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Overall employee rating

3.2
Based on 28 reviews
5
4
3
2
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Detail Ratings
Work life balance
3.0
Career Growth
3.0
Work flexibility
3.0
Job Security
4.0
Pay and benefits
4.0
Leadership
3.0
Company Culture
3.0
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Process Engineer
3.3
29 April 2026
Work-Life Balance Can Be Hit or Miss
Pros: Some teams really foster a decent work-life balance, letting you have solid 40-hour weeks. As a Process Engineer in the Houston office, I've had good periods with predictable schedules.
Cons: But then during plant turnarounds, it's a grind. Expect 60+ hour weeks in the oil and gas sector during those intense periods, which makes personal life tough.
Advice to Management: Try to standardize workload expectations across different departments and project phases. Overworking during turnarounds impacts morale.
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Software Engineer
3.3
25 April 2026
Decent for a Corporate Giant, Growth is on You
Pros: As a Software Engineer at Shell, you can find solid internal training if you look for it. The company's size means lots of different projects in the oil and gas industry. You'll definitely learn a lot if you're proactive and seek out new challenges.
Cons: Career progression can feel really slow sometimes, especially if you're not constantly pushing for new roles. It's a huge corporate environment, so moving up usually means dealing with a lot of red tape. Individual career growth isn't always a priority for management unless you make it one.
Advice to Management: Try to be more proactive in employee career development, not just reactive to requests. Offer clear pathways for advancement in technical roles.
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Process Engineer
3.3
24 April 2026
Solid Pay & Benefits for Technical Roles
Pros: As a Process Engineer, the base salary is really competitive for the oil and gas industry. The 401k match and comprehensive healthcare benefits are definitely solid for a global energy company.
Cons: The bonus structure can feel a bit opaque for technical roles, making it tough to understand how it's calculated. Also, annual raises sometimes don't keep pace with initial expectations in this corporate environment.
Advice to Management: Transparency on bonus calculations would really help employee morale for technical staff.
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Latest jobs from Shell

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Process Engineer
3.1
18 April 2026
Solid company, but job security can be shaky
Pros: The company brand is strong, which looks good on a resume. For technical roles like mine, the training and development were solid. I did appreciate the hybrid model work arrangement, giving some flexibility in the Houston, TX office.
Cons: Job security isn't what it used to be in the energy sector. There's always talk about restructuring or downsizing, especially after big oil price swings. It felt like annual cuts were a real possibility, making things tough for many.
Advice to Management: Management needs to be more transparent about long-term plans and less reactive with layoffs. Employees in the oil and gas industry would feel more secure if there was a clearer strategy for handling market volatility.
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Process Engineer
2.9
11 April 2026
Job Security Can Be Shaky In Oil & Gas
Pros: Being part of a large corporate like Shell definitely has its perks. You get to work on massive projects in the energy sector. The compensation package for Process Engineer roles is solid, which helps during uncertain times.
Cons: Honestly, job security in the oil and gas industry can be a real worry here. There's always talk about restructuring or project cuts, especially in the Houston, TX office. It's hard to feel truly stable when market prices fluctuate so much.
Advice to Management: Try to be more transparent about long-term project plans. This could ease some of the job security concerns for your engineers.
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Project Manager
3.1
6 April 2026
Leadership has good intentions, but it's slow
Pros: You learn a ton working for a corporate giant like Shell, especially in the energy sector. There's usually solid support from your direct manager, which helps as a Project Manager in complex projects. The focus on safety in the oil and gas industry is genuinely strong.
Cons: Upper leadership often feels out of touch with day-to-day operations in the Houston office. Decisions take forever; the bureaucracy can be really frustrating for Project Manager roles. It's tough to get quick approvals for important initiatives.
Advice to Management: Try to empower mid-level managers more and trust their judgment. Speed up decision-making processes; the long approval cycles are a major bottleneck. Listen more to feedback from the project teams and the field.
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Process Engineer
3.4
6 April 2026
Decent Flexibility, But Depends On Your Team
Pros: For non-field roles like mine, the hybrid work model is a solid perk. I could typically work from home 2-3 days a week in the Houston, TX office, which really helped with my commute. It's a good setup for a large oil and gas company.
Cons: True remote work is almost non-existent for engineering roles; you have to be in the office a set number of days. Managers also have a lot of discretion, so some teams get more flexibility than others. It's not always consistent across departments in this energy sector giant.
Advice to Management: Standardize the hybrid policy more clearly across all departments. Give managers clearer guidelines on flexibility so it's not so dependent on individual discretion for onshore engineering positions.
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Process Engineer
3.6
1 April 2026
Decent work-life balance, but watch out for projects
Pros: The hybrid work schedule is a big plus. It's great to have WFH days when you're not needed onsite in the Houston office. For process engineer roles, you mostly get decent 40-hour weeks.
Cons: Project deadlines can be tough. Sometimes you're pushing past 5 PM regularly to meet targets, especially in the energy sector. Being on call for refinery operations also impacts personal plans.
Advice to Management: Try to better manage project scopes to avoid consistent crunch times. More support for those on call would improve work-life balance for many engineers.
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Associate Engineer
3.3
30 March 2026
Solid Benefits, But Pay Could Be Better
Pros: The benefits package is definitely a highlight working at Shell. We had really good health insurance options, solid retirement matching, and generous paid time off. For a big corporate company in the oil and gas industry, these benefits feel very secure.
Cons: While the benefits are great, the base salary for an Associate Engineer felt just okay. It wasn't bad, but it wasn't top-tier for the Houston market. Raises weren't huge either, and performance bonuses felt pretty standard, not exceptional for our hybrid roles.
Advice to Management: Management should look at making base salaries more competitive for early-career professionals, especially for engineering roles in the energy sector. We appreciate the strong benefits, but a better salary would really help with retention in the Houston area.
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Process Engineer
3.0
5 March 2026
Leadership can be a real mixed bag
Pros: You get a lot of resources working for a big corporate energy company like Shell. The pay and benefits are pretty solid for a Process Engineer, and some of the managers are genuinely good mentors.
Cons: The quality of leadership is super inconsistent across teams. Some senior folks seem totally out of touch with real refinery operations challenges. Decisions often take forever, slowing down important projects.
Advice to Management: Really work on developing consistent, strong leadership at all levels. Senior management needs to stay more connected to the day-to-day operations and the challenges their teams face.
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