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Exxon Mobil main competitors are BP America Inc, ConocoPhillips, and Chesapeake Energy.

Competitor Summary. See how Exxon Mobil compares to its main competitors:

  • BP America Inc has the most employees (70,100).
  • Employees at BP America Inc earn more than most of the competitors, with an average yearly salary of $112,940.
  • The oldest company is Chevron, founded in 1879.
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Exxon Mobil vs competitors

CompanyFounding dateZippia scoreHeadquarters# of LocationsRevenueEmployees
1870
4.5
Irving, TX7$343.4B72,000
1879
4.8
San Ramon, CA4$146.5B44,679
1910
4.9
Houston, TX3$24.1B3,400
1989
4.6
Oklahoma City, OK1$11.7B1,300
1950
4.9
Houston, TX2$2.0B675
2003
4.4
West Chester, PA1$8.5M75
1888
4.8
Pittsburgh, PA2$11.9B14,600
2002
4.9
Houston, TX3$56.9B10,400
1909
4.8
Warrenville, IL4$164.2B70,100
1980
4.9
San Antonio, TX13$129.9B10,015
1927
4.4
Houston, TX8$143.2B14,600
1968
4.9
San Antonio, TX1$35.0B14,300
1986
4.9
Fort Worth, TX3$4.6B3,335

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Exxon Mobil salaries vs competitors

Among Exxon Mobil competitors, employees at BP America Inc earn the most with an average yearly salary of $112,940.

Compare Exxon Mobil salaries vs competitors

CompanyAverage salaryHourly salarySalary score
Exxon Mobil
$53,156$25.56-
Chevron
$50,184$24.13-
CITGO Petroleum
$41,700$20.05-
Chesapeake Energy
$68,587$32.97-
Murphy Oil
$52,605$25.29-
Energy Transfer Solutions
$62,142$29.88-

Compare Exxon Mobil job title salaries vs competitors

CompanyHighest salaryHourly salary
Exxon Mobil
$98,277$47.25
Chevron
$99,856$48.01
Murphy Oil
$95,920$46.12
Tesoro
$94,055$45.22
BP America Inc
$92,845$44.64
CITGO Petroleum
$92,766$44.60
Valero Energy
$92,762$44.60
Energy Transfer Solutions
$89,499$43.03
Chesapeake Energy
$88,819$42.70
ConocoPhillips
$87,488$42.06
XTO Energy
$76,718$36.88
Phillips 66
$58,317$28.04
Alcoa
$42,939$20.64

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Exxon Mobil jobs

Exxon Mobil demographics vs competitors

Compare gender at Exxon Mobil vs competitors

Job titleMaleFemale
Murphy Oil36%64%
Exxon Mobil56%44%
Chevron57%43%
ConocoPhillips63%37%
Chesapeake Energy67%33%
Alcoa74%26%

Compare race at Exxon Mobil vs competitors

CompanyWhiteHispanic or LatinoBlack or African AmericanAsianUnknownDiversity score
55%17%14%9%5%
10.0
63%15%11%8%3%
9.9
63%14%9%7%7%
9.5
51%22%12%10%5%
10.0
56%18%10%10%5%
9.9
61%15%16%6%3%
9.7

Exxon Mobil revenue vs competitors

Exxon Mobil revenue is $343.4B. Among it's competitors, the company with the highest revenue is Chevron, $202.8B . The company with the lowest revenue is Energy Transfer Solutions, $8.5M.

Exxon Mobil and similar companies CEOs

CEOBio
Roy C. Harvey
Alcoa

Roy Harvey is President and Chief Executive Officer of Alcoa Corporation, a globally-competitive industry leader in bauxite, alumina, and aluminum, with 14,000 employees in 10 countries. He is also a Director of Alcoa Corporation. Roy has served as Alcoa’s Chief Executive Officer since November 2016 and took on the additional role of President in May 2017. Prior to the separation of Alcoa Inc. into two separate companies, he was Executive Vice President and President of Alcoa's Global Primary Products (GPP) business from October 2015 to November 2016. From June 2014 to October 2015, Roy was Executive Vice President, Human Resources, Environment, Health & Safety and Sustainability. As part of this role, he oversaw the Alcoa Foundation, one of the largest corporate foundations in the U.S. During his Alcoa career, Roy has held a variety of operating and financial assignments across the U.S., Europe and Latin America. He was Chief Operating Officer for GPP, where he focused on the day-to-day operations of Alcoa's mining, refining, smelting, castings and energy businesses. Prior to this role, he served as Chief Financial Officer, GPP. Earlier, he served as Director of Investor Relations, and before this role was Director of Corporate Treasury. Roy joined Alcoa in 2002 as a business analyst for GPP in Knoxville, Tennessee. While there, he worked with the global casthouse system to develop performance measurement systems and drive casthouse profitability. He later moved to Brazil as casthouse manager in the São Luis smelter and then as the plant controller. In 2007, he became plant manager for the San Ciprián smelter in Spain, and a year later he was named Director of Finance and Business Integration for GPP Europe. Before coming to Alcoa, Roy was Corporate Manager of Environmental Affairs at Greenstone Resources Ltd., a gold mining company based in Central America. Roy graduated with honors from The Wharton School of Business, University of Pennsylvania, simultaneously earning master’s degrees in International Business and Corporate Finance as a fellow of the Lauder Institute International MBA program, and holds a bachelor’s degree in Mining Engineering from Columbia University. In 2008, Roy was named to the prestigious Young Global Leaders Program of the World Economic Forum.

