What engineering discipline would you recommend new students specialize in (or avoid) given the current/future job market?
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What engineering discipline would you recommend new students specialize in (or avoid) given the current/future job market?
What task in your role would be the hardest to explain to someone outside your industry? For me, some of the work seems straightforward until you try explaining all the constraints, tradeoffs, and decision-making involved. What’s something people usually don’t understand about your job?
It took me a long time to say it out loud, but I regret choosing this path. The pay is stable, but the constant pressure and lack of fulfillment are leaving me feeling like I'm ready to exit. I’m actually thinking about a total career change later in life. Has anyone successfully walked away from engineering after a decade plus?
What’s one thing that new employees often underestimate when starting a new job? In my experience, it’s how long it takes to learn the informal processes and relationships that actually make things happen. The technical side is often easier to pick up than the organizational side. What do you think?
I’ve been working in construction since I graduated 5 years ago. I’ve gradually realized I don't want to do this for the next 3 decades, but I feel stuck. Is it too late to switch engineering disciplines without destroying my career progression?
How do you handle disagreements with your manager about technical decisions? I’ve learned to pick my battles and always come with data instead of opinions when I do push back. It doesn’t always work, but it at least keeps the conversation productive. How do you approach it?
Mechanical
Always going to need mechanical for anything physical. Electrical is another great one for this market, but takes the right person to do that
Mechanical