And so, amid the flickering glow of malfunctioning Power BI dashboards and cascading alerts, Baker Hughers pressed on, its corporate heart beating an irregular rhythm. From the ruins of Cloud Tower and the smoldering shop floor, a new figure emerged: Chief Transformation Officer Janelle, freshly imported from a consultancy so elite it claimed to have no website, “because true visionaries are discovered, not Googled.”
Janelle arrived armed with a 300-slide deck titled “Radical Regeneration: A Framework for Reinventing Reinvention.” Her first decree: a re-org of the re-org, in which teams were shuffled not for efficiency, but for optics. “We must signal agility,” she intoned, sipping kombucha in the executive war room, “even if we lack the burden of direction.”
Under her command, a Transformation Steering Committee was formed, consisting largely of those same middle managers who had survived every prior culling by mastering the art of visibility without substance. They gathered weekly to “unpack synergies” and “architect holistic alignment,” speaking in an ancient GE dialect so dense that even MS Copilot refused to summarize their meeting minutes.
Meanwhile, Krebs and Yogesh, the Cloud and Ding-A-Ling alliance, joined forces with Janelle to launch “Baker Hughers Next™”—an ambitious initiative that promised to “pivot the pivot” by leveraging AI to automate AI. No one understood what this meant, least of all the AI itself, which began generating hallucinated reports predicting $17 billion in savings by 2030, but only if Baker Hughers ceased operations entirely by Q2.
On the ground, the shop floor workers, now reduced to a skeletal crew, watched in quiet resignation as their tools were replaced by sleek new machines that arrived uncalibrated and came with manuals written entirely in Italian. One brave tech attempted to decipher a safety procedure using Google Translate, only to cause a minor explosion and the evacuation of Building 2 bathrooms.
The supply chain, once stretched, now fully snapped. Vendors, weary of Kafkaesque payment terms and QNs, filed lawsuits or simply ghosted the company. Ersatz suppliers delivered components so poorly made that engineers coined a new phrase: “Vendor-grade failure.” Production lines sputtered to life only intermittently, often grinding to a halt because critical parts had been replaced by a new SAP block labeled “PH - placeholder – to be sourced later.”
And yet, up in the executive canopy, the CEO beamed proudly at quarterly earnings slides, now adorned with bright icons and inspirational quotes. “We’re not losing money,” he declared, “we’re investing in transformation.” The board clapped politely, secure in the knowledge that their stock grants were vesting regardless of direction.
But outside, whispers grew. Customers defected. Competitors circled. People began asking uncomfortable questions about “carbon-neutral drilling” and whether AI-powered turbines were, in fact, a thing. And as Baker Hughers lurched forward, a lumbering beast weighed down by buzzwords and broken systems, the final irony took shape:
It had become an unstoppable transformation machine—incapable of delivering lasting value, but utterly incapable of stopping itself.
And so the company marched on, not toward salvation, but toward the most modern fate of all: an endless pivot into irrelevance.