Thread regarding ExxonMobil Corp. layoffs

History Repeats

This is from 2007-2008 period when Calgary’s job market was hot. Lots of young engineers were quitting Imperial Oil. Imperial was desperate to retain its people. Salary bumps across the board were in double digits (and not the lower double digits).

I remember attending Engineering VP Eddy Lui’s town hall meeting for the engineers and geoscientists. Eddy was explaining how Imperial Oil had a d-mbbell shaped demography curve - lots of people in their very early careers, lots of people at the end of there career, and almost no-one in the mid-career in the company. The reason for this demography was Imperial’s decision to lay off and not hire anyone in the early and mid 90s. Eddy said, “Never again Imperial will make such a mistake!”. In his words, Imperial will hire engineers at a steady pace irrespective of the company’s situation. Eddy and upper management were worried about the future of the company. When the seniors retire, they would leave a vacuum in the company.

Let’s come to the present now. Some of the folks who attended that session are at the top of the company now. I am telling you, you folks will have to repeat Eddy’s comment when no one will come to Imperial Oil when the market recovers. You will be saying, “Never again Imperial will make such a mistake!”.


by
| 3145 views | | 10 replies (last October 15) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1k7jmjb57

10 replies (most recent on top)

They called it the great crew change and all of industry made those statements. Now they just think engineers are a dime a dozen and have no value. They think you can just hire one at any time off the street and get the same results. Maybe not the same but good enough. Good enough should be our new motto. We no longer strive for anything other than average. All of industry is going this way. Management doesn’t have a clue how hard it is to get things done at the working level these days. A few of us carrying a huge load. Remember John Galt.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @dn+1k7jmjb57

Yes there are many engineers in India but they don’t have experience. Just throwing bodies at a problem doesn’t solve it. This isn’t trench warfare after all.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @dk+1k7jmjb57

@cq tell me you know nothing about the significant positive cash generation of the Canadian assets without telling me….lol. Talk to someone in finance and ask them where the money to fund Guyana and Permian came from.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @d9+1k7jmjb57

Most of the Canadian projects really svck, financial and environmental messes. Lots of d-bag arrogant a-holes with way too high opinion of themselves

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @cq+1k7jmjb57

Worried about the shape of the demographics curve?! Now that’s funny! That’s not what’s keeping anyone up at night these days.

The problem with Imperial is y’all rode the reserves obsession wave and sold cr-p projects to your American overlords for decades. Kept many a Canadian career going and carried many to blissful retirement. Now those cr-p projects aren’t cash flowing and your American overlords are on to your little schemes. Not going to let it happen again.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @cb+1k7jmjb57

@b1 lol you are working for an American company. Trump will correct everything! One at a time.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @b7+1k7jmjb57

@av smarter and better educated than those US frat boys from mid-tear universities.....

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @b1+1k7jmjb57

@af curry boys! Many many many….

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @av+1k7jmjb57

The difference between 2007 and now? They now have an unlimited supply of people in India, and they don’t care about processes or doing things right anymore (regardless of the WAEM or standards of business conduct corporate spiel)

This time it’s different

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @af+1k7jmjb57

Leave it to ExxonMobil to worry about

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @a6+1k7jmjb57

Post a reply

: