Great pay but poor management and too much bullying. - Frac Operator Assistant I Halliburton Employee Review

1.0
Feb 20, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The pay is great if you work lots of overtime. I came in with a college degree, no experience and I got $15.50 an hour, although it sounds like a low wage it adds up when you work 120 plus hours a week with perdium. Monthly I average $4,200 on small paychecks to $5,600 on big check months, and annually it averages over $90k. We have a 14 on, 7 off schedule and alternate night shift and day shifts. It is the easiest job I have ever had, hands down. We get paid to travel to and from location and the actual physical part of the job is simple for any guy big or small in stature. The weeks off are unpaid but they fly by quickly. When you are in your 14 days, you do nothing but work, there is no going home leisure time. It's a good job if all you wanna do is work constantly. The insurance is top notch as well, along with 401k and stock.

Cons

Although the pay is great and you can take care of most debt quickly, the time away from home is what gets most workers to quit. Turn over at this company is ridiculous, and after a year at the job I see it and don't want to be apart of it anymore (that's why I'm on here looking for new jobs). It's a complete gamble if you get put on a good crew with people you can get along with, if you don't get along with some guys then it can make the job miserable. I've read some other reviews on here and it seems like a common thing for red hats to disrespect green hats, no matter what college experience nor military background you have. It's very childish and high school like attitudes on most crews, too much testosterone can cause frustration in the work field. Everyone wants to tell you how to do the job their way and it always conflicts every other person. The lack of communication is terrible and downright dangerous to new guys, yet the managers take no action on this problem. When going through training we had no idea of what the next step was for us, making it impossible to plan ahead for moving your family if needed. Halliburton does not lay off employees too often (they are currently now due to the oil prices) but they will fire you for the smallest things and unfairly keep someone else they like who did the same mistake. It's a favoritism game out here, lots of rules broken by management and you can't do anything about it. They have missed hundreds of dollars on my paycheck multiple times and they take weeks to give back pay. And worst of all is the time away from home, you only get one week out of the month to be home. You miss kids growing up and can't come home immediately if anything happens. The money is not worth the pain of missing family, especially when you get disrespected and treated poorly by management. The money is great but the people that work here are very difficult to deal with (yes, I get along with everyone else outside of this job, I'm a Christrian man who has respect for others).

Explore other reviews about Halliburton

5.0
May 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Culture is great. Lots of opportunity to grow.

Cons

Company doesn't have work from home option.

1.0
Jun 22, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Halliburton looks strong on the outside, especially on a resume, and the brand name still carries weight in the industry. Some teams work on interesting projects, and if you get a fair manager, you can learn a lot about large-scale B2B operations.

Cons

If you land under the wrong manager, performance improvement plans (PIPs) can be used as a weapon, not a coaching tool. I was put on a PIP that contained inaccurate claims even after I shared detailed evidence and context. I provided several solid pieces of documentation to HR to rebut the accusations, yet nothing meaningful was investigated or corrected in my case. HR felt more like a shield for management than a neutral party. In my experience, they protected internal politics instead of looking at facts and evidence. There is a culture of quiet compliance. Many people stay 10+ years because the pay and brand are “safe,” but they are hesitant to challenge unfair treatment or speak up about toxic behavior. Corporate hierarchy is heavy, and real decisions seem to depend more on who is backing your manager than on actual performance or documented facts.

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