Robert D. Lawler
Chesapeake Energy

Michael K. Wirth
Chevron

Ryan M. Lance
ConocoPhillips

Ryan Lance is an American businessman. He serves as the chairman and chief executive officer of ConocoPhillips.

Roger W. Jenkins
Murphy Oil

Roger W. Jenkins was elected President & Chief Executive Officer of Murphy Oil Corporation in 2013. Jenkins joined Murphy in 2001 as Drilling Manager in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. In 2002, he was promoted to Operations Manager, Sabah. In 2004, he was promoted to Senior Operations Manager. Jenkins was named General Manager, Sabah Operations in 2006 before being promoted to Vice President/General Manager, Sabah Operations in early 2007. In September 2007, he transferred to Houston after being named Senior Vice President, North America, overseeing all North American operations and exploration. In 2009, he became President of Murphy Exploration & Production Company and was named Chief Operating Officer for Murphy Oil Corporation in 2012. 
Jenkins earned a bachelor’s degree in Petroleum Engineering from Louisiana State University in 1983. He received an MBA in Finance from Tulane University in 1994 and has completed the Advanced Management Program at Harvard Business School. Prior to joining Murphy, Jenkins spent 17 years with another major oil company.

Mr. Greg C. Garland
Phillips 66

Mr. Joseph W. Gorder
Valero Energy

Joe Gorder became Chairman of the Board on Dec. 31, 2014, and Chief Executive Officer on May 1, 2014. He previously served as President, and as Chief Operating Officer, responsible for refining operations and commercial operations in marketing, supply and transportation. He also has served as Chief Commercial Officer and President of Valero Europe. He oversaw all commercial trading and related activity for the company, including Crude and Feedstock Supply and Trading, Products Supply and Trading, Wholesale Marketing, Logistics Operations, Commercial Business Development, Transportation and Specialty Products Marketing. In addition, he was responsible for all business activity and operations of Valero’s assets in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Gorder served as Valero’s Executive Vice President-Marketing and Supply, following tenure as Senior Vice President for Corporate Development and Strategic Planning. Before joining Valero, he held the positions of Vice President of Business Development for Ultramar Diamond Shamrock, and Director of Commercial/Industrial Sales, Assistant Treasurer and Director of Information Systems for Diamond Shamrock.

Bernard Looney
BP America Inc

Carlos E. Jordá
CITGO Petroleum

Randy Cleveland
XTO Energy

What employees say about Exxon Mobil's competitors

Employee reviews
profile
3.0
A zippia user wrote a review on Jul 2024
Pros of working at Exxon Mobil

Global environment mentality

Cons of working at Exxon Mobil

Employee ranking on performance

Exxon Mobil benefits

Benefits and perks

What do you like best about Exxon Mobil's CEO and the leadership team?

Accountable, somewhat open

How would you improve Exxon Mobil's culture?

Change performance ranking and stop reorganization to get rid of people. Not HR friendly

How did you prepare for the Exxon Mobil interview?

Questions based on situations faced

How does your compensation at Exxon Mobil compare to the industry average?

Keeps up with industry average

What's the diversity at Exxon Mobil like?

Somewhat diverse just to make it look good

What brings you the most joy at Exxon Mobil?

Accomplishment, but little recognition

Is this useful?1 people found this review helpful
profile
4.0
A zippia user wrote a review on Sep 2019
Pros of working at Exxon Mobil

There's a lot of experienced people that can help me do my job better.

Cons of working at Exxon Mobil

Not sure about the oil industry. I think I would like to work on something better.

Exxon Mobil benefits

Coffee is good I think. Also I like the cafeteria.

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