How we are treated via PIP and supposed “one year contracts” is how you’ll find every other company. The fact that we didn’t do it before is WHY we have such sh-t managers and all the cr-p that we do.
My personal opinion on that aside, I can at least answer for why many in EMIT quit. It’s a bunch of small ones, but the big three that really drove them over the edge are pay, lack of respect from business, and no future. It’s hard to pass up $400k, 1 month vacation, WFH if you’d like, and being given the option to actually make decisions and work on tech newer than 2005 when currently as a 4 year employee I make 105k, get 2 weeks vacation, have to come to an office to sit on zoom all day, and have all of my ideas shot down because the business is terrified of automation. Business forces us to work on stupid dogs rather than more advanced ML for trading.
We are a dying commodity business. Even Darren’s chart showing us with our green business growing out of nowhere, we had a dip in income still. So in Dallas’ mind even our most optimistic projections have us shrinking slightly over the next 20 years. I don’t even want to see what the real projections are. Eventually XOM will become a private company to avoid as much scrutiny and to stop investing and drain the oil and gas for all its worth, significant dividends to the others until it privately sells itself off to others and declares bankruptcy. That’s how capital markets work for dying commodity businesses, pretty standard.