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- Newsgroups: sci.engr
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!sdd.hp.com!hp-cv!hp-pcd!hp-vcd!edmoore
- From: edmoore@vcd.hp.com (Ed Moore)
- Subject: Re: I don't want to keep looking for new jobs.
- Sender: news@vcd.hp.com (News user)
- Message-ID: <BzzqHo.D8E@vcd.hp.com>
- Date: Mon, 28 Dec 1992 22:29:48 GMT
- References: <1gt3n6INNko5@access.usask.ca>
- Organization: Hewlett-Packard VCD
- X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.1.4 PL6]
- Lines: 69
-
- >user Ed Moore@vcd.hp.com writes:
- >>If we engineers must expect to have many jobs rather than a few,
- >>then perhaps we should pursue education in breadth rather than in depth.
- >
- >Yah! A little of this, a little of that. It makes sense.
-
- I (Ed Moore) agree that it makes sense, but often for unfortunate reasons.
- There definitely is a need for specialists. Much of what we regard as progress
- in the industrial world is the direct result of individuals dedicating their
- lives to a single, narrow pursuit. In my opinion, we would be flying today on
- airplanes of 1950s technology if all airplanes since 1903 had been designed by
- generalist engineers. The progress in aerospace technology was greatly
- enhanced by the specialist.
-
- >>We need more company managers (like Ed Moore's HP bosses) who recognize that
- >>a well-trained and CROSS-TRAINED staff is far more useful than a whole room
- >>full of specialists.
- >
- >Oops! Can't quite buy this one. There is a need for specialists.
-
- Amen! HP's businesses are far more amenable to the cross-trained staff than is
- Boeing's business. I went to Boeing as a stress analyst with no aircraft
- stress analysis experience. I discovered that the structural optimization (to
- save weight) on airframes required detailed knowledge of the intricate
- structural features used on airframes. On a bridge, building or nuclear power
- plant, a large member is used to carry a large load. On an airframe, a hundred
- small, thin pieces are riveted or bonded together to carry the large load. I
- believe the only people who know whether the resulting structure will perform
- the task are those who are intimately acquainted with such structures. Let me
- emphasize, I only want to fly on airplanes designed by specialists!
-
- >The recent trend to decentralize organizations has led to an
- >unwillingness to support technical specialists. The problem is
- >that when managers are forced to look no further than their own
- >relatively small bottom lines, they become reluctant to keep
- >specialists on staff. An engineer with a broad (but shallow) background
- >becomes more attractive to managers than an engineer who has been
- >doing one or two difficult activities very well for years. The specialist
- >becomes an albatros, because his organization typically does not
- >have enough need for his/her expertise. But it and other organizations
- >do have that need from time to time.
-
- I agree completely. If a business has technical problems that need
- specialists, and yet sacrifices its specialists to improve today's bottom line,
- then it is simply another example of the U.S. practice of short term investing.
-
- >We may not be around much longer, for the reasons that I've mentioned.
- >But the willingness of companies to eliminate technical specialists
- >from their payrolls can only cost them more, in the long term.
-
- Yes, short term investing tends to be less rewarding than long term investing.
-
- What is good for the country and company may not be good for the individual
- engineer. Long term investing will, in the long term, be more rewarding to the
- country and company. But the individual engineer cannot force good investment
- practices on the company. If my son were a young engineer I would strongly
- encourage him to avoid specializing to protect his career. To be a bit
- flippant, you are always qualified for your present job or you wouldn't have
- it. Therefore don't spend any time improving your qualifications for that job;
- spend that time preparing for a different job you are not qualified for.
-
- This discussion is vital to the interests of young engineers. I'd like to see
- many engineers with 15+ years experience throw in their observations. They
- might be very different from mine, and the young engineer has a right to know.
-
- My opinions, not HP's.
- Ed Moore - edmoore@vcd.hp.com
- Hewlett-Packard
- Vancouver, WA
-