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AREngineering advice I would give you if I wasn’t afraid of hurting your feelings:
1. Being “smart” is not enough. Engineering rewards consistency, not bursts of brilliance. The people who move up are the ones who show up prepared every single time.
2. If you don’t understand something, say it. Sitting quietly in meetings doesn’t make you look competent, it makes you invisible. Ask the question. Chances are three other people are confused too.
3. Your degree is just the entry ticket. The real learning starts on the job. No one cares what grade you got in Thermo five years from now. They care if you can solve problems today.
4. Communication will make or break your career. If you can’t explain your design clearly, it doesn’t matter how good it is. The engineers who rise fastest know how to speak to non-engineers.
5. Stop waiting to feel “ready.” You will never feel 100% qualified. Apply for the role. Lead the meeting. Volunteer for the stretch project. Growth is uncomfortable on purpose.
6. And lastly, no one is coming to manage your career for you. Not your boss. Not HR. You have to ask for raises, ask for responsibility, and track your wins.
This isn’t harsh. It’s real.
Engineering is an incredible career if you treat it like a skill you’re actively building, not just a title you earned.
If you’re in STEM, I want you to win. But you have to take ownership.
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