bbookz
Structural
- Oct 19, 2005
- 27
I'm looking for some career advice from my fellow professional engineers. I am at a bit a crossroads. I have 9+ years of experience as a building structural engineer for a small/mid sized (20-30) local one office company. I have learned a lot with this company, progressing from EIT straight out of school to a project engineer and PE, but it has been a bumpy road at times. This is the type of small company environment where you are tested early and often, have to learn through trial and error and go from being a helper to a project manager very quickly within a year and a half in my case (for smaller projects). We design everything - wood, concrete, PT, steel, light gauge, masonry etc. QA/QC is spotty at best and there are not many standard procedures to rely on. That being said, the management are good people and there are a few quality mentor engineers to learn from. One thing I have seen, and this probably is industry wide, is that engineers are required to do and know more and more. Being a mid level engineer at this company is a high pressure job and one that lately is taking a toll on me. The mid level engineers do all their own design and drafting, write their own specs, cost estimates, do most of the QA/QC for their projects on their own without much oversight. When I started I supported other mid-level engineers who had plenty of drafting support as well - but now we are on our own and the company seems reluctant to ever hire a drafter again. The few people that get design or drafting help are 20+ year engineers who know little CAD and even they are having to come along. The quality control will not get any better and we have been expanding a little more rapidly lately without a very clear plan in my opinion. I don't see much future promotion potential where I am.
So, all that being said despite my stubborn loyalty and low tolerance for risk - I'm still young at 31 and their are a world of opportunities out there, so I am thinking it is time for a change. I have many skills and am always willing to learn. The problem is that in my area (a prominent mid-atlantic east coast state)structural building engineering is a fairly narrow company selection and on top of this I feel like I need a break from structural design. I just don't like having to design for life safety in an industry with what seems like perpetually narrowing margins = increasing workloads and tighter schedules. Work for the big construction management companies seems like long hours, a lot of travel and low pay.
It seems like civil (erosion sediment control and state mandated storm water management is huge here)engineers have more opportunities both in the public and private sector. I'm reviewing my hydrology and state stormwater regulations on my own time. I am looking for possible work in the public (state, local, $$ federal) sector. At the same time, I don't want to take a big pay cut and start again as I am married, own a home and am planning to start a family (so many changes). So, really I don't know what to do. There is a small chance that I could transfer to the civil side within my own company, but they have invested in me as a structural engineer and I don't think they would want me to do that. So, I will continue looking in hope that I find a good opportunity. Does anyone who has made a transition within the field have any advice for me? Thanks in advance.
So, all that being said despite my stubborn loyalty and low tolerance for risk - I'm still young at 31 and their are a world of opportunities out there, so I am thinking it is time for a change. I have many skills and am always willing to learn. The problem is that in my area (a prominent mid-atlantic east coast state)structural building engineering is a fairly narrow company selection and on top of this I feel like I need a break from structural design. I just don't like having to design for life safety in an industry with what seems like perpetually narrowing margins = increasing workloads and tighter schedules. Work for the big construction management companies seems like long hours, a lot of travel and low pay.
It seems like civil (erosion sediment control and state mandated storm water management is huge here)engineers have more opportunities both in the public and private sector. I'm reviewing my hydrology and state stormwater regulations on my own time. I am looking for possible work in the public (state, local, $$ federal) sector. At the same time, I don't want to take a big pay cut and start again as I am married, own a home and am planning to start a family (so many changes). So, really I don't know what to do. There is a small chance that I could transfer to the civil side within my own company, but they have invested in me as a structural engineer and I don't think they would want me to do that. So, I will continue looking in hope that I find a good opportunity. Does anyone who has made a transition within the field have any advice for me? Thanks in advance.