It's all about Shareholder Return - IT Business Analyst Chevron Employee Review

2.0
Jun 21, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- 12 weeks of family leave - time off for miscarriage - EAP mental health - ReThink parenting resource - Adoption credit - free snacks - 38" widescreen curved monitors in the office for everyone - generous severance package (when offered) - sharp, friendly colleagues - recruitment from underrepresented colleges - no discrimination against trans employees

Cons

The place is a cult. They have their own language and if you master it, you are considered "hi-pot(ential)." (Imagine Scientology-speak in the office, on decks, in meetings, etc.) Lifers (folks who have been with the company for 20+ years) talk about the good old days when work was their family. Now management is clinical and robotic in how they treat employees. A lot of burnout with the "do less with more" being drilled into your head. Return to office is mandatory to promote collaboration even if everyone you work with is in a different time zone or you have primary caregiver responsibilities. They're also moving jobs from CA to TX (and from US to abroad) and hiring in India or contractors who ask no questions/lack critical thinking skills. You work crazy hours to have daily stand-ups at 6:30 or 7 am or 9 pm. Pretty typical to have 5-6 consecutive meeting 4 days a week with barely any time to do deep work, eat, or use the restroom between meetings. Environment is very "Office Space 15 pieces of flair" where they tell you the baseline but really expect you to go 120%. If you ask, "will my job be safe if I uproot my family and relocate?" Management responds with "I understand your question" instead of a yes/no answer. It's exhausting, toxic, and extremely passive aggressive.

Explore other reviews about Chevron

5.0
Mar 24, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good opportunity but big company

Cons

Big company and can get lost easy

2.0
Jun 19, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Paychecks still hit when expected.

Cons

The recent restructuring has fundamentally weakened how the organization operates. Critical workflows that once relied on cross‑functional alignment are now slowed by fragmentation, unclear ownership, and constant handoffs. The company is asking for the same performance with significantly fewer resources and far less structural support. Employee trust has taken a noticeable hit. Messaging from leadership remains upbeat, but it rarely reflects the day‑to‑day reality employees are navigating. The gap between what is said and what is experienced has grown wide enough that many people no longer feel their concerns are being acknowledged, let alone addressed. Workload pressure has intensified across the board. Teams are stretched thin, managers are overwhelmed, and the pace of change has outstripped the systems needed to support it. The result is an environment where people are doing their best despite the structure, not because of it. Chevron has historically been known for stability, collaboration, and thoughtful decision‑making. Those strengths are much harder to see in the current setup. There is still a path back to a healthier culture, but it will require leadership to confront the consequences of the reorganization directly and rebuild transparency, alignment, and trust.

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