?
I’m convinced that not informing an employee what exactly it is that is required, results in 99.9% of failings.
Networking with coworkers finding out what they are doing (if they will tell you), and finding a mentor higher up even if they’re from a competitor can make a world of difference. It’s a bad generalization to assume that everyone who is cynical on this site is a low rated performer. Many people are burnt out of corporate life in general. It’s also a bad generalization to assume someone who got laid off or rated low is a bad performer or somehow inferior to their colleagues. This is the thing that gets at me. There are many stories from all over industry where work injustice has happened. I worked with a mechanical engineer who told me face to face that he was rated low and cited it was due to lack of teamwork. It was the first he had heard of it. How do you think that affects a person? Different people have different meanings to teamwork and that is why the manager should explain how to be successful, spelling it out. These types of things go with you and will affect relationships outside of work and etc for years. Another person in my group got a lower than expected performance rating due to something the boss made up. They were gaslighted in my opinion. They can find ways so you don’t score better so that you are not up for promotion or to force you out. Both of these people were squared away. When I work with a person I have my one assessment. What can a person do? My hope is not in this world. I’ve learned over time to pull info out of my managers. I manage up, asking them exactly how to be the best and checking in frequently. You have to. They don’t really care about how you do. We have to take control of the situation ourselves.
I hope if you were let go that your boss did it with grace. None of this attitude stuff that I’ve heard before where one manager said “too little, too late” while snarking.
I was like you OP, full of energy when I began my career. I accomplished a lot. I had my boss’s boss coming to me for assignments. I ended up with a manager and some colleagues who clashed with action oriented work style. I had to dial it back and lost the passion. People felt I was driving them, but I didn’t mean it that way at all. I switched my work style to being slow and quiet, and I have never regained the passion. I’m ready to stop work for good, but I’m too young yet.

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Post ID: @qog+18KLVUFE

I had a very similar experience when at XOM for only 2-1/2 years. They begged me and offered $$$ to leave my 20 year career at age 50 to come work for the “world class” Exxon. Moved my family to Spring and committed to a solid 15 years to get full pension/retirement/etc.

I took the PIL option back in July, rather than play the PIP BS game. Moved back to north Texas where is home.

I don’t regret the experience at XOM. Rather, consider it a learning experience and a stepping stone to something better.

Got a nice job with a small company outside of O&G, where they appreciate me and I can office from home. No annual performance reviews and everyone reports directly to the owner.

The whole experience was simply disappointing. Expected much more from that “world class” company.

Move on with your life and good luck.

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Post ID: @rlp+18KLVUFE

I applaud the OP for sharing this...and it rings true for me as well, however, given the enormous paycheck every two weeks, I’ll happily put up with the BS because it’d be difficult to make this kind of money elsewhere. The median household income for a family of 4 in the US is $40k. I’ll happily “play the game” for a base salary of over $110k/yr and bonus.

Burnout is real but it’s also very relative to our salaries.

Pucker up buttercup and quit whining.

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Post ID: @aiz+18KLVUFE

I spent almost 31 years with the majority of never being able to take time off without being called multiple times... was ranked low for the first time last year (2019) and of course was of course put in the bottom for 2020 and out the door I went. The burnout is real and for the first time in 14 years I was truly able to enjoy the holidays with my kids and grandkids. I was actually present and not worrying about my phone ringing because someone else didn’t care to meet a deadline and I had to jump hoops to fix it..... by the time I walked out the door I realized they did me a favor. I may be older, but have had offers for consulting and permanent work. I worked for private companies before hiring on with XOM and I can tell you that it is no where the same place as it used to be. I hope thoughts let go find peace and know it is for the best and for those still there good luck and PLEASE do not let it destroy you!

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Post ID: @met+18KLVUFE

So true, I usually am here for the lulz but this is something the “culture” people at the company need to understand. Many people, including myself who is getting into mid-career and still ranked well at the company already feel the same way as OP.

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Post ID: @lgb+18KLVUFE

😢. Get Help, fast!

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Post ID: @ugq+18KLVUFE

Love the Linkin Park quote! That song was playing in my head during the layoff week.

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Post ID: @zeh+18KLVUFE

Thanks for sharing!

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Post ID: @avf+18KLVUFE

Ditto. This is exactly the same way I felt and what I went through..

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Post ID: @vta+18KLVUFE

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