Thread regarding ExxonMobil Corp. layoffs

Surviving +35 years of Oilfield Employment

My assumption was that the oil company did not love me and, I certainly did not love them. I was in the industry to make $$ and retire. To do so, I had to learn to hustle for the work.

Over a period of +35 years, I worked for 9 different companies after graduating: Getty Oil, Amoco, T H Hill, Halliburton, Purssage Engerie , Union Texas Petroleum, Arco, Vaster, ExxonMobil. All but one as an employee. I collected pensions from Amoco and ExxonMobil. I was never laid off or fired. I simply left when I got a better offer (normally driven by more $$). My last 15 years was with EM. I finally took the EM at 65 yo. 35 years in the oil patch was enough fro me :)

But, it WAS a wild ride with many busts and booms. To survive, I had to keep my skills tack sharp. My thing was ERD, then extreme HRZ completions, then DW subsea tree installation via wire. I authored many industry SPE papers and coordinated several industry events….. I was always trying to position myself at the leading edge of technology and operations for the benefit of the company (and for me). I also maintained an oilfield network and used it to move to the next job opportunity. And finally, I prayed a lot that I would stay employed, be able to provide for my family and make retirement.

I don't see how a young person in today's oilfield could do any less than I did (hustle for work) and expect to maintain some sort of continuously employment in this industry. The instability inherent within this industry is nothing new; from what I can see that is not going away. You always need to be planning and positioning for the next job.

Good luck to your all - JG

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| 2367 views | | 9 replies (last December 9, 2020) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+18jELtqe

9 replies (most recent on top)

Op, congrats on the retirement and years in the patch. Wasting your time with this bunch. Enjoy what you spent a lifetime achieving.

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Post ID: @1toc+18jELtqe

Remember this what do you call second place? First loser.
There is a reason we have gold, silver, and bronze in the Olympic Games.
Everyone cannot get an award, and everything you do is not perfect. You better learn to s— it up.

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Post ID: @1ofw+18jELtqe

@qdo+18jELtqe That’s right they are your kids. Raised by boomers. You reap what you sow.

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Post ID: @1yot+18jELtqe

@ruf+18jELtqe You must be one of those id–ts we have who thinks reviewing a technical document means commenting on spelling and punctuation errors. Tip: focus on content and you will add much more value.

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Post ID: @1zyr+18jELtqe

It's a combination of hard work, skill, and the luck of being in the right place at the right time.

It is NOT just hard work and skill, as you say it is.

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Post ID: @ykq+18jELtqe

Hey JG - when you authored those "industry SPE papers" did you use phrases like "maintain some sort of continuously employment" and "Good luck to your all"? Perhaps your admin assistant ... oops I mean proofreader should be on your Xmas card list. Good luck to your too JG!

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Post ID: @ruf+18jELtqe

I recall the .com boom and bust, followed by this boom.
Walmart may have a lot of ignorant hillbillies going to it and a no longer selling made in USA products, but they do have a sound business model. That’s where we should grow our skills. I’ll be the greeter. EMIT to Electronics. Geoscientists to garden and shovels, accounting, well to accounting. Support staff to the registers. Operations to sports, maintenance to hardware. Former managers picking up shopping carts and sanitizing them for Stryok’s hillbillies.

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Post ID: @zro+18jELtqe

The "new" generation is not getting hurt by this downturn for long. The younger workers will go work for Amazon or Google and be just fine. They are still young enough to pivot to a new industry. The ones getting hurt are the 40+ year old workers who have dated and specialized skills that cant be moved to another industry. If you stay at a company too long you get stuck to that company and when they no longer need you then you are screwed. No one but yourself to blame for getting comfortable. Live and learn is all you can do at this point.

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Post ID: @unc+18jELtqe

You’re a boomer! Maybe a good Ag as well?
Our parents were depression raised. We learned to cut the toothpaste tube in half and wipe out the remaining paste before getting a new tube out of the cupboard. Our kids were raised receiving participation awards and never knew what not winning or defeat feels like. Hopefully our grandkids will and right this ship.

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Post ID: @qdo+18jELtqe

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