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Career path guidance

M

mook johnson

Jan 1, 1970
0
Howdy Folks,

I am humbly seeking advice on career path moves to learn from your successes
and mistakes.

I have a BSEE and 8 years experience. I'm mostly an analog engineer in a
company that does low volume and low technology products for oil fields.
These are used downhole so extremely conservative designs are the norm. We
push the edge on nothing. The is a niche market emerging on high
temperature electronics (200 - 500 C) for jets, cars, etc.

Problem is that I have been promoted from jr. engineer to engineering
manager over ~30 engineers & techs, in 8 years. That seems fast to me since
I've only completed 1 large scale project and a few smaller scale ones in
that time (lots of down time). The stuff I've worked on is performing great
in the field, but I'd like to have more experience under my belt before I
move up to the ranks of management. The projects have been largely analog
such as a 10 mile cable telemetry drivers, offline SMPS, offline BLDC motor
drive, thermal performance, electrical reliability, load switching, analog
measurements, sensors, A2D, and some slow 8-bit digital microcontrollers and
PICs to control things and communicate with the host.

Should I be concerned about not learning high speed DSP, FPGA (xylinx
spartin), Tera-flop processing speeds, other industry technology?

How bad is it to corner yourself into a niche? how do you avoid doing it?
As a manager, I'll only be exposed to new technology by looking over the
shoulders of others. I feel like I'm getting less technically savvy by the
minute. :)

Your advice is appreciated. It can be a simple as telling your career
story.

TIA
 
D

Dan Fraser

Jan 1, 1970
0
As a manager all you will need to know is enough to stter other people and
to know when they are BSing you. Others need to think you now the stuff but
as a manager all you really need are the buzzwords.

On the other hand, 2 years in management, if you get laid off, you'll be
next to useless as an engineer again.

Do you real Dilbert?
 
T

Tim Wescott

Jan 1, 1970
0
Dan said:
As a manager all you will need to know is enough to stter other people and
to know when they are BSing you. Others need to think you now the stuff but
as a manager all you really need are the buzzwords.

On the other hand, 2 years in management, if you get laid off, you'll be
next to useless as an engineer again.

Do you real Dilbert?

More importantly, do you _want_ to be a manager? Remember that managers
_manage_, they don't engineer -- if you see yourself enjoying that then
go for it, and plan on picking up the necessary business skills. I've
gone the opposite direction, having recently quit my day job and taken
up consulting to avoid becoming management.
 
G

Guy Macon

Jan 1, 1970
0
mook johnson said:
Problem is that I have been promoted from jr. engineer to engineering
manager over ~30 engineers & techs, in 8 years. That seems fast to me since
I've only completed 1 large scale project and a few smaller scale ones in
that time (lots of down time).

Is there any chance that you are being set up as a scapegoat?
Should I be concerned about not learning high speed DSP, FPGA (xylinx
spartin), Tera-flop processing speeds, other industry technology?

How bad is it to corner yourself into a niche? how do you avoid doing it?
As a manager, I'll only be exposed to new technology by looking over the
shoulders of others. I feel like I'm getting less technically savvy by the
minute. :)

Your biggest problem will be that companies looking for engineers don't
like to hire managers, and companies looking for managers have a tendency
to not want managers from other companies, and especially other *kinds*
of companies. You may end up in a situation where you have to take
whatever they dish out because nobody else will hire you. I am not saying
that this always happens, but I have seen it.

Take a look at http://www.guymacon.com/trance.html and note hidden
rule number four...
 
J

Jim Thompson

Jan 1, 1970
0
As a manager all you will need to know is enough to steer other people and
to know when they are BSing you. Others need to think you now the stuff but
as a manager all you really need are the buzzwords.

Wrong! My policy, when I was a manager, was simple... be able to do
everything the troops could, only better.

Let the troops take the credit and glory for every accomplishment.

(What do I need glory for, as manager I get the _money_ ;-)
On the other hand, 2 years in management, if you get laid off, you'll be
next to useless as an engineer again.

Not if you follow my policy. (But the paperwork hassles can hamper
your ability to learn and hone your skills... that, and the political
BS, caused me to ultimately opt out of management.)
Do you read Dilbert?
[snip]

Yep.

...Jim Thompson
 
J

Joerg

Jan 1, 1970
0
Here I agree with Jim. You have to understand what your engineers are doing or
projects will run out of control faster than you think.

