https://www.businessinsider.com/exxon-mishandled-layoffs-morale-oil-price-collapse-2021-2
12 replies (most recent on top)
If you listen to the analyst calls it’s very clear that Wall Streets perspective comes before the employees well-being. Darren Woods spends more time addressing analysts then employees. Gee, he spoke ONE time in a forum at the campus during the year.
Somebody missed nap time. And yes, you have no future at EM.
Moral at Exxon s—s. Already got the threat that it will be a tough year for rankings... guess what, I don't give a sh–! Fire me or not, I really don't care. Since I'm a white male I've pretty much maxed out career potential at this Woke Globalist c-ap company. I hope the hedge funds take us over and figure out how to make money instead of us being a ridiculous power point j–koff company.
Hahaha! Typical EM employee thinking they are the center of the world! Nope. Go on any financial analyst site and you can see that none of these stories are ever discussed wrt company performance.
Correct on both counts
@1dyj+19nDWrLg you must be very smart. I guess it wouldn’t lead to investors choosing Chevron, Shell or BP instead
- world’s
“Covid” led to the greatest disruption of the world’s economy in history, and took hundreds of billions of dollars in market capital from oil companies alone, all in about 6 months.
But, why isn’t the word’s attention on morale at EM. Go figure?
@1zbu+19nDWrLg Why wouldn’t investors care about morale? It is a direct factor that will impact company performance, and thus share price.
@1bab+19nDWrLg yup! Though I don't think the majority of investors care about company morale.
While the information is a “no sh-t sherlock” for us, it’s not something public investors would know on their own.
What a waste of money to pay for business insider premium