How does one find one of the production engineering jobs? One of the best ways is to seek a position as a graduate engineer trainee.
If you have a degree and want a job as quickly as possible in your chosen field, such a position might just be the answer for you. You will get to use the skills you obtained in college on a daily basis. A graduate engineer trainee might deal with production evaluation, managing manufacturing, and operating in supplies.
In your interview for the position, you might be asked about the factors you will keep in mind when designing something, the PERT analysis, the favorite subject you had during your last semester of college, about basic designs and digital design, and any number of other subjects related to engineering. Practicing ahead of time for your interview could help you get the trainee job that will lead to a position as a production engineer.
There are many production engineering jobs, but the availability of such jobs depends on your location. Some current production engineering jobs available are from Toyota and the Lucas Group. You can find such job listing on CareerBuilder.
Sales engineering jobs are not necessarily "plentiful" in today's economy. Sales engineering jobs are some of the first jobs to be cut, because they do not involve production.
There are plenty of production engineering jobs available out there. Some common ones are an industrial technologist, industrial engineer, and manufacturing engineer.
The best way to go with Chemical Engineering is to find jobs in chemical plants such as Exxon or Shell. There you could get jobs such as plant manager, production engineer, and so on depending on what you like the most.
I was unable to find the unemployment rate for manufacturing engineering jobs, but I was able to find the unemployment rate for production occupations. For more unemployment rates, visit: http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.t13.htm
I was unable to find the unemployment rate for manufacturing engineering jobs, but I was able to find the unemployment rate for production occupations. For more unemployment rates, visit: http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.t13.htm
There sure are. One place you might begin your search would be Conoco Phillips. If that is not what you're looking for you might try http://www.olx.com/q/production-engineering/c-256.
dirty jobs
Engineeringcrossing.com is a site specific for engineering jobs. but sites like monster.com, jobs.com, and pHd.org, can give a wider variety of jobs including engineering jobs.
Try searching on www.indeed.com. They have many different engineering jobs that you can research and apply for. You can enter your location to find engineering jobs near you.
I don't see why not. Lots of engineering jobs overlap, but to be sure I'd check with more knowledgeable people on the subject (i.e. track down an aeronautical engineer, ask him)
Maintance away is the railway jobs that use mechanical engineering.