A lot of this discussion is focused on the question of if non-engineers or engineers make the best managers.
Some people take the view that they will only work for an engineer manager and no one else.
I don’t want to get off on a rant here but…
In my experience there an engineering degree is no predictor of success or failure in being a manager. I have seen both extremes and everything in between from both non engineers and engineers when it comes to managing ability.
Managing is not about engineering and engineering is not about managing, although some engineering techniques can be applied to management. Managing is about motivating people. Managing is about leadership. Managing is about resolving conflicts in the work place. Managing is about communication skills, presentation skills, marketing skills. None of this is about engineering. These skills help engineers, they are just not central to being an engineer.
The best and worst managers that I have ever worked for are both engineers, both products of the same training and selection process. It was when I was a civilian employee of the Canadian military and my immediate manager was a military officer. They were the result of the identical process and the best was posted in to replace the worst who was getting out of the military. (Not because he was seen as a bad manager but because he was offered a lot of money in the private sector. I often wonder how many days he survived in that job.)
Where managing and engineering meet is in the technical aspects of managing. Managing is about making decisions. Often these decisions are made on the basis of a mathematical model that uses statistical or other analytical skills common to engineering to make predictions . Managing often requires a certain logical thinking process that is common to engineers. These skills also exist outside of engineering, its just that they are common to all engineers.
Engineering is often about detail. All too often the Peter Principle applies and a good detail engineer gets promoted to management based on detail success and is an abject failure where the requirement to manage is about seeing the larger picture and seeking necessary and valid compromises to achieve the required result.
Engineers often lack in people skills. We are more comfortable with numbers and equations that behave in predictable manners. We are not comfortable working with people who behave in often unpredictable fashions. (They can be predicted, just not by the skills taught in engineering schools nor with the precision of predicting deflections in a steel beam.)
To say that you would only work for another engineer is also a career limiting decision. Sooner or later the lines of responsibility and accountability in your organization must converge and they almost never converge in an unbroken line of engineers. Even if they do, your company is hired by an outside entity and that is never an unbroken line of engineers.
Also if you are say a civil engineer would you work for an electrical engineer? What does an electrical engineer know about civil engineering technical issues? Lets break this down further. Would you as a structural engineer work for a municipal engineer when they are both sub disciplines of civil? Would you as a steel designer work for an engineer whose expertise is reinforced concrete? After all what does a concrete engineer know about steel?
If I was a junior engineer just starting out I would seek out manager who had good technical skills as well as good managerial skills. Remember that a job interview goes both ways and I like the comment about hiring the company.
There was a comment in another thread where a senior engineering manager routinely made available the résumé’s of senior staff to applicants. Why not politely ask for them? If you are applying to a consulting company then these are standard documents that they routinely give to prospective clients and often post on the web site. If they have a problem with that request then think about why they do not want you to know this information. After all you will soon learn this information in the workplace. Any company that practices any sort of enlightened management should be impressed with your diligence and insight in asking for them and happy to provide them.
Early in one’s career it is important to refine one’s technical training and gain experience in the practical application of these skills. Unfortunately it is at this stage of one’s career that one does not have the options of multiple job offers and the ability to distinguish good technical and managerial skills quickly. Just remember that good judgment comes from experience and experience comes from bad judgment. If you make a mistake, learn from it try to correct it and move on.
Also early in your career you often do not have the luxury of turning down a job offer because you need the money, you do not know when the next offer will be coming. The worst job I ever had was one where I jumped at an offer because I thought I needed that job. (Coincidentally the manager was a non engineer who neither understood nor respected engineering.)
As for the comment about the GE manager who casually made a comment that PE’s were a good thing for everyone here is another spin on that. I have a client who is a former base commander for the Canadian military. He and I spent last summer at their corporate head office working very closely and staying at the same hotel and taking most meals together. There were others in our work group that were also ex- military commanders in both the Canadian Armed Forces and the US Army. They all said that the most difficult thing about being a commander was remembering that even the most casual comment could be construed as an order and considerable effort and expense would be spent in meeting it. Expense that he did not mean nor sanction.
Perhaps the manager made the suggestion simply as a general comment that quickly took on a life of its own and the result was something that he was caught in and unable to stop without appearing to be hypercritical or undeceive. If he really meant for it to be company policy, does he publish policy in the newsletter? Explain it perhaps but policy in large organizations is usually a more formal procedure that the newsletter.
Why expect us to be PE’s and not support us in this endeavor? (on site classes, work time for study groups, testing centers in the facility etc.) What do you mean you don’t really want us to be PE’s? What does it say here in the newsletter?
On the other hand he might have meant to establish policy that way. Its often more effective to have a widely believed and followed flexible informal policy that to issue a formal rigid policy. A simple word to motivate the troops and let the best rise to the top. I don’t know the circumstances but it’s an alternate explanation.
Of course that’s just my opinion. I could be wrong.
Rick Kitson MBA P.Eng
Construction Project Management
From conception to completion