JD P.E.
Mechanical
- Oct 17, 2021
- 78
Through a professional relationship I have been offered the opportunity to open an satellite office for a relatively young engineering firm (5 years old). The main firm has about 35 employees and caters to mostly O&G/petrochem - revenues somewhere around 7-8 mil. The overall business is growing fast, is debt free, and the owner who is also an engineer is focused on opening other locations. There are no established relationships in this area and it would be on me to generate business and do the engineering for the projects I'm comfortable with (if PE required, the owner would review & stamp). If it gets busy I can leverage other employees at the headquarters while I work on hiring other engineers. My primary focus would be on the regional power plants, pulp/paper mills, and refineries - about 55 total.
The scope of my services would include a range of maintenance & reliability consulting as well as vessel/tank design, pipe design, pipe stress, etc.
My personal experience is slim since I've been an engineer about 4 years. However, I've always been the hardest worker in the room and people inside and outside the companies I work for took notice (reason I was offered this), but I also know I don't know everything.
Is there someone with a little more experience that can comment on if this is either a great opportunity or a train wreck waiting to happen? I'd preferably like to hear from people who have taken career risks or went out on their own - but all opinions welcome.
The scope of my services would include a range of maintenance & reliability consulting as well as vessel/tank design, pipe design, pipe stress, etc.
My personal experience is slim since I've been an engineer about 4 years. However, I've always been the hardest worker in the room and people inside and outside the companies I work for took notice (reason I was offered this), but I also know I don't know everything.
Is there someone with a little more experience that can comment on if this is either a great opportunity or a train wreck waiting to happen? I'd preferably like to hear from people who have taken career risks or went out on their own - but all opinions welcome.