Also, you'd have to enjoy managing. I always did. But I know many, many who
didn't yet stuck to the role they were put into.

If you pursue managing: Get involved, take interest in all the projects but
never micro manage. Give people decision making power and praise. That's not
easy. Once I had to reluctantly let our SW guys pick an operating system I
didn't like at all. But I allowed them to come to their own consensus with just
one little demand: I'd hold them responsible to make it work.

Now for the hard part: You may be faced with tough decisions in the future. An
example is a layoff. Not for the faint of heart but that may have to be done at
some point. Also, you will become a buffer between upper management and your
engineers. That can be pretty nerve racking but for me it was ok.

Regards, Joerg
 
M

mook johnson

Jan 1, 1970
0
These are exactly the kinds of comments I was looking for.

Keep them coming and thanks.
 
T

Terry Given

Jan 1, 1970
0
mook johnson said:
These are exactly the kinds of comments I was looking for.

Keep them coming and thanks.

Beat this: I sacked myself as R&D manager because I found out I was crap as
a manager, and am really only interested in designing circuits. My boss was
surprised, to say the least, but we solved the management issues (it was an
offshore R&D house with 5 engineers and a technician, for a US company) and
I went back to designing circuits - win-win for the company.

Cheers
Terry
 
J

John Larkin

Jan 1, 1970
0
Beat this: I sacked myself as R&D manager because I found out I was crap as
a manager, and am really only interested in designing circuits. My boss was
surprised, to say the least, but we solved the management issues (it was an
offshore R&D house with 5 engineers and a technician, for a US company) and
I went back to designing circuits - win-win for the company.

Cheers
Terry

Right: management is a pain. There's nothing more fun than designing
cicuits.

John
 
K

Kevin Aylward

Jan 1, 1970
0
Jim said:

Nonsense and complete crap. The above answer is, essentially, correct.
My policy, when I was a manager, was simple... be able to do
everything the troops could, only better.

You are a dreadful manager then. Period. Its a most basic, non debatable
point, that this what *good* managers must never attempt do.

You are simply not not being realistic. Your simply dreaming. A manager
may well be managing projects that involve very complicated software and
hardware. It is simply not possible to be an expert in all of the
*detailed* aspects of such projects. A managers job is to organise
*other* experts to the job, not be able to to the job himself. He needs
to know when to but out, and let those that actually know the details do
*their* job.


Kevin Aylward
[email protected]
http://www.anasoft.co.uk
SuperSpice, a very affordable Mixed-Mode
Windows Simulator with Schematic Capture,
Waveform Display, FFT's and Filter Design.
 
K

Kevin Aylward

Jan 1, 1970
0
Joerg said:
Here I agree with Jim. You have to understand what your engineers are
doing or projects will run out of control faster than you think.

That is not what Jim is saying. Sure, you need to have a good
*appreciation* of what your engineers are doing, but Jim is claiming
that the manager should be *better* in all details then the experts that
are being paid to do that job specifically. Its daft. Its a complete
waste of resources.

I can't believe that people can be so clueless as to the function of
what a good manager is.

Kevin Aylward
[email protected]
http://www.anasoft.co.uk
SuperSpice, a very affordable Mixed-Mode
Windows Simulator with Schematic Capture,
Waveform Display, FFT's and Filter Design.
 
T

Terry Given

Jan 1, 1970
0
Kevin Aylward said:
Nonsense and complete crap. The above answer is, essentially, correct.


You are a dreadful manager then. Period. Its a most basic, non debatable
point, that this what *good* managers must never attempt do.

You are simply not not being realistic. Your simply dreaming. A manager
may well be managing projects that involve very complicated software and
hardware. It is simply not possible to be an expert in all of the
*detailed* aspects of such projects. A managers job is to organise
*other* experts to the job, not be able to to the job himself. He needs
to know when to but out, and let those that actually know the details do
*their* job.


Kevin Aylward

The aforementioned answer is IMO a THEORETICAL one. In practice, the manager
is going to have to make decisions. If 2 techos with similar qualifications
come to a manager, and state opposing cases for a course of action, who do
you believe? IME most managers go with the guy who is WRONG, because they
just didnt understand the explanation. I lost an argument a while back to a
guy whose entire argument was essentially that 2.31 > 3.0. I won the battle
though, when things turned to shit a-la my predictions.

