LostHippie
Mechanical
- Sep 2, 2011
- 25
So, I am a recent college graduate that has been working with a small diesel engine spinoff company of a larger transport corporation for about 7 months. The job pays well below the average starting salary for mechanical engineers, and gives a flat, yearly pay increase of 2%. The benefits and vacation policy blows, its in a crappy area with pretty much no access to civilization within an hour of the building, and on top of that the job is so simple a high school graduate could learn to do it in a month or less. I took the job because of a time constraint issue, and do my best to be as productive and friendly as possible, but for some reason my supervisor has decided that I am his mortal enemy, and continually squabbles with me over silly things that do not affect the company nor the quality of my work. Recently he has halted any progression towards adding responsibility or importance to my job function, and yet other engineers that hired on at the same time as me are moving on to bigger and better projects. I know I am not incompetent because all of my coworkers constantly comment on the quality of my work.
So now I have a potential in with an industrial lighting company, where I (along with several other recent graduate engineers) will be developing a line of industrial LED lighting units, and later will assist in retro-fitting older facilities with said lighting solutions. The pay increase is not much (3%); however, it will be 20 minutes from a major city in my state, and 1.5 hours from several of the largest cities in the state. On top of all of this, I may actually get to do some real engineering work for the first time since I graduated, which I admit the lack of engineering has been killing me.
I go in tomorrow to check out the facility and talk with the director of engineering, I'm pretty sure I'm a shoe-in from the phone conversation I had earlier this week. I'm wondering if it is worth the risk of relocating and all of that jazz (especially since I haven't gotten in a full year with this company) for what I would classify as an upgrade in geographical satisfaction? I'm not sure how my new boss will be, or if the general attitude of the workforce will be any better, or any of that.
Any comments or suggestions would be very helpful,
LostHippie
So now I have a potential in with an industrial lighting company, where I (along with several other recent graduate engineers) will be developing a line of industrial LED lighting units, and later will assist in retro-fitting older facilities with said lighting solutions. The pay increase is not much (3%); however, it will be 20 minutes from a major city in my state, and 1.5 hours from several of the largest cities in the state. On top of all of this, I may actually get to do some real engineering work for the first time since I graduated, which I admit the lack of engineering has been killing me.
I go in tomorrow to check out the facility and talk with the director of engineering, I'm pretty sure I'm a shoe-in from the phone conversation I had earlier this week. I'm wondering if it is worth the risk of relocating and all of that jazz (especially since I haven't gotten in a full year with this company) for what I would classify as an upgrade in geographical satisfaction? I'm not sure how my new boss will be, or if the general attitude of the workforce will be any better, or any of that.
Any comments or suggestions would be very helpful,
LostHippie