As someone who spent time in two other companies before joining Chevron I noticed four things that hurt Chevron the most that I wished someone had told me about before joining.
One, my BU is over staffed and our reorg did not do a single thing to address that problem. It take five people to sc--w in a lightbulb and because of this work structure we spend a lot of time waiting on others. One person to buy the lightbulb, one to bring the ladder, one to take off the light bulb, one to place the light bulb, and one to dispose of the broken light bulb.
Two, the PDC process and people changing roles every two to three years is bonkers. There always seems like someone comes in and has to be trained to do the work, like getting the right light bulb or having to learn where the ladder is placed. And those that get the hang of things are then on their way out to another role.
Three, there is a lot of process just to do something. We have to set up a plan to change the light bulb. Then present it to managers like four times to make sure they agree. I have seriously regurgitated the same set of slides kfor a project this last year in part of this process of approvals. Only after recycling the same presentation over and over (after changing the name of the milestone meeting and date) do they agree that we can change the light bulb. But for only one light bulb, if we need to change another similar light bulb we will have to present everything to managers again and recycle the same presentations but now make sure we specify that this is a different, but very similar light bulb we are changing. And then we congratulate ourselves for getting this project through the weeks-long process, meeting or exceeding or goals to put on our PMP, while the actual work took a couple of days to do.
And four, management takes forever to make a decision. We just need to change a light bulb... not wait on whether a small light bulb is in the budget for this year or if this is the right light bulb. Then spend another month just making the approvals. No one here ever takes responsibility for anything, and when they do they are probably getting ready to move to their next role.