BigEGT
Automotive
- Apr 4, 2005
- 5
I'm kind of at the end of my rope here. This may get a little complicated so I'll try to keep it brief and concise.
I graduated from GA Tech in '03. I had worked in 2 small consulting firms (electrical and civil) during my time at school. I am mechanical and don't want to enter the consulting arena. I know I shot myself in the foot by not obtaining relevant internships. I really stretched myself to graduate in 4 years, but even so I had a few campus interviews. I had one with an auto manufacturer that went (in my opinion) very well. However, I received a rejection letter. Shortly thereafter, my resume found itself to the same people via other contacts. They called and began discussing salary over the phone (as if I already had the job). I was surprised. They then realized they had already interviewed me and said that the (rejection) letter stood.
In any event, I graduated without any prospects and began searching full time. After several weeks, I accepted an offer of employment with a former (civil) employer based on the assumption that I would leave when I found full time work in my field. I intended to stay a month or two. It ended up being a full year. My job was more of a draftsman/secretary/IT/do-it-all position than engineering. I spent that year searching the paper, Monster & company, contacts (limited) and talking to recruiters. A recruiter found an Engineering Change Coordinator contract position for me with a Tier 1 supplier to the auto industry. I took it but it's 65 miles away from home, has no benefits, pays less than entry level engineering salary and (worst of all) is more of a technical assistant position. I don't even work in engineering. I interface with engineering but I work in and directly under maintenance. I have been there 5 months. That brings us to the present.
I'm pretty lost. People ask me what kind of job I would like to do and like all gearheads, I say design engines. But in reality, I don't know if I would like manufacturing or quality or sales or etc. just as well because I've never worked in those specific jobs before. I do know that I prefer to solve problems and think analytically than to push paper and mull over codes and standards. I like to work with things I can lay my hands on: connect the abstract design with the concrete construction.
My apologies for the novel. But I would appreciate any advice that this group can provide. This site is the only place I can ask people who are in my field/situation. Thanks in advance for any help you can provide.
I graduated from GA Tech in '03. I had worked in 2 small consulting firms (electrical and civil) during my time at school. I am mechanical and don't want to enter the consulting arena. I know I shot myself in the foot by not obtaining relevant internships. I really stretched myself to graduate in 4 years, but even so I had a few campus interviews. I had one with an auto manufacturer that went (in my opinion) very well. However, I received a rejection letter. Shortly thereafter, my resume found itself to the same people via other contacts. They called and began discussing salary over the phone (as if I already had the job). I was surprised. They then realized they had already interviewed me and said that the (rejection) letter stood.
In any event, I graduated without any prospects and began searching full time. After several weeks, I accepted an offer of employment with a former (civil) employer based on the assumption that I would leave when I found full time work in my field. I intended to stay a month or two. It ended up being a full year. My job was more of a draftsman/secretary/IT/do-it-all position than engineering. I spent that year searching the paper, Monster & company, contacts (limited) and talking to recruiters. A recruiter found an Engineering Change Coordinator contract position for me with a Tier 1 supplier to the auto industry. I took it but it's 65 miles away from home, has no benefits, pays less than entry level engineering salary and (worst of all) is more of a technical assistant position. I don't even work in engineering. I interface with engineering but I work in and directly under maintenance. I have been there 5 months. That brings us to the present.
I'm pretty lost. People ask me what kind of job I would like to do and like all gearheads, I say design engines. But in reality, I don't know if I would like manufacturing or quality or sales or etc. just as well because I've never worked in those specific jobs before. I do know that I prefer to solve problems and think analytically than to push paper and mull over codes and standards. I like to work with things I can lay my hands on: connect the abstract design with the concrete construction.
My apologies for the novel. But I would appreciate any advice that this group can provide. This site is the only place I can ask people who are in my field/situation. Thanks in advance for any help you can provide.