TranslationStation6
New member
I'm not sure if I'm allowed to ask for career advice here but this is the area for questions so
I'm a process engineer at a university clean room in the US. I work on some simple projects that companies hire us to complete in addition to training students, working on our own projects and doing a bit of maintenance. I have been doing this for ~4 years, and started after completing my masters degree (electrical engineering). In this context I have done every step of most fabrication processes except implantation and packaging.
I would like to move into industry but I do not have any industry experience and do not know anyone in industry to ask for advice. I suspect that right now it may not be too hard to get a process engineering job at a fab? Is applications engineering a good long term career move? I like some of the applications positions I see but imagine that devoting so much time to learning one specific tool for one organization would not lead to many transferrable skills for when I leave the role. Is there a risk of being pigeon holed? I would like to do product engineering but I do not have any hardware design experience which seems desired. Test and validation also seem intriguing, but have a similar issue.
Are there any areas that seem more promising for development than others? I just feel a bit lost when I look at applications and don't know what is sensible to pursue. I'd thought that I had a solid skill set and resume for this field but find my self questioning that as I look at requirements.
I can say that I would like to live in as large of a metro area as possible.
I'm a process engineer at a university clean room in the US. I work on some simple projects that companies hire us to complete in addition to training students, working on our own projects and doing a bit of maintenance. I have been doing this for ~4 years, and started after completing my masters degree (electrical engineering). In this context I have done every step of most fabrication processes except implantation and packaging.
I would like to move into industry but I do not have any industry experience and do not know anyone in industry to ask for advice. I suspect that right now it may not be too hard to get a process engineering job at a fab? Is applications engineering a good long term career move? I like some of the applications positions I see but imagine that devoting so much time to learning one specific tool for one organization would not lead to many transferrable skills for when I leave the role. Is there a risk of being pigeon holed? I would like to do product engineering but I do not have any hardware design experience which seems desired. Test and validation also seem intriguing, but have a similar issue.
Are there any areas that seem more promising for development than others? I just feel a bit lost when I look at applications and don't know what is sensible to pursue. I'd thought that I had a solid skill set and resume for this field but find my self questioning that as I look at requirements.
I can say that I would like to live in as large of a metro area as possible.