bp reviews

3.8

67% would recommend to a friend

(7,117 total reviews)
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Meg O’Neill

56% approve of CEO

45% positive business outlook

bp has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 7,117 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The bp employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Energia, mineração, utilitários industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

7K reviews
1.0
Feb 14, 2017
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

- The base salary and cost of living within the surrounding area

Cons

Working at BP Whiting requires a certain amount of incredulity - you'll perpetually slap the back of your hand to your forehead and say "I can't believe this is how it is here! How is this allowed to go on?" First and foremost, the company culture is extremely resistant to change. In most companies, metrics are used to measure progress towards a goal. At BP, the metrics are the goal. This was the fundamental issue at Deepwater - where employees were pressured to keep quiet about safety concerns (survivors later testified about this to Congress) so as to make the KPI (key performance indicators) look good. This tradition is alive and well at Whiting, where all attempts to improve safety, morale, and efficiency are met with managerial or HR obstruction. The "post hoc fallacy" is essentially the office slogan, as management will attribute the causes of momentary drops in hand-injuries or slips/falls on safety initiatives, when in reality its just the law of averages, and if they're down one month, they'll rise the next. At one point, the refinery was becoming so dangerous that a refinery-wide "safety suggestion" meeting was held, where employees were permitted to offer suggestions on ways to reduce hazards. Every suggestion was shot down, even those that are performed as industry norms or are common at other oil/chemical refineries. Instead, the supervisors pushed the solution of stronger metrics. No attempts are ever made to change the safety culture. If you have the misfortune of knowing BP Whiting's HR department, you'll understand why this is. Like most businesses, all BP locations have a "speak-up line", where you can call to report harassment, threats, health/safety/environmental concerns. The company freely admits that BP Whiting is the #1 source of speak-up calls. When I first started working there, a veteran employee pulled me aside and stated outright that if I call the speak-up line, I would be fired. There is a long history of employees calling the speak-up line to report harassment by their managers, after which the manager would work in conjunction with HR to terminate the employee. That's not conjecture or guesswork - it's verifiable. This policy ends up breeding an extremely toxic environment, where some managers have full leave to harass and scream vitriol at their subordinates, berate them loudly and aggressively in front of others, and abuse their ability to assign workload well over 40 hours per week (heck, I've seen certain managers assign 75 hours/week worth of work to individuals). Remember, at BP Whiting, HR always looks the other way when management engages in unprofessional behavior. There are department supervisors/managers who have remained in the same position for literally decades, all the while presiding over teams that suffer consistent 15-20% annual turnover to get away from them. There are departments with 10-20 people in them, where no one has been there for more than 5 years as people are more apt to walk away from the money/insurance/pension in order to achieve peace of mind and get away from harassment. How the HR employees are able to collect a paycheck and not be paralyzed by guilt or embarrassment is beyond my understanding. In any case, only two types of people can flourish in such a culture: sociopathic bullies and people who are just "going through the motions" and have given up any sense of ambition. If you are considering working here, know this: Every year, dozens of employees walk away from very attractive pensions and salaries in favor of finding a professional environment to work at. And every other year, this includes the refinery manager. The BP corporate office will continually install some new accomplished, hardworking and efficient leader into the head role at the refinery, but after a year or so of experiencing the obstructive and morale-reducing culture perpetuated by the department "leadership" and the laissez faire attitude of HR, they too walk away from the company, deferring the pay, pension and stock benefits in favor for the two things you cannot find at BP Whiting: peace of mind and professionalism.

2.0
Jan 31, 2015
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

If you get in where's there's actually a good boss it can be a great company to work for.

Cons

They promote the wrong people. They don't want a true speak-up culture as they might have to look at themselves and realize they don't have a lot of great managers. Talent isn't what gets you promoted. They try to control people by saying "It's not what you do but how you do it". That's BS as this is an oil company and "what we do" keeps things from blowing up and killing people. They promote for behaviors not how you impact the business or how good your delivery is. Management stomps out technical people with great ideas if they don't have the right political views. BP management has forgotten we are running Oilfields not popularity contests. They talk about safety but uninformed management makes poor decisions. Unfortunately this is rampart in this company.

3.0
May 5, 2023

British Petroleum

Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

Please note the below feedback is applicable only for the bp pune-Innovation and Engineering(I&E) division and not relevant for bp london and bp houston offices 1.Good pay master 2. You can take lengthy breaks and go on a 2 weeks vacation to get refreshed which is good for your mental health considering the covid times we are living in. 3. Few of the candidates who are hired are really good at technical skills and are open source contributors. you will get an opportunity to meet technically sound people 4.Good for individual contributors roles. All the roles are individual contributor roles, no matter what the job description says. I was working as Azure architect in my previous organizations and when i joined bp pune, i came to realized that it is an individual contributor role and i am suppose to give daily status to the scrum master who is from the vendor side. If you have worked as a program manager, Azure solution architect, delivery manager in your previous roles, you might feel that you are going atleast 7 years back in time when you used to work as a senior developer. A feature would be assigned to you and you need to delivery it by working with the vendor teams.

Cons

1. Not much power has been given to the bp Pune associates to drive the things. All the strategic decisions are taken by the BP london and BP houston office associates after having discussion with vendor associates. 2. Highly vendor driven organization. Permanent employees working out of bp pune office does not have much power or say in the ways of working. even though the vendor and india bp employees are based in the same country which is India, vendor team works in 2 PM to 11 PM shift and bp badge employees are suppose to go to office twice or thrice a week and bp badge employee starts the work at 9 am and had to take calls in the evenings as the the vendor comes in shift(2pm to 11pm) so it becomes really difficult for the bp permanent employee based out of pune to get time for oneself. I have given this feedback to the management but nothing changed 3. If you are someone who wants to lead the team of technical people, you may not get an opportunity working out of bp india. you must join bp london or bp houston in case you wish to be part of strategic decision making. 4. Getting promoted to next grade is a lengthy process 5. You won't gain business domain knowledge if you are part of platform teams be it AWS or Azure data platform

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