Don't go to college. Work in a trade. The system is boken.
I have a BSME and can't land an interview
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How much experience do you have and in what field? I have had pretty damn good success looking for a job and I have a BSME. I have ~10 years of experience with R&D scale-up and chemical processes. I probably put in 100-125 job applications, got 30-40 call backs, 20ish 1st rounds, 10 2nd rounds and 4 offers. This was over the span of approximately 5 or so months. If you are not getting hits on your resume, think about changing it up. Focus on your accomplishments and impact.Comment
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How much experience do you have and in what field? I have had pretty damn good success looking for a job and I have a BSME. I have ~10 years of experience with R&D scale-up and chemical processes. I probably put in 100-125 job applications, got 30-40 call backs, 20ish 1st rounds, 10 2nd rounds and 4 offers. This was over the span of approximately 5 or so months. If you are not getting hits on your resume, think about changing it up. Focus on your accomplishments and impact.
Personally, I think it's all shit. People just cook numbers quantifying accomplishments and then give some shit explanation if mud checked on it during an interview. If I was hiring an engineer I would want to know what they can do, not how nicely they framed some accomplishment they most likely embellished on the resume.
If I was to try and go back and dig into quantifying what I did, it would require tracking down old colleagues and having a sit down trying to make sense of what we can remember and doing the best we could to quantify it all based off logic. We were never given metrics on any of that shit nor did we pay attention to it.Last edited by fate0311; 10-22-2024, 07:41 AM.Comment
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Resume is good. It isn't textbook STAR method. My background is in test and evaluation so it is exploratory work. Harder to quantify accomplishments when my focus has essentially been trying to break things and then assessing the failure points. It's hard to explain but test engineering is a tough one to put on a resume sometimes without just listing the tests I did which doesn't help with STAR method.
Personally, I think it's all shit. People just cook numbers quantifying accomplishments and then give some shit explanation if mud checked on it during an interview. If I was hiring an engineer I would want to know what they can do, not how nicely they framed some accomplishment they most likely embellished on the resume.
If I was to try and go back and dig into quantifying what I did, it would require tracking down old colleagues and having a sit down trying to make sense of what we can remember and doing the best we could to quantify it all based off logic. We were never given metrics on any of that shit nor did we pay attention to it.
Just fkin lmaoDeath to all genocidal fascists. Glory to the revolution! Glory to the workers!Comment
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Took you this long to figure that out, damn
Think I’m the only one in my company without a degree. I got certs thoughLast edited by InsideMane; 10-22-2024, 07:50 AM.Comment
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Resume is good. It isn't textbook STAR method. My background is in test and evaluation so it is exploratory work. Harder to quantify accomplishments when my focus has essentially been trying to break things and then assessing the failure points. It's hard to explain but test engineering is a tough one to put on a resume sometimes without just listing the tests I did which doesn't help with STAR method.
Personally, I think it's all shit. People just cook numbers quantifying accomplishments and then give some shit explanation if mud checked on it during an interview. If I was hiring an engineer I would want to know what they can do, not how nicely they framed some accomplishment they most likely embellished on the resume.
If I was to try and go back and dig into quantifying what I did, it would require tracking down old colleagues and having a sit down trying to make sense of what we can remember and doing the best we could to quantify it all based off logic. We were never given metrics on any of that shit nor did we pay attention to it.
You do need to jump through the hoops for job interviews, especially now that its more of an employers market. How you speak to the screener/recruiter versus manager versus subject matter expert matters. HR/Recruiter holds the keys to the kingdom for the most part, tell them what they want to hear. Any engineer on engineer interview will be easy since you should be able to talk shop and just get to the details, but that's usually one of the last interviews you will do.
Contact those co-workers and figure those numbers out. Learn the lesson and track those metrics yourself in the future, get to know your industry better and what the numbers are. There is a huge difference between "Scaled up a process to commercialization" versus "Scaled up a process to commercialization that produces 8M ft2 of product a year" . I am going to guess for your experience its the difference between "Performed non-destructive testing for a product line" and "Performed non-destructive testing, ensured that the 1.6M units met a quality threshold of 99.4% during production".Comment
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If you want me to take a look over your resume for you, send me a PM and scrub it of personal information. Ill give it a look over. I'm not familiar with testing engineers but I am sure there is a way to express your work that appeals to either other test engineer roles or similar positions.
You do need to jump through the hoops for job interviews, especially now that its more of an employers market. How you speak to the screener/recruiter versus manager versus subject matter expert matters. HR/Recruiter holds the keys to the kingdom for the most part, tell them what they want to hear. Any engineer on engineer interview will be easy since you should be able to talk shop and just get to the details, but that's usually one of the last interviews you will do.
