Thread regarding Baker Hughes Inc. layoffs

Moved from CVX's Board

Good luck getting employment... Well I was lucky. I started looking for a job last spring and got one in late fall, outside of O&G.

I was with Chevron for 4 years (worst company I have been apart of) and 8 years with a service company. The other half of my career was diverse. Construction, manufacturing, nuclear, consulting. I graduated from an Ivy League school with an Engineering degree, also an MBA from a top Tier program. I thought this would at least separate me a bit and give me an edge. It did not. I found that my diverse experience and my P.E. (Professional Engineer) did more for me than anything else. I started looking on job boards but within a few months of bad results....a few interviews with organizations I did not want to work for....

I went the recruiter route. I found that everything mattered as they sold my skills to a large set of opportunities. I was somewhat picky, but never turned down an interview. I interviewed with 11 places before finally getting an offer from the 12th that I liked. Of the other 11 interviews I got 4 offers. I set my salary the same so it was less opportunities and greater competition. The market last year was flooded with O&G employees, worse this year. Most that worked for the majors did not continue with education and certifications. Also not a very solid background of experience. These interviews drill down to the nuts and bolts. They are long and tedious. Usually 2-3 phone screens and 1-2 in person interviews.

I think it would be evident that without a meaningful 4 year degree you won't get past the internal screening. It is not to late to get your certs. HR, Accounting, Safety....all disciplines have there own. 70% of the jobs I interviewed for required your PE. For the 20 plus year employees, it will take 3-4 months best scenario. Start to finish. Worse case well over a year. I would start the process now. I was blown back at how tight the market is in general. I wanted to stay local but 3 months in I chose a 250 mile radius for opportunities. This of course accelerate, doubles the process.........be prepared for a rough time.

I believe the economy is going into recession. That being said you will get a job. Take the time to get what you need over the next 6 months, go back to school, certs and even experience. Start applying now. Even if you stay, it does not hurt to look. Of course be cognizant if you use a recruiter, you can't screw them over.

Be honest and up front...........................................................................

And of course no one knows how bad Chevron is, in providing employees with skills both technical and leadership wise.

It's a fortune 3 company.

Play that angle...

Also there are zero jobs in O&G. Look outside. Good luck. Don't get down....... Just keep up the fight....

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| 1182 views | | 2 replies (last February 8, 2016) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+FQIVAr5

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Thanks for the great advice

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Post ID: @llw+FQIVAr5

"Ivy League school, degree in Engineering and an MBA from a top tier program," yet this article is awash with poor spelling and atrocious punctuation. Perhaps one piece of advice not included here would be to proof read everything you send to potential employers. This would include cover letters and your resume. You might find yourself being interviewed for more positions if you can convince your first contact that you are not, at best, dyslexic. Worst case would be that you're giving the impression that you're a slovenly buffoon with no concern in the slightest at the poor impression you are making.

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Post ID: @pcm+FQIVAr5

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