However Kev is dead right about managers not designing. I had an R&D manager
who insisted on doing everything, himself. If he had been capable, it may
have worked. alas he was not. We turned upward delegation into a sport thoug
h, and twiddled our thumbs while he did our work (but didnt collect our
wages).

Cheers
Terry
 
K

Kevin Aylward

Jan 1, 1970
0
Terry said:
The aforementioned answer is IMO a THEORETICAL one. In practice, the
manager is going to have to make decisions.
Yes.

If 2 techos with similar
qualifications come to a manager, and state opposing cases for a
course of action, who do you believe?

No one said life was simple.
IME most managers go with the
guy who is WRONG, because they just didnt understand the explanation.

But there is no practical way to avoid this situation. Its a basic fact
of life. People *have* to make decisions based on an incomplete
understanding. We have to accept that wrong decisions are always going
to be made, and that no blame can be attached for making those wrong
decisions.
I lost an argument a while back to a guy whose entire argument was
essentially that 2.31 > 3.0. I won the battle though, when things
turned to shit a-la my predictions.

We can all recount these type of situations. However, it dosnt realy
mean much. One neglects all the times when we were also wrong.

The universe is described by a big probability function. It is
impossible to make predictions 100% correct. Indeed, evolution tells us
that out of large number of mutations (i.e. possible trial and error
solutions to a problem), only a few are an improvement in net survival
numbers.

The point here, is that managers need to address, and be expert in,
different issues then design. That's what "manager" means. You cant
*expect* then president of the US to understand the details of
constructing a nuclear bomb, which is what Jim is suggesting, and is a
complete non starter. The president only needs to know the bigger
picture. Of course, he has to trust scientists on some aspects, and this
could result in a wrong decision, but there is absolutely no way around
this fundamental issue. Its *impossible* to be master of all trades. We
just have to live with, or not as the case may be, with this aspect of
our finiteness.

Kevin Aylward
[email protected]
http://www.anasoft.co.uk
SuperSpice, a very affordable Mixed-Mode
Windows Simulator with Schematic Capture,
Waveform Display, FFT's and Filter Design.
 
T

Terry Given

Jan 1, 1970
0
Kevin Aylward said:
No one said life was simple.

Amen to that.
But there is no practical way to avoid this situation. Its a basic fact
of life. People *have* to make decisions based on an incomplete
understanding. We have to accept that wrong decisions are always going
to be made, and that no blame can be attached for making those wrong
decisions.

I try and make decisions based on risk management. I do this with my circuit
designs too - identify the areas that are highest risk, make sure I check
them adequately, and have strategies to deal with negative outcomes. For
example as long as my circuit layout allows me to place the correct parts,
lots of mistakes can be fixed at low cost. conversely failing to take
thermal and mechanical operating conditions into account at the design stage
typically leads to nightmare re-design scenarios. Its usually pretty obvious
where time is better spent in the design phase using this approach.

Note the deliberate use of *try* - you are dead right, everybody makes
mistakes, its only the reasons that change.
We can all recount these type of situations. However, it dosnt realy
mean much. One neglects all the times when we were also wrong.

mistakes are an opportunity to improve skills. When I make mistakes, I try
to find out the root cause - and learn from it. sometimes I learn
measurement techniques, or analysis methods, or cross-checking etc. But
invariably there is something to be learned.....even (especially :) if its
someone elses mistake.
The universe is described by a big probability function. It is
impossible to make predictions 100% correct. Indeed, evolution tells us
that out of large number of mutations (i.e. possible trial and error
solutions to a problem), only a few are an improvement in net survival
numbers.

Indeed. Statistics are also meaningless in the context of an individual -
obviously so, to you. but lots of people get really stuck on this.
The point here, is that managers need to address, and be expert in,
different issues then design. That's what "manager" means. You cant
*expect* then president of the US to understand the details of
constructing a nuclear bomb, which is what Jim is suggesting, and is a
complete non starter. The president only needs to know the bigger
picture. Of course, he has to trust scientists on some aspects, and this
could result in a wrong decision, but there is absolutely no way around
this fundamental issue. Its *impossible* to be master of all trades. We
just have to live with, or not as the case may be, with this aspect of
our finiteness.

