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Engineers Need Exceptional Growth Plans By Gary Hinkle
An engineering career is a challenge, not something for academic lightweights or people who aren’t passionately interested in the intriguing practice of mechanical, electrical, civil or other engineering disciplines in the real world. As students, aspiring engineers must conquer a hefty load of advanced coursework in math, physics and other subjects that may not, at times, seem to have any practical application in the real world. Soon after starting their careers, most realize that their academic education was just the beginning, and that career-relevant continuing education is critical for success. As Carl Selinger says in his book, Stuff You Don’t Learn in Engineering School, “Engineers are concerned not just with technical competency, but with so many things…that their engineering education has not prepared them for.” Investing in continuing education needs to be a life-long commitment.
Leading Others
Business Skills
Eventually, many engineers take on
project leadership roles which call on a broader and more advanced set of
abilities like delegating, influencing, communicating, estimating,
negotiating and planning. The challenge they face is how to significantly
improve in these areas of leadership and management. Whether on a leadership track or not, even the brightest engineers, realizing the importance of all these competencies, find it makes their heads spin. They often don’t know where to start and don’t know how to go about developing these abilities.
Management deficiencies can’t be solved overnight, but a culture of self-management can be established quickly by equipping engineers and managers with comprehensive professional development plans. A good development plan serves as a roadmap for ongoing contributions that meet or exceed employer’s expectations, and every individual who believes in his or her plan should be motivated to follow it on their own. Managers must be supportive, but each individual should create his or her own development plan.
Over time, it’s likely that
different skills will become a priority while other skills languish a bit.
This is especially true for technical skills, as new technologies and
tools replace those that become obsolete or irrelevant. Another example is
shifting from a role where management skills (scheduling, budgeting and
planning, for example) are important, to a role where leadership
characteristics (influence and negotiating ability, for example) are
essential. If you would like a complimentary example of some good development plans, click here to request it from the author.
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