nrME
Mechanical
- Jun 20, 2011
- 3
Hi everyone,
I am about to finish up my MSME. I have focused on polymer composites and would like to find work in that area (or closely related).
I have no experience in industry, so I am very unsure about a few things:
1) How important is a P.E. for mechanical engineers? I know a civil engineer (has his P.E.) who insists that it is essential to the future of my career. I thought it was good to have, but not quite as essential as he made it sound.
2) With only an M.S. is R&D a dead end road to go down? Also, is it common for R&D positions at smaller companies to include a lot of SBIR/STTR proposal writing? Is that experience valuable to future jobs or does it lock you into a less technical career path? (for example will that experience not be counted if I wanted to change jobs to a design position somewhere else?)
I appreciate any answer and advice you can give. My adviser and other professors are pretty useless when it comes to advice regarding the complexities of trying to make a career in industry.
I am about to finish up my MSME. I have focused on polymer composites and would like to find work in that area (or closely related).
I have no experience in industry, so I am very unsure about a few things:
1) How important is a P.E. for mechanical engineers? I know a civil engineer (has his P.E.) who insists that it is essential to the future of my career. I thought it was good to have, but not quite as essential as he made it sound.
2) With only an M.S. is R&D a dead end road to go down? Also, is it common for R&D positions at smaller companies to include a lot of SBIR/STTR proposal writing? Is that experience valuable to future jobs or does it lock you into a less technical career path? (for example will that experience not be counted if I wanted to change jobs to a design position somewhere else?)
I appreciate any answer and advice you can give. My adviser and other professors are pretty useless when it comes to advice regarding the complexities of trying to make a career in industry.