Kevin Aylward

Yep. "A good leader makes decisions. Sometimes they are right" - I dunno who
said it, but IMO its true. The worst bosses I have had are always the ones
who cannot make decisions, and by inaction cause great harm (didnt Bill
write a play about that). The best bosses were the ones that made decisions
and then measured their performance, correcting when necessary (quality
people talk of Plan-Do-Check-Act to solve issues, ie close a feedback loop
around a problem to make it go away).

As far as being an "expert" in all of the things your staff do, I think
(with a bit of creative interpretation) that it is actually achievable. I
think troubleshooting skills are the key. A thorough understanding of the
basic principles of the various engineering disciplines is helpful, but
having excellent engineers whos judgment you can rely on is better.

Getting team dynamics to work is the other good trick. A friend of mine
described managing engineers as "like herding cats with egos".

Cheers
Terry
 
K

Kevin Aylward

Jan 1, 1970
0
John said:
No, really Kevin, you should try it some day.

Ahmm.. after 30+ years of doing so, I have really outgrown it. Shagging
birds is much more fun...Its what we are designed to do.

Kevin Aylward
[email protected]
http://www.anasoft.co.uk
SuperSpice, a very affordable Mixed-Mode
Windows Simulator with Schematic Capture,
Waveform Display, FFT's and Filter Design.
 
K

Kevin Aylward

Jan 1, 1970
0
Terry said:
Amen to that.


I try and make decisions based on risk management. I do this with my
circuit designs too - identify the areas that are highest risk, make
sure I check them adequately, and have strategies to deal with
negative outcomes. For example as long as my circuit layout allows me
to place the correct parts, lots of mistakes can be fixed at low
cost. conversely failing to take thermal and mechanical operating
conditions into account at the design stage typically leads to
nightmare re-design scenarios. Its usually pretty obvious where time
is better spent in the design phase using this approach.

Note the deliberate use of *try* - you are dead right, everybody makes
mistakes, its only the reasons that change.


mistakes are an opportunity to improve skills. When I make mistakes,
I try to find out the root cause - and learn from it. sometimes I
learn measurement techniques, or analysis methods, or cross-checking
etc. But invariably there is something to be learned.....even
(especially :) if its someone elses mistake.

I hope you realised that I was being a bit deeper here. Our brain, as is
life itself, is a Darwinian machine
(http://www.anasoft.co.uk/replicators/index.html). All of our process
resolve to only 3 principles. Random generation of traits, selection of
traits, and replication of those traits.

The *only* way we can predict *anything* and *everything* is because of
a prior trial and error process. its absolutly inherent that all
knowledge is gained from selection of mistakes (bad mutations).

Making mistakes gets bad press, but the reality is that it *is* the
mistakes that must occur to make successes. Even playing the guitar. If
you never play a bum note, you aint playing anything new.
Yep. "A good leader makes decisions. Sometimes they are right" - I
dunno who said it, but IMO its true. The worst bosses I have had are
always the ones who cannot make decisions, and by inaction cause
great harm (didnt Bill write a play about that). The best bosses were
the ones that made decisions and then measured their performance,
correcting when necessary (quality people talk of Plan-Do-Check-Act
to solve issues, ie close a feedback loop around a problem to make it
go away).

As far as being an "expert" in all of the things your staff do, I
think (with a bit of creative interpretation) that it is actually
achievable.

and you were doing so well up to this point:)

Its not achievable in a million years. A few hundred years ago, it many
have been possible for a good scientist to have a really good handle on
the sum knowledge at that time. Today, its completely out of the
question. As I said, its a complete non starter. Why do you think there
are so many specialist medical doctors? Most expert technical papers, in
any general field (medicine, physics etc) are only understood in detail
by a scant handful of specific specialists.
I think troubleshooting skills are the key. A thorough
understanding of the basic principles of the various engineering
disciplines is helpful,

Yes. The key phrase here is "basic principles". That is all one can ask
for.
but having excellent engineers whos judgment
you can rely on is better.
Yep.


Getting team dynamics to work is the other good trick. A friend of
mine described managing engineers as "like herding cats with egos".

Probably.

Kevin Aylward
[email protected]
http://www.anasoft.co.uk
SuperSpice, a very affordable Mixed-Mode
Windows Simulator with Schematic Capture,
Waveform Display, FFT's and Filter Design.
 
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