nate2003
Mechanical
- Sep 25, 2003
- 37
I just got done reading the "Five Year Update" thread and that got me thinking of my own situation and I am wondering about switching engineering fields.
I graduated with a mechanical engineering degree six years ago. I didn't do any relevant internship during college because of where I am from, there were none available, but I did a civil engineering internship with the state and I did road construction and drove trucks, implements, etc. the other years.
After graduating from college I had a difficult time getting a job offer, at least partly due to my lack of experience. Maybe the economy or something else played a part I don't know. After 7 months of looking, I got an offer as a "raw material utilization specialist" at a company that went through tons of steel a day. I primarily worked on revising BOM standards and made nesting improvements on their burn tables, lasers and saws. I was laid off after 6 months. After 4 weeks of looking, I had two offers, one as a machine designer and the other as a manufacturing engineer. I chose the manufacturing engineer job and I'm glad I did because an acquaintance of mine took the other position and was laid off within a year.
Now, five years later, I am quite often disappointed in my job. I spend time training people how to assemble things. I show operators who have been running a machine for 25 years how to rename a CNC program file. I help them layout drawers and organize fixtures for better efficiency. I have been very immersed in lean manufacturing and I am good at it and have done well. My engineering degree helped me get this job, but I look around and see "redeployed" shop personnel doing the same thing I do, although I am paid more. I make capital justifications, but that takes only rudimentary math skills. I deal with suppliers over quality issues. I order tooling. I do ISO audits. I make cleaning lists for the cell operators and audit them for organization and cleanliness, efficiency, etc.
My dilemma is this: I feel that I am losing my technical skills and my education. I LOVED dynamics and physics in college. I wasn't a star in math, but I enjoyed it. Now I rarely use my $200 calculator, and then it is only for simple math. I subscribe to trade magazines for the sole reason of solving the monthly brainteaser.
I have an opportunity for an inter-corporate transfer to a position that is listed as an Industrial Engineer, but it has the same job functions that I am doing now. No offense to the IEs out there, but in school we MEs called the IEs "imaginary engineers" because we felt that vibrations was a harder class than calculating labor standards from time observations. I am concerned that I am slowly losing my knowledge and skills and that I will be stuck forever in a career that I don't like.
What are my options? Someone mentioned Oil and Gas in the other thread. What do O/G engineers do?
I'm not a big dreamer with all sorts of original ideas and solutions, but I like solving problems with existing methods. I like being outside, but that is just a preference. I don't like spending all day at a desk, but half a day is fine. I like projects. I actually like working around manufacturing, I just think I’m regressing intellectually. I don't like big cities, traffic, don’t want to work in a skyscraper, so I'm not interested in working in LA, Chicago, NYC, Milwaukee, etc.
Also, I think that of all the branches of engineering, manufacturing/industrial engineering is high on the list of endangered fields as manufacturing is going overseas at a rapid rate, so that is a concern as well for me and I think that limits my opportunities now and will limit them even more in the future. I would like my career to be flexible so that I can move to a different state if I want and still be able to find a job in my field.
What would my opportunities be in civil engineering?
Any ideas about an engineering career path I might like or how to get into one? I have the corporate experience, the team experience, the office politics, I have confidence in my skills and abilities and I do well at whatever I do. I have been successful in my job. However, does that experience count at all or am I possible looking at starting over in an entry-level position with low pay? I am making around 60K now.
One more thing. I chose engineering as a career in highschool after reading about the marvelous engineering feats of the world at the beginning of every chapter of my trigonometry book. If the stories had been about standard work documents and 5S audits, I probably would have been a farmer or a construction worker.
Thanks for all of your wonderful advice.
"I have had my results for a long time, but I do not yet know how I am to arrive at them." Karl Friedrich Gauss
I graduated with a mechanical engineering degree six years ago. I didn't do any relevant internship during college because of where I am from, there were none available, but I did a civil engineering internship with the state and I did road construction and drove trucks, implements, etc. the other years.
After graduating from college I had a difficult time getting a job offer, at least partly due to my lack of experience. Maybe the economy or something else played a part I don't know. After 7 months of looking, I got an offer as a "raw material utilization specialist" at a company that went through tons of steel a day. I primarily worked on revising BOM standards and made nesting improvements on their burn tables, lasers and saws. I was laid off after 6 months. After 4 weeks of looking, I had two offers, one as a machine designer and the other as a manufacturing engineer. I chose the manufacturing engineer job and I'm glad I did because an acquaintance of mine took the other position and was laid off within a year.
Now, five years later, I am quite often disappointed in my job. I spend time training people how to assemble things. I show operators who have been running a machine for 25 years how to rename a CNC program file. I help them layout drawers and organize fixtures for better efficiency. I have been very immersed in lean manufacturing and I am good at it and have done well. My engineering degree helped me get this job, but I look around and see "redeployed" shop personnel doing the same thing I do, although I am paid more. I make capital justifications, but that takes only rudimentary math skills. I deal with suppliers over quality issues. I order tooling. I do ISO audits. I make cleaning lists for the cell operators and audit them for organization and cleanliness, efficiency, etc.
My dilemma is this: I feel that I am losing my technical skills and my education. I LOVED dynamics and physics in college. I wasn't a star in math, but I enjoyed it. Now I rarely use my $200 calculator, and then it is only for simple math. I subscribe to trade magazines for the sole reason of solving the monthly brainteaser.
I have an opportunity for an inter-corporate transfer to a position that is listed as an Industrial Engineer, but it has the same job functions that I am doing now. No offense to the IEs out there, but in school we MEs called the IEs "imaginary engineers" because we felt that vibrations was a harder class than calculating labor standards from time observations. I am concerned that I am slowly losing my knowledge and skills and that I will be stuck forever in a career that I don't like.
What are my options? Someone mentioned Oil and Gas in the other thread. What do O/G engineers do?
I'm not a big dreamer with all sorts of original ideas and solutions, but I like solving problems with existing methods. I like being outside, but that is just a preference. I don't like spending all day at a desk, but half a day is fine. I like projects. I actually like working around manufacturing, I just think I’m regressing intellectually. I don't like big cities, traffic, don’t want to work in a skyscraper, so I'm not interested in working in LA, Chicago, NYC, Milwaukee, etc.
Also, I think that of all the branches of engineering, manufacturing/industrial engineering is high on the list of endangered fields as manufacturing is going overseas at a rapid rate, so that is a concern as well for me and I think that limits my opportunities now and will limit them even more in the future. I would like my career to be flexible so that I can move to a different state if I want and still be able to find a job in my field.
What would my opportunities be in civil engineering?
Any ideas about an engineering career path I might like or how to get into one? I have the corporate experience, the team experience, the office politics, I have confidence in my skills and abilities and I do well at whatever I do. I have been successful in my job. However, does that experience count at all or am I possible looking at starting over in an entry-level position with low pay? I am making around 60K now.
One more thing. I chose engineering as a career in highschool after reading about the marvelous engineering feats of the world at the beginning of every chapter of my trigonometry book. If the stories had been about standard work documents and 5S audits, I probably would have been a farmer or a construction worker.
Thanks for all of your wonderful advice.
"I have had my results for a long time, but I do not yet know how I am to arrive at them." Karl Friedrich Gauss