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Started By
Message
re: 2nd Interview with Halliburton
Posted on 4/2/14 at 8:54 am to TheIndulger
Posted on 4/2/14 at 8:54 am to TheIndulger
It's strange with operators. I've seen them scoop up guys that I thought should have been fired from Halliburton.
I've also heard of Chevron rejecting someones application. The guy worked on their account and they loved him. When he took a job with another operator, they asked why he didn't consider working for Chevron. They had no clue he even applied. And he was a great employee that they would have killed to have. Sometimes, I think this whole system is just a game of luck.
I've also heard of Chevron rejecting someones application. The guy worked on their account and they loved him. When he took a job with another operator, they asked why he didn't consider working for Chevron. They had no clue he even applied. And he was a great employee that they would have killed to have. Sometimes, I think this whole system is just a game of luck.
Posted on 4/2/14 at 9:13 am to Indigold
When I went through the interview process they basically had me sit down and talk to 3 or 4 different managers and then we all went out to lunch and they drilled me with some more questions. It wasn't too bad.
I also started off as an associate technical professional at the Carrollton plant.
I also started off as an associate technical professional at the Carrollton plant.
Posted on 4/2/14 at 10:21 am to KG6
quote:
I've also heard of Chevron rejecting someones application. The guy worked on their account and they loved him. When he took a job with another operator, they asked why he didn't consider working for Chevron. They had no clue he even applied. And he was a great employee that they would have killed to have. Sometimes, I think this whole system is just a game of luck.
I interviewed for a job to help run Chevrons Real time drilling operations center, they were a little ahead of the game so they weren't ready to hire me but said they would hold onto my application(Really ahead of schedule seeing as this was ~3 years ago and its still not up)
Well they had a positions come up that I was an absolute perfect fit for and the guy I interviewed actually remembered me and gave it to the manager who was going to hire for that position. He called me and wanted me to apply. I submitted my resume and heard nothing. I called him a month later and he said it never crossed his desk so I sent it again and never heard anything. HR is the first line of defense their and they don't know how to sort applicants based on technical skills.
They ended up hiring a guy who was WAY less qualified than me, it was very strange.
Posted on 4/2/14 at 10:56 am to TheIndulger
quote:
That's what I found out also. I don't think they are drooling over cement and mwd hands.
In my 20 years of experience this has been my observation. At least on the drilling side. I've had a few opportunities to make the switch but it would have involved taking a pay cut.
This post was edited on 4/2/14 at 10:57 am
Posted on 4/2/14 at 10:57 am to jladne3
quote:
And yes I've found it the case for myself with any entry level engineering position with an operator. Hell I only have a years experience and I've already had doors open but I'm just buying my time (another year or two) for the right door to open up for myself.
If you say so.
Posted on 4/2/14 at 11:09 am to redstick13
(no message)
This post was edited on 10/20/21 at 4:27 pm
Posted on 4/2/14 at 12:26 pm to lsutiger2010
Let's talk base pay. What is it starting? After 4 years?
Posted on 4/2/14 at 12:57 pm to guesswho
Starting out is usually anywhere from mid 50's to 62 like stated earlier. Depends on exact title and what segment you are in. Field Eng make a lil more than field specialist, both make more than your run of the mill hand. I know both my buddies that were MWDs were around 125 there second year but like I said before, they were working a lot.
Posted on 4/2/14 at 1:01 pm to GREENHEAD22
quote:
know both my buddies that were MWDs were around 125 there second year
Posted on 4/2/14 at 4:12 pm to Indigold
So just got done and headed home. Went rather smoothly. All interviews were really laid back. Really wined and dined me last night. Basically up here it's cementing, production enhancement and boots and Coots. I feel like it went really well. I guess I'll see about base salary in a few weeks. Fingers crossed
Posted on 4/2/14 at 5:13 pm to Indigold
Second year he made 125k but still only making $35 an hour?
Posted on 4/2/14 at 7:08 pm to Indigold
quote:
production enhancement
Winner IMO, but then again I am not even sure what B&C does anymore. I know they have diversified a lot from just being blowout specialist.
Posted on 4/2/14 at 7:18 pm to GREENHEAD22
PE field engineers have the best chance of moving into a role with an operator due to their formation knowledge. Its just a bit tougher of a lifestyle than other PSLs. I dont know what R&D would be like.
Posted on 4/2/14 at 7:56 pm to GREENHEAD22
I feel like I liked PE the most. From my understanding, B&C is just the name. They don't really have to deal with fires that often anymore, so it seemed like they only did coiled tubing. PE is definitely my preference after yesterday and today
Posted on 4/7/14 at 11:26 am to lsutiger2010
quote:
I would look into the managed pressure drilling divisions of the major oilfield service companies. SLB, Hal, WFT all have a division. I think it is a big up and coming part of the oilfield and a lot of the operators are adopting the technology.
It's been around since the mid 90's. I did my first pressure drilling training around 1998.
Posted on 4/7/14 at 12:53 pm to KG6
quote:
PE field engineers have the best chance of moving into a role with an operator due to their formation knowledge. Its just a bit tougher of a lifestyle than other PSLs. I dont know what R&D would be like.
My recommendation is to always try and be involved with the drilling side of the work. It's generally more challenging, pays better, and has a higher ceiling for advancement.
Get a good real world understanding how the drilling industry works. You will eventually use that knowledge way more than what you are learning in school.
It's the route I took and I will likely be taking a resident country manager position in South Africa soon. It's a formula I've seen many successful people in our industry use.
Posted on 4/7/14 at 2:21 pm to jladne3
I have a friend who is an assistant operator claiming to make 100k first year. 

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