Thread regarding Chevron Corp. layoffs

Good WSJ story about Companies trying to hire back laid off people.

https://www.wsj.com/lifestyle/careers/layoffs-job-return-offer-0c3f8884?mod=wsjhp_columnists_pos_1

The Company That Laid You Off Wants You Back. What Do You Say?
Businesses that cut too many jobs are turning to ex-employees who can get up to speed quickly

You got laid off. Now the company that dumped you is crawling back, like a sorry ex, with an offer to return. Do you kiss and make up?

Thousands of federal workers have been let go and recalled in recent months. Some who landed different jobs declined, others jumped at the chance. A third group accepted warily while continuing to apply elsewhere.

Private-sector employees should think about what they would do in a similar situation because companies’ staffing levels can yo-yo during periods of economic uncertainty. A volatile stock market, on-again, off-again tariffs, and government funding that stops and starts are just some of the reasons employers might eliminate roles in one moment then look to hire in the next.

It’s already happening in some cases. In online job forums, people swap stories about being called back by companies including Meta, Salesforce and Pratt & Whitney.

“I have clients whose former companies have called them and said: ‘We actually need you. We were too aggressive in our cost-cutting initiatives,’ ” says career adviser Debra Wheatman.

Deciding how to respond involves practical and emotional considerations. The first thought in your head might sound like an angry Taylor Swift lyric. (“We are never, ever, ever getting back together.”) Holding a grudge is natural, and no one likes to look desperate.

Wheatman counsels clients to make sober assessments of their alternative job prospects and finances. If you’re being courted by other companies or sitting on ample severance, perhaps you can tell your old company to take a hike. If you’re in a precarious spot, your ex-employer might be the best available option.

“Think about some of the things you want to negotiate,” she says. “You have a little bit of the upper hand because they want you back.”

Some of her clients have gotten raises and promotions upon returning. Others have settled for the same jobs they had—sometimes with heavier workloads because of staff reductions.

Cut loose
Headshot of Jessica Swenson, a freelancer.
Jessica Swenson accepted an offer to return to a former employer as a contractor. She wanted to try freelancing and says she relishes being her own boss. Photo: Jessica Swenson
Jessica Swenson lost her job at a branding agency on a Thursday. The following Monday, she was asked back as a contractor.

This was a bitter pill six months after she earned a promotion. Between savings and her husband’s income, Swenson, 48 years old, was tempted to say no.

“I could have told them to bug off and looked for new work, but we all know how the job market is,” she says. She took the offer.

Despite an initial shot to her pride, Swenson doesn’t feel like a pushover several months later. She had always wanted to make a go of it as a freelance writer. Her layoff was the nudge she needed, and her old company quickly became her first client.

Swenson has added others. She says she makes about half as much money as she used to, but enjoys the freedom to set her own hours. On the day we spoke, she had gotten a haircut during business hours because she’s her own boss.

For Kristie Jones, who was laid off from her software sales-manager job after her company’s acquisition, the bridge was burned. She says she received an ominous calendar invitation on a Sunday night, was terminated in a meeting the next morning and escorted out of the office immediately. Her belongings at her desk were boxed by someone else and mailed to her.

Kristie Jones in a beige sweater, sitting in a red chair.
Kristie Jones says her layoff was handled too callously for her to consider going back. Photo: Julia Fay
She says an executive on the new management team called her a few weeks later and offered to reinstate her, saying he had learned she was well regarded internally.

“I was like, ‘Are you kidding me?’ ” says Jones, 55. “I wouldn’t have had to go through all the emotional trauma if they’d taken time to talk to me or my boss or my employees before laying me off.”

Though she didn’t have anything else lined up, she had six months’ severance. She’s now an independent sales consultant.

Boomerangs
Bosses who want to leave the door open would do well to practice layoff “hygiene,” says Andrea Derler, who leads research at human-resources software maker Visier. That means treating people with dignity on the way out and keeping digital dossiers on them.

