Thread regarding Chevron Corp. layoffs

A word to the wise is sufficient

Listen up. If you’re looking to get a job with Chevron anywhere, please do not be fooled. Chevron is building their ENGINE facilities in India and has no intention of taking care of their American workers who have built the company.

Hey, I get it… If you need a job, use them to get a job so you can have an income and benefits while you’re looking for another job. Don’t think that they will reward you if you work really hard for the company. That’s not how Chevron operates. Their MO is to use you to produce only until they find someone to do your job cheaper, as evidenced by the recent layoffs. It’s well known that they lay off older workers to cut off their pensions and hire younger workers at lower wages systematically.

Chevron has about $257 billion in assets. Their net profit was 35.465 billion in 2022, 21.369 billion in 2023, 17.661 billion in 2024 and they’re on track for 13.441 billion in 2025. Do you notice the downward trend in profits? That translates into layoffs and offshoring and outsourcing jobs for greater profitability.

Their recent layoffs were particularly brutal for their older workers. People dedicated their lives to the company under the false belief that they would retire with the full pension that they were promised when they started working for them. Your grandfather‘s Chevron is not the current Chevron that exists. As soon as this CEO is done taking his hatchet to Chevron and jumps ship with his golden parachute they will bring in a new CEO with lots of new and bold promises. Don’t fall for it.

Those of us who have been retained at Chevron know that our heads are on the chopping block. We have watched very intelligent, talented, dedicated, and experienced colleagues get laid off via email with the attitude to not let the door hit you in the a$$ on your way out. After 20 years with this company, I was appalled at how they treated my colleague at the end of his career here. No parting words of thanks, no retirement celebration, no words of praise or thanks…a simple kick in the a$$ via email and adios amigo.

PLEASE, if you’re thinking of a career at Chevron, DON’T. If you need a job, use them just long enough to land another job and get out as soon as you can. I’ve done my duty to alert you. If you’re reading this and decide to work for them, when it happens to you, you won’t be able to say that nobody ever told you or that you didn’t see it coming. A word to the wise is sufficient.


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| 3671 views | | 6 replies (last October 6) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1k6v8vfj1

6 replies (most recent on top)

No sh-t Sherlock. finding the alternative opportunity or landing that "other" job is the hard part.

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Post ID: @cp+1k6v8vfj1

Those of us who still have a job with Chevron know that the ice we are standing on just got a lot thinner and will get much more thinner every month that goes by. It is in our best interest to control the timing of our exit instead of becoming an unexpected casualty without adequate retirement resources. Our managers are not good people. I stopped considering them leaders a long time ago.

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Post ID: @ay+1k6v8vfj1

They are destroying a once-great American company. Yay, India!

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Post ID: @aj+1k6v8vfj1

But the corporation is on track to save $3bn through ENGINE? Let’s ignore the fact that no one has qualified over what period of time that $3bn savings will be achieved (per year? Over the next decade?). Let’s also ignore that it’s probably cost $1bn in redundancies, and $1bn to establish ENGINE.

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Post ID: @ae+1k6v8vfj1

This post is 100% on point.

Also worth noting that we often talks about the actions of “the company” or “the corporation,” which distances the INDIVIDUALS whose behavior has wrecked this place from their actions. We need to call out the people responsible, starting with MW & MN.

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Post ID: @aa+1k6v8vfj1

Needed to be said. Well done.

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Post ID: @a1+1k6v8vfj1

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