Good company with competitive pay and benefits - Manager Phillips 66 Employee Review

5.0
6 Jul 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Competitive Pay and Benefits: Competitive salaries and benefits, including health and dental insurance, 401(k) with 8% company match, company-paid pension up to 9% based on age and years of service, annual bonus (VCIP) based on salary and performance, restricted stock (RSUs) based on salary and performance, 2-6 weeks/year of paid vacation based on years of service, and other benefits. Career Development: P66 offers opportunities for career development, including tuition reimbursement, mentoring programs, and training. Work/Life Balance: this one is boss-dependent; however, most managers encourage and allow for a good work-life balance.

Cons

Work/Life Balance: as stated in Pro's, work-life balance is boss-dependent. Most management teams encourage good work-life balance; however, some value their short-term day-to-day production more highly than their employees' long-term work-life balance. This can make it difficult to avoid burnout and enjoy working at P66 in the long run. Bureaucratic: while not as bad as working for the government, working at Phillips 66 can be slow-moving and bureaucratic. Every few years the company will make a genuine attempt to improve, but each attempt usually involves something along the lines of a 50-point change management plan to improve nimbleness.

Explore other reviews about Phillips 66

5.0
3 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good pay, benefits, strong company

Cons

Depending on the department, culture can vary

2.0
19 May 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Great pay and benefits (frankly too much for the industry) - Good place for new employees and people approaching mid-career to learn and develop - Great people and culture in certain organizations (Marketing, Lubes)

Cons

- Not a competitive bone in the body of the executive team - Much more time for analysts and reporters than employees - Politics and not leadership determines promotion and future - An eroding culture - Poor development of mid career employees - An executive team that is disconnected and invisible to most employees

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