Customers for years have used Visier to track employees’ productivity, compensation and skill sets. Now artificial intelligence can quickly mine those records—including archived files on workers who have left—to identify strong candidates for job openings.

“The AI agent would, for example, run a search for appropriate skills profiles against a database of existing employees, former employees and new applicants,” says Derler. “So if you want someone back, you can put them right into the candidate pool.”

This is one reason why Derler expects there could be an uptick in boomerang employees. Invitations to return, long dependent on fond memories, can practically be automated.
Matt Massucci, chief executive of recruiting firm Hirewell, adds that businesses are more attuned to onboarding costs. This is the time and effort it takes to hire plus the three to six months of subpar production a new recruit is likely to deliver while getting up to speed. Bringing back an ex-employee who was a solid performer before a layoff can reduce those expenses.

He says it’s common now for a business going through a round of layoffs to encourage affected employees to apply for other roles within the company. The odds of a reunion often depend on whether the job cuts stemmed from external pressures, a reorganization or an effort to weed out underachievers.

“Work is just a relationship, and there are a lot of parallels to people who break up and get back together,” Massucci says. “It comes down to: Why did you break up and how did you break up?”

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| 2602 views | | 11 replies (last April 26, 2025) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1jsmf5r91

11 replies (most recent on top)

In 2020, most EOIs were gone about two weeks after they were notified their EOI was accepted, that was mid-June. Some EOIs (low-level managers and some high technical positions) were allowed to stick around a little while longer (most were gone by mid-September, 3 months later than the ordinary EOIs) to "consult" on the "transition". I know of one who was allowed to "consult" for six months before leaving. As stated a few entries below, don't be lulled into thinking that you're going to be hired back as a consultant.

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Post ID: @jg+1jsmf5r91

I have seen several people come back as consultants.

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Post ID: @j6+1jsmf5r91

window dressing news

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Post ID: @fy+1jsmf5r91

About the only thing Chevron has been good at historically is that when they decide to let someone go, they do not change their minds. Please do not hold out hope of getting re-hired, that just isn't going to happen. Better to focus your energies on moving on. MW in his tenure has aptly demonstrated that even if you knew how to make the better mousetrap (or more appropriately, knew how to find oil), he refuses to lose face and will instead hire some college kid to take your place. Hence why Chevron is in the position it's in now.

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Post ID: @e3+1jsmf5r91

It's nice that some of you are in a position to turn down gainful employment and can brag and boast about it online but not all of us are in that situation.

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Post ID: @e0+1jsmf5r91

Several years ago I worked for another company and I was laid off. I was looking for a new job position and I went for an interview. It turned out, the job was for a position as a contractor for the job I was laid off from at the same company I was just laid off from. During the interview, I noticed the job similarity but did not know the company name. After a while I asked the interviewer and he acknowledged the job was at the same company and was my old job opening. I told him I used to work there and they probably would not hire me back. He told me he already spoke with the company and they were willing to hire me back as a contractor.
I went home and thought about it. I decided I did not want to return to the same toxic work environment I had just left, so I turned the position down the next week. It was the correct decision.

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Post ID: @dh+1jsmf5r91

Plus if you are hired back within a year, which we know won’t happen, you have to pay back any severance.
I’m going to enjoy watching this all unfold, as I took the early package and start new position in three weeks.
Best of luck.

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Post ID: @dc+1jsmf5r91

If one were to go back after being laid off, understand the company has already demonstrated their level of loyalty. Don't expect that to change and get what you can while you're there. That's exactly what they are doing with you.

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Post ID: @bq+1jsmf5r91

I would go back for a price and some guarantees absolutely

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Post ID: @bp+1jsmf5r91

The article may be useful and timely to many in Chevron trying to cope with being laid off. If you get upset with that and enjoy seeing others suffer, you need to find a life.

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Post ID: @aj+1jsmf5r91

So you copy and paste the article? You know that is copyright infringement, right? I guess you didn't take that mandatory Chevron training that told you not to do that. BTW, Chevron isn't going to be hiring the people they lay off back...

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Post ID: @a1+1jsmf5r91

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