No question, some parts of the engineering job market are
hot right now. “That means anyone with experience in ‘green’
and sustainability industries,” says Tri-Star Search recruiter
Edrie Bezak in Portland, Oreg. “I could probably place people
in those areas without even speaking to them.”
Bezak says the demand is particularly high for engineers
who can certify that buildings are living up to ASHRAE environmental
standards, or U.S. Green Building Council LEED
ratings. Ditto for engineers with experience running and
commissioning wind farms. “We are seeing people coming
from Denmark to fill those positions. That goes for slots in
field operations and installation, all the way to day-to-day
operation of wind farms,” she says.
Employers are paying up for these kinds of skills. “On
the west coast, the low end of the range is about $75,000
and the high end is $110,000 for mechanical or electrical
engineers with green or sustainability skills,” says Bezak.
Also in demand are electrical engineers with experience
in running utility substations and working with high
voltages. “High-voltage engineers with experience are
pushing the $100,000 mark,” she says.
Another healthy area is in radio-frequency work. “RF
stuff on the west coast is in the $70,000 to $80,000 range,”
says Bezak.
Salaries are moving up quickly for hard-to-find engineering
candidates, she claims, but “for run-of-the-mill
jobs, they are stagnant if not going lower,” Bezak says.
“There is not much going on in the semiconductor industry
because so much of that industry has gone offshore. That
will probably continue.”
In other areas demand seems to be steady, though
not superheated. “A lot of areas have been flat for the last
few months, probably because of anxiety about where the
economy is going,” says Allan Vohden, general manager of
Vohden Associates LLC in West Simsbury, Conn. Nevertheless,
Vohden has seen hiring activity by medical-device
makers, factory-automation firms, process-engineering
concerns, and petrochemical processors. “There has also
been a steady demand for engineers who can design with
plastics, as well as mold designers,” he says.
But Vohden doesn’t see a lot of upward pressure on
salaries in these areas. “Employers are still working on tight
budgets. My impression is that salaries are basically flat for
these jobs,” he says. Typical starting salaries tend to cluster
in the $59,000 to $65,000 range, Vohden says. The figure
might rise to between $65,000 to $75,000 for those with
10-years experience, “perhaps up to $80,000, depending
on the industry,” he says.
Echoing that sentiment is Lee Holland, vice president of Carnegie Resources in Charlotte, N.C. “Hiring is spotty,”
he says. “Salaries are going up slowly except in companies
that have to fill a position left by someone who had a lot of
specialized experience.”
Holland says he is seeing engineering salaries in the
$65,000 to $85,000 range, but “I’ve seen them as high as
$90,000 to $100,000 for real specific skills. You are going
to pay $90,000+ for a highly experienced gear designer,”
he says.
Others in demand include engineers with experience
designing conveyor systems and in metalforming. “We
have been inundated with requests for people with experience
designing tools and dies, particularly from the
food-service suppliers and from Tier-1 and Tier-2 auto suppliers.
The automotive industry has lost a lot of tool and die
designers to retirement. There aren’t a lot of young people
going into that industry,” says Holland.
“Heavy industrial companies also are looking for engineers
and seem to be doing well,” says Lucas Group
executive senior partner Erik Kessinger in Atlanta. “And a
lot of companies are doing well in composites and defenserelated
work,” he says.
Kessinger is also getting calls for electrical engineers
with a background in consumer products, mechanical engineers
with skills designing plastic parts, and both mechanical
and electrical engineers familiar with medical devices.
Regardless of the industry, a few engineering skills
seem to be universally useful. Most recruiters we contacted
mention a background in Pro/Engineer as a big plus. Several
also mentioned SolidWorks familiarity as helpful.
Finally, age doesn’t seem to be as much of an impediment
to hiring as it once was, at least according to recruiters.
“If the engineer has the right background, age doesn’t
matter,” insists Carnegie Resources’ Lee Holland. “Age is only
a problem for some of the strongly skilled engineers who
didn’t finisher their degree,” says Edrie Bezak. “For those
with a degree, age is no problem whatsoever.”
Make Contact
Carnegie Resources, carnegieresources.com/
Lucas Group, lucasgroup.com/manufacturing/index.asp
Shanklin & Associates, techjobsearch.com/
Tri-Star Search, tinyurl.com/2hq7gb
Vohden Associates, vohdenassociates.com/
Engineers
in the
Most Demand
- Gear designers
- Tool-and-die designers
- Plastic-part designers
- Medical-device
designers
- High-voltage
engineers
- “Green” building
engineers
- Wind-farm operators
- Automated-equipment
designers
|