Contact those co-workers and figure those numbers out. Learn the lesson and track those metrics yourself in the future, get to know your industry better and what the numbers are. There is a huge difference between "Scaled up a process to commercialization" versus "Scaled up a process to commercialization that produces 8M ft2 of product a year" . I am going to guess for your experience its the difference between "Performed non-destructive testing for a product line" and "Performed non-destructive testing, ensured that the 1.6M units met a quality threshold of 99.4% during production".
- Performed MPI and FPI testing to identify and monitor areas of stress concentration, facilitating timely design rework and increasing overall testing efficiencyComment
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That bullet point is fine, but should be under another bullet point that better explains the goal/larger picture at hand.Comment
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Looking back I should have got a strong trade or 'career for life' if that even exists. I have done alot of contract work over the years, whereby once the contract is ended you either get transferred to another company many miles away or take redundancy for some extra cash. I have sent out countless applications since September, only had 3 interviews. Got another tomorrow though, so I just got to keep up hope.Former username on old misc was 'maori-rap'Comment
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So tell a story from high->low level (chronologically) over the span of 4-6 bullets? Specific bullets are fine as long as the first couple bullets address the industry/context of what you do on a high level.Comment
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"Mechanical Engineer Manager" Date Start - End- Lead a group of engineers and technicians in the development of "Whatever Novel Product" for "Whoever it was". Successfully developed product catalog that passed acceptance for TXDOT and CALDOT construction projects.
- Determined feasibility by investigating and scaling down of existing industrial processes used within industry.
- Developed PFD's, P&ID's, BOMs, 2D Drawings and 3D Models (Solidworks) for in-house test systems that mimicked existing industrial processes.
- Produced Statement of works, scopes and other relevant vendor documentation necessary for electrical and control portions of the project.
- Oversaw in-house mechanical fabrication, construction and commissioning of scaled processes. Developed training material for both technicians and scientists.
- Managed EPC contractor in the scale up R&D process; Capital project budgeted at 40MM. Full scale production (80MT/yr) expected to go online Q4 2024.
- Acted as the Subject Matter Expert (SME) for "Whoever it was" - Assisted in the development of mechanical portions of project.
- Provided updates to stakeholders regularly, this included: Executive Team, Board of Directors and Potential Investors.
- Lead safety initiatives included FMEA, HAZOP, and LOTO documentation for full facility.
- Determined feasibility by investigating and scaling down of existing industrial processes used within industry.
- Next project I worked on
The details were changed but that is the general outline of how my resume reads. My resume is 1 page (Front and back) and I always include a cover letter. I have about 6 or 7 templates that I developed and I just swap names/titles/companies that I feel would work best. Hope this helps.Last edited by Cuminmebro; 10-22-2024, 12:27 PM.Comment
- Lead a group of engineers and technicians in the development of "Whatever Novel Product" for "Whoever it was". Successfully developed product catalog that passed acceptance for TXDOT and CALDOT construction projects.
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Escientally. As an example, my resume goes as follows:
"Mechanical Engineer Manager" Date Start - End- Lead a group of engineers and technicians in the development of "Whatever Novel Product" for "Whoever it was". Successfully developed product catalog that passed acceptance for TXDOT and CALDOT construction projects.
- Determined feasibility by investigating and scaling down of existing industrial processes used within industry.
- Developed PFD's, P&ID's, BOMs, 2D Drawings and 3D Models (Solidworks) for in-house test systems that mimicked existing industrial processes.
- Produced Statement of works, scopes and other relevant vendor documentation necessary for electrical and control portions of the project.
- Oversaw in-house mechanical fabrication, construction and commissioning of scaled processes. Developed training material for both technicians and scientists.
- Managed EPC contractor in the scale up R&D process; Capital project budgeted at 40MM. Full scale production (80MT/yr) expected to go online Q4 2024.
- Acted as the Subject Matter Expert (SME) for "Whoever it was" - Assisted in the development of mechanical portions of project.
- Provided updates to stakeholders regularly, this included: Executive Team, Board of Directors and Potential Investors.
- Lead safety initiatives included FMEA, HAZOP, and LOTO documentation for full facility.
- Determined feasibility by investigating and scaling down of existing industrial processes used within industry.
- Next project I worked on
The details were changed but that is the general outline of how my resume reads. My resume is 1 page (Front and back) and I always include a cover letter. I have about 6 or 7 templates that I developed and I just swap names/titles/companies that I feel would work best. Hope this helps.Comment
- Lead a group of engineers and technicians in the development of "Whatever Novel Product" for "Whoever it was". Successfully developed product catalog that passed acceptance for TXDOT and CALDOT construction projects.
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go blame Biden voters.
It's even way worse in Canada. Getting a job offer is seen as a gift now. Every job has 1000 applicants.
weak men create weak times....
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