I live in an area with a lot of high tech jobs (Salt Lake) and I can tell you that the competition is intense. I have been looking for a job for almost five months, with a Master's in engineering and no experience/internships (think that last bit is really screwing me atm), and I have received one interview total.
Several of my applications were even auto rejected because I had 95% of the skills they wanted, but not 100%. The pool of applicants is so large that they don't have to care if you don't have absolutely everything they want.
I was always told that engineering is a skill set that leads to easy employment, if you can make it through college. Turns out that was wildly inaccurate.
Umm, because bacteria, algae and plants make hydrocarbons in exactly this method?
The problem is the steps involved to make these kinds of chemicals (gasoline) are generally waste products (from other reactions) which poison the algae, making it difficult to get high concentrations/ lots of production.
Cantennas are perfectly legal- where does does idea of illegality come from? The only thing I could find is one cop who didn't know what the hell he was talking about.
I don't know of any undergraduate course called "management".
There are tons of management courses available at any decent buisiness college! Organizational behavior and management, small business management, etc. etc.
The problem is more that many of those aforementioned PHB do not in fact have any management courses under their belt, and neither do they have the technical experience to be able to properly understand things from an engineer's point of view. The Org Behavior course I took was incredibly helpful, and I would strongly recommend anyone who is a manager with no educational experience take a few classes.
Nucor Steel and Licoln Electric are a good example of where management knows how to get their people motivated and keep them happy. But the techniques they use are VERY well explained in any management class- Go now! Take one! At a reputable college preferably. (and I don't mean one of those stupid self help seminar things)
I live in an area with a lot of high tech jobs (Salt Lake) and I can tell you that the competition is intense. I have been looking for a job for almost five months, with a Master's in engineering and no experience/internships (think that last bit is really screwing me atm), and I have received one interview total. Several of my applications were even auto rejected because I had 95% of the skills they wanted, but not 100%. The pool of applicants is so large that they don't have to care if you don't have absolutely everything they want. I was always told that engineering is a skill set that leads to easy employment, if you can make it through college. Turns out that was wildly inaccurate.
Umm, because bacteria, algae and plants make hydrocarbons in exactly this method? The problem is the steps involved to make these kinds of chemicals (gasoline) are generally waste products (from other reactions) which poison the algae, making it difficult to get high concentrations/ lots of production.
Cantennas are perfectly legal- where does does idea of illegality come from? The only thing I could find is one cop who didn't know what the hell he was talking about.
There are tons of management courses available at any decent buisiness college! Organizational behavior and management, small business management, etc. etc.The problem is more that many of those aforementioned PHB do not in fact have any management courses under their belt, and neither do they have the technical experience to be able to properly understand things from an engineer's point of view. The Org Behavior course I took was incredibly helpful, and I would strongly recommend anyone who is a manager with no educational experience take a few classes.
Nucor Steel and Licoln Electric are a good example of where management knows how to get their people motivated and keep them happy. But the techniques they use are VERY well explained in any management class- Go now! Take one! At a reputable college preferably. (and I don't mean one of those stupid self help seminar things)