Will taking up a job as a manufacturing engineer effect my job prospects to mechanical engineering roles in the future?

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Posted on 16 Aug 2022, this text provides information on Job Search Queries related to Career Talk. Please note that while accuracy is prioritized, the data presented might not be entirely correct or up-to-date. This information is offered for general knowledge and informational purposes only, and should not be considered as a substitute for professional advice.

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manpreet Tuteehub forum best answer Best Answer 2 years ago

 


I am currently working as a Mechanical Design Engineer at one of the Silicon Valley Tech companies.

Recently, I was interviewed by A company for the Manufacturing Engineer role.

The process is almost done and I think that there will be an offer most definitely.

I just have a lingering doubt/concern that if I take this role, I will not be able to revert back to a Mechanical design engineer role in the future as the places to where I will apply will consider me a manufacturing engineer and not a mechanical design engineer. The job is very similar to what I am doing at my current place but the title is different.

So my question is: Will taking up a job as a manufacturing engineer effect my job prospects to mechanical engineering roles in the future?

Also: Will companies entertain my requests if I ask for a slight change in the job title to something like "Mechanical Engineer in Manufacturing"?

Further details on the role:

This role basically involves Architecting (system-level design) of the manufacturing lines, giving specifications to the vendors who build the equipment, reviewing them, validating them. Depending on the individual doing the job, he/she can dig very deep into the technical review and can also suggest very specific parts and designs. So, in a way, this role also has a design component to it. It is quite interesting and I feel is challenging.

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manpreet 2 years ago


I've worked in manufacturing roles in 3 companies for the last dozen years and before that was in academia/laboratory roles as well as a stint in a start-up.

Only you can answer, of course, what is best for your career trajectory, but it is possible to say something about the general differences between those two career paths and also something about career switching in your context.

Manufacturing engineering in most places is lumped together with the vast domain of "supply chain management". The people in such jobs work with a very much "convergent" perspective. Their job is to create their deliverables in a planned and structured way. Performance is measured on speed, cost, and repeatability. The ultimate goal is to meet expectations without surprises. In manufacturing engineering you work as a "bridge" between engineering and contract manufacturers. That might sound interesting but what it usually means in big companies is that much of your interactions will be heavily mediated by project managers on the engineering side and account managers on the CM side (with interests that are orthogonal to each other). Until you develop the right relationships with technical folks, on your own with no help, you will be vulnerable to very pushy supply chain people who only care about their own KPI's and are pulling/pushing you in different directions.

I made it sound like Manufacturing engineering sucks, but I do work in it and I like it. It's not that I enjoy dealing with supply-chain people, the endless turgid ECO process, shitty MRP software, and engineering departments that won't give me the time of day, but I have been able to carve out a niche doing satisfying, technically interesting work. In my case, I focus on failure mode analysis and mfg-test application software and process control. It certainly is not possible in many places to do what I do, YMMV.

By contrast in Design engineering, in the best cases, work is done with an "emergent" perspective. You're creating new possibilities and are judged not just on speed and consistency but also on more intangible aspects of the work. There will be a problem, I think, to cross back into Design if you venture out in to a Manufacturing job. Manufacturing, in many places, isn't regarded as engineering and large orgs with organizational "silos" don't like career-changers. Moreover, you won't necessarily develop a deep understanding of the products while in manufacturing unless you somehow develop solid relationships with people in engineering.

To explicitly answer your questions:

Will taking up a job as a manufacturing engineer effect my job prospects to mechanical engineering roles in the future?

Yes.

Also: Will companies entertain my requests if I ask for a slight change in the job title to something like "Mechanical Engineer, Advanced Manufacturing"?

A big company? Probably not. The job title is just a title, anyway. I would focus instead on what they actually expect you to do more than the job title.


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