Life as a logging engineer - Senior Field Engineer Halliburton Employee Review

4.0
Nov 3, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Great work culture and people. You will work with people from all around the world and everyone has an experience to share. - The company rewards experience and performance with training. You will never stop learning nor being competent. - Large company with many opportunities to grow and many service lines to vary the type of work offered. - Very safety oriented. - Good salary in comparison to other similar jobs in different fields. - Very demanding job that professionally leaves you fulfilled after success.

Cons

- Long hours and hectic schedule. 24/7 on call schedule means you have no control over when you be off and leaves your personal life in tatters if you do not adapt. Days off schedule not honored. - Exhausting work. Up to 72 hours of no sleep while being physically and mentally active. - Standards can be overly bureaucratic.

Explore other reviews about Halliburton

5.0
Jun 29, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The company has great benefits

Cons

The con would be you are constantly in inclement weather.

1.0
Jun 18, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

* Strong brand recognition and opportunity to work on large-scale marketing initiatives. * Exposure to technical subject matter and cross-functional collaboration. * Good place to learn how large enterprise organizations operate.

Cons

I joined in a hybrid role where flexibility was an important factor in accepting the position and making personal life decisions. Within about a year, the organization moved to a full return-to-office model. While companies can change workplace policies, the transition felt abrupt and inconsistent in practice. A recurring challenge was that expectations around in-office presence did not always appear to match day-to-day reality. Remote participation still occurred for meetings and operational needs, which created confusion around when flexibility was acceptable and when it was not. Within my department, I also experienced challenges around communication and collaboration. Feedback on projects sometimes arrived late or only after priorities had shifted, and in some cases work was reassigned or substantially changed without clear involvement from the original contributor. Public criticism of work product without prior coaching made it difficult to improve or feel ownership over deliverables. Leadership communication during organizational changes often felt more focused on compliance than employee concerns. Employees raising questions about work arrangements sometimes perceived limited space for open discussion. Over time, the combination of reduced flexibility, inconsistent application of expectations, and limited recognition of specialized contributions negatively affected morale and trust.

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