Victoria Burt
Contributing
Editor
The
equipment was for realtime
simulated testing,
and the performance of
the stepper motor had
to be exceptional. So
he used an unenclosed
stepper motor and designed
the housing. “It
was a good design that looked
great,” he says. “However, when
I went to assemble it, I realized
I could only install the screws
that held the assembly together
from the inside. Big stupid
mistake.”
Henderson’s boss was sympathetic
and told him to find
an off-the-shelf stepper with a
housing and good performance.
He did and the test system
worked fine. “I asked my boss
what to do with the $25,000
stepper motor I designed,” he
recalls. “He told me to go to
the test lab, put it in the bottom
drawer, and mark the drawer
‘Extremely important parts. Do
not open.’ Every few years after
that, I would get a call asking for
permission to open the drawer.
I always told them no. Ten years
later, I left the company and the
drawer with the stepper motor
was still there.”
“My biggest career
mistake was jumping
ship too early. When times are
tough and things look dreary,
don’t jump too quickly.” That
advice is from Jim Sines, principal
engineer, who says he quit
his job for a lower-paying job at a different company. “It took
five years to get back to where
I was. And if I had stayed with
the original company, I would
have been included in a buyout
four months later. The buyout
included relocation or a nice
severance package,” he adds.
Mark Walters says his
biggest mistake
was letting other people tell
him what he could or couldn’t
do in his career. After getting
out of the Navy, Walters took a
draftsman position for just over
minimum wage at a local toilet
factory. “I didn’t have a college
degree and just expected that
this was probably the
best I could do,” he says.
“I stayed over 11 years,
partly because I believed
I wasn’t good and also
because the personnel
manager made sure I
understood I was not an
engineer or a designer but
only a draftsman.”
Walters finally took
a chance and tried for a
position with a metallurgical-
furnace fabricator,
and was accepted. “After
a short time there I found
out I had more knowledge
than most of the
designers and some of the
engineers. I learned the
CAD program in less than
a week and after a few months
made it up through the ranks of
designer to engineering technician.”
He stayed with the company
until a downturn in the
economy forced layoffs.
“By this point I had enough
confidence in my abilities to try
for a position in the engineering
department at a semiconductor
test-equipment company.
This is where I am today and
have been for over eight years,”
Walters says. “For too long I listened to people who didn’t
understand my potential. Now
I am a CAD resource and help
many individuals, and I could
have done more for others if I
had moved on before.”
Wendell Reeves
considers himself a
hands-on guy who enjoys
rolling up his sleeves
and getting involved with
equipment and processes.
“At one point in my career,
an engineering manager
asked me to be an
engineering supervisor,
where I had six technical
personnel reporting
to me,” he says. “I was in
this position for three
years, then transferred
to another location as a
process engineer without any
subordinates reporting to me.
Once again I was approached
about applying for the engineering-
supervisor position
with 10 reports. I took the position
and worked in this role
for two years before once again
transferring to my current
location with only technical
responsibilities.”
Reeves says after these two
stints, he realized he did not
particularly enjoy the role of
supervisor and made a decision
to return to a purely technical
role with no supervisory
responsibilities. “I feel much
more fulfilled in taking on
everyday technical issues than
I do dealing with personnel
problems and formal development
of other engineers. My
biggest career mistake was
allowing myself to be enticed
into a role (twice) that I did
not actively seek and probably
took for the wrong reasons
(prestige and promotion).”
Jim Warrens had a comfortable
job as plant engineer of a company that made
plastic ear tags for farm animals
when a recruiter called. “The
job was maintenance superintendent
and I was promised a
promotion when the current
plant engineer retired. It took
me from a small company with
less than 100 employees to a big
company with over 500 employees.
I took the job only to find
myself out of work six months
later,” he says.
Management decided to
reduce overtime pay to 150%
on Sundays instead of the 200%
they were making, and it did
not go over well. “I had no input
into the decision, but I agreed
to it,” Warrens says. “Then I
got blamed for poor morale
and was made the scapegoat. I
was fortunate to receive three
months severance pay. But
I made the mistake of being
greedy and believing the recruiter,”
he says.
He ended up as a manufacturing
engineer for a small
company with nearly no benefits,
making two-thirds of what
he made at the big company.
“The blessing of this mistake
was I got back to doing machine
design and realized that it gave
me more job satisfaction than
being a supervisor. But is has
taken me over a dozen years to
get back to the benefits and pay
levels I lost from that bad decision,”
he adds.
Read more
stories
There are more examples
of reader mistakes on
the Career Talk blog.
Click on community.machinedesign.com/blogs/careertalk and look for the
post called “My biggest
mistake.”