Moonstone
The satisfaction of seeing something useful where there was nothing before is the reason why I became an engineer and why I still enjoy the profession so much some 30 years later.
IMHO “real” engineering is done in the field. That’s not to say that there is no place for the theoretical design stuff, but the actual taking of raw materials and seeing it fashioned into a useful end result is what it is all about, at least for me anyway.
The other advice about being organized in the office is good advice as well, losing documentation and control over the administrative stuff is a real killer. If you cannot produce any documentation about something happening then you cannot prove that it happened. Keep a good diary, I like to use lab books with bound pages so you cannot lose a page or be accused of tearing one out. (And NEVER take a page for use as scrap paper; keep some other paper for that. A lawyer friend taught me that.)
One final piece of advice the worst decision you can ever make is to default to making no decision at all, you may decide to defer the decision until something happens or you get better information but to fail to make a decision is the worst decision you can ever make.
You will never have perfect information you sometimes have to make some assumptions, sometimes you can have too much information and be subject to analysis paralysis but sooner or later you will have to make a decision. Better to make it earlier and then move on.
Often you can be 80% correct with only 20% information, best to hit the target while there is an opportunity than to concentrate on a perfect bull’s eye only to find that the opportunity to make a decision has moved on before you make it.
Make the best decisions you can with the skills, information and resources available then move on. If it doesn’t work out then make a decision to correct the problem, but don’t lose any sleep after you have done your best, tomorrow is another day and will have its own problems and challenges.
Rick Kitson MBA P.Eng
Construction Project Management
From conception to completion