Thread regarding Chevron Corp. layoffs

Glassdoor Feedback Analysis (Chevron, June 2025)

So, I downloaded 200 recent Chevron employee reviews on Glassdoor and categorized the feedback (well AI did it). This is what I got:

Chevron Employee Review Analysis

  1. Positive Feedback (20 Themes)
  1. Strong compensation and benefits (salary, bonus, pension, insurance)
  2. Flexible work schedules including 9/80 and hybrid/remote options
  3. Supportive coworkers and friendly work environment
  4. Good overall work-life balance
  5. Opportunities for career growth and professional development
  6. Safety culture is emphasized and respected in operations
  7. Access to executives and SMEs in certain roles
  8. Collaborative, team-oriented atmosphere
  9. Respect for engineering roles with long-term value
  10. Exposure to technical projects and tools
  11. Company-wide commitment to training and learning
  12. Positive location experiences (e.g., El Segundo, Bakersfield)
  13. Transparency in pay and job expectations in some departments
  14. Emphasis on ethics and compliance
  15. Internal events and engagement programs
  16. Relocation and travel opportunities for employee development
  17. Strong emphasis on safety in field operations
  18. Autonomy in some departments fostering trust
  19. Robust onboarding programs for new hires
  20. Diverse workforce and inclusion initiatives noted positively
  1. Negative Feedback (20 Themes)
  1. Frequent reorganizations and layoffs reducing job security
  2. Lack of strategic vision or clarity from executives
  3. Ongoing offshoring and outsourcing of U.S. roles
  4. Bureaucracy slowing project approvals and execution
  5. Heavy administrative overhead burdens technical staff
  6. Chronic instability in certain job functions
  7. Disconnect between leadership and staff at ground level
  8. Culture shift from employee-first to cost-focused
  9. External consultants driving decisions frequently
  10. Favoritism and office politics affecting promotions
  11. Slow and unclear promotion pathways
  12. Micromanagement in specific teams or departments
  13. Communication breakdowns across units
  14. Layoffs executed without clarity or support
  15. Erosion of benefits compared to previous years
  16. Employees feel undervalued and easily replaceable
  17. Frequent role changes without proper consultation
  18. Leadership avoids accountability during change
  19. Diversity efforts seen as performative by some
  20. Relocation demands causing major life disruption
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| 1732 views | | 4 replies (last June 15, 2025) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1jxpjcjd3

4 replies (most recent on top)

And that's what you've learned during your career so far? How to use AI, like anyone else can do, even a 5 year old? Well, newsbreak, this isn't layoff related, anyone else can easily find it, it's not new info, and well, just
YAWN.................................................................................

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Post ID: @gc+1jxpjcjd3

@a1
This is absolutely true and it absolutely trends with every failed organizational venture we've gone down over the last 15+ years. Zero accountability by the individuals getting paid to make these decisions internally.

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Post ID: @ga+1jxpjcjd3

Evil HR group should be listed

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Post ID: @ax+1jxpjcjd3

B.9. LOL hahahah "External consultants driving decisions frequently"...

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Post ID: @a1+1jxpjcjd3

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