[Editorial]
Staying Employed In This Industry Can Be Tough At Times
Joseph Desposito
ED Online ID #19025
June 12, 2008
Copyright © 2006 Penton Media, Inc., All rights reserved. Printing of this document is for personal use only.
Reprints
In an issue where we celebrate the top 50 employers
and also list the top employers in the electronics
OEM, it’s worthwhile to bring up one of the dirty
words of the industry—unemployment.
As someone who has lived through many of the industry’s
downturns and experienced layoffs firsthand, I can say with
certainty that this profession is fraught with career minefields.
But probably you already know that.
When I found myself out of a job early in my career due to
a downturn in the industry, I absolutely did the wrong thing.
I dropped out of grad school, which my company had been
paying for. When I couldn’t find another position right away, I
found a job in another field.
Somehow it didn’t dawn on me that the best way to survive
the downturn was to stay in graduate school and, when
things turned around, try to get back into
the workforce with an improved educational
background. But what did I know?
Maybe I wasn’t listening, but I don’t
remember any of my professors warning us
future EEs about the volatility of the industry
we were joining. In my naiveté, I thought
an EE degree essentially meant that I would
have a job for life. After all, in other professions
and even other engineering
disciplines, this is often the case.
In fact, the “other” EE degree—
electrical engineering rather than
electronic engineering—seems to lead
to a much more stable profession. But
I was smitten with electronics and didn’t
consider working at a utility, such as Con Edison,
which services the New York area.
MORE THAN ONE STORY
Many other EEs have had similar career snafus. I meet them
all the time. One guy who I knew many years ago and worked
in the defense industry like me got so tired of bouncing around
from one company to another, depending on which one
secured the latest military contract, he finally quit and went
back to school for an accounting degree. Thankfully, I never
went that far.
A couple of other guys now work on the periphery of the
industry. Both started their own networking companies, one
after getting laid off from a satellite communications company
and the other from a semiconductor company. But they aren’t
designing networking chips or equipment. They’re simply
building and maintaining PC networks for small businesses.
Another fellow I know has a son who graduated with an EE
degree back in 2002 and couldn’t find a job in the industry during
that downturn. Now, his son works in another field. If I had
known the son better, I probably would have advised him to go
to grad school, as I mentioned earlier, and wait for the industry
to recover. But even if he were my own son, I think it would
have been a hard sell.
ON THE OTHER HAND
Of course, EEs fare better in some companies than in others.
National Instruments didn’t resort to layoffs during the devastating
years following the dot-com meltdown in March 2000.
When I first heard this (back in 2004, if I remember correctly),
I felt NI should be held up as a model for this industry.
If every company held on to its EEs during the tough
times, the profession would gain in stability and
respectability. And, there might never be a
“lack of EE graduates” to worry about.
One generation of happily employed
engineers would surely encourage
the next generation to follow a similar
career path.
On the subject of industry downturns,
I had a chance to talk with
Theo Claasen, executive VP of business
development and board member
of NXP, at the recent International Electronics
Forum (IEF) in Dubai, UAE. At one
point in the conversation, he mentioned that for
the most part the semiconductor industry has been
cyclical with high average growth.
When I asked if these industry ups and downs were ever
going to end, he pointed out that in the last few years the semiconductor
industry has been less cyclical with healthy growth
in the high single-digits. Maybe this is what’s needed after all.
If companies don’t have to experience boom and bust cycles
every few years, maybe there will be a trickle-down effect to
EEs, who will finally enjoy some long-term job security.
As for my own story, I got back into the industry through
the back door, so to speak, securing a job in the editorial end of
the business—a position that required an EE degree. I have to
admit I was thrilled when I landed that job many years ago and
am still happy to be part of this industry today.
This issue names 50 and more of the top employers in the
electronics industry. We hope that it will be of value to you
in your career, as well as to engineering students you may
know who might benefit from knowing where to place their
first resumes.
|