Johnny, I think we do agree.
My experience working with clients in the general petroleum industry is that the culture there does invest in the long term for reliability, safety, and overall lowest cost. The companies may be large, making it a challenge at times to get your preferred initiatives to move forward, but there is already current of support there. If anything, there is so much going on at petroleum industry companies that the volume of opportunities and rapid change is the challenge.
I was warning against working for companies that lack the culture for maintenance and reliability. I would avoid them entirely. And at companies that are luke-warm to the value of reliability engineering, it's important to know who your advocates are and how they are positioned to support the cause. In any situation, it's always wise use metrics to show the results, and keep tracking them to confirm things are still working. (This doesn't mean metrics guarantee 100% support, but metrics and value propositions are the currency of business management and build trust in you. If you can speak that language, it will be recognized at all higher levels in the company. Engineering and maintenance talk only resonates to a point.)
I do believe this particular career path (rotating equipment reliability) is both interesting and full of long-term opportunity. It's also transportable across industries more than other career paths. I would be excited to hire someone with my design engineering team if they had a reliability and maintenance background. If you're in the USA, reliability and continuous improvement is one of the major efforts that make our successful companies profitable. They don't teach much in engineering school - in fact the first things to learn is why the things you learned are not enough to be useful (a good example, once you learn to calculate a bearing's L10 life, learn why it's usually inaccurate and how to calculate an L10a life instead). Spend time learning as much as you can about machining, inspection, fabrication/welding, machine design, and if possible reliability in school. I had to work to learn these things after college because my exposure was so limited in school.
David