Posted on 09/15/2014 3:26:55 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
[SNIP]
All of which brings us to the latest popular lament among pundits, politicians, and even some in the business world: the perceived lack of engineers and/or STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) graduates. President Obama has said We need more engineers, so has Hillary Clinton, and then Lockheed Martin executive Stephanie Hill recently stated that well lose if we dont produce at least 1 million more STEM grads.
About all the handwringing, readers can relax. Indeed, theres nothing to this story or alleged shortage. Price signals work. They always do, and they do because one of the underlying purposes of markets is to fulfill unmet needs. We dont need government or deep-thinking policy types to fix what is not a problem. The free markets already are as evidenced by the higher pay that engineers and other technical types can command in the marketplace.
Assuming the higher pay doesnt cause more individuals to migrate toward STEM disciplines, that will merely serve as a signal for companies to apportion even more in the way of funds to the hiring of those who do. If market forces can turn million dollar computers into commodities that can be had for a few hundred, its very apparent that they can solve any presumed dearth of technical laborers. Important here is that innovations divined by the very engineers seen as too short in supply are rapidly negating the need for local talent as is.
Indeed, while Lockheed Martins Hill says well lose if we dont produce more STEM grads, companies like oDesk are rendering this imagined shortfall irrelevant. Thats the case because oDesk matches businesses around the world with engineers and computer programmers from around the world.
(Excerpt) Read more at forbes.com ...
I am so glad that I am reading this. I thought it was just me!
Love RF
And it is true!
Anyone that expects someone disciplined in ALL the engineering arts for $15 Hr is farking NUTS.
OMG, that was too funny.
RF is fun. Cool stuff in there. Most of the guys and dolls in my classes had no clue what the professor and I talked about at times.
With building design, at least people has a smidge of an inkling what I’m talking about. Sometimes.
Pretty much replaced by modeling software that can be used by literally anyone with even a basic understanding of wavelength, take-off angles, capacitance and resistance.
Heck, I downloaded antenna modeling software and learned how to use it in about an hour. Built a home-brew 17m (18mhz) antenna in another hour and made contacts around the world same day.
I laughed so hard because it's true AND someone finally found a way to put it on an easy to understand chart! ROFL!!!!
Have you guys looked at Sologig? It’s the technical/IT only side of Careerbuilder.
Dunno if it’s any better.
If anyone knows an rf engineer with shaped beam experience...ping me
I know a company that pays every aerospace engineer with over 10 years exp well over 100k and I’ve recruited over 100 of them.
“Test Engineer”
LOL! $15 an hour!
I am a test engineer, retired for 3 years. I still turn down offers to go back to work at $150k+. And I just relocated from the Houston area to Florida.
This job stuff is very basic....for defense contractors.
No H1B’s allowed.
Must have the ability to hit the ground running as there is no time to be trained or to learn a task.
Must be a U.S. citizen or you will not be able to get a security clearance.
Some jobs require a clearance to start. If you don’t have it, don’t apply. Some jobs require the ability to gain and maintain govt clearance. If you have a record of domestic violence, don’t apply.
If you have a bankruptcy don’t apply to a job that requires anything over a secret clearance.
There is a job description....ignore it.
There are Basic Qualifications....this is the key.
There should be 4 or 5.
If you do not have the keywords AND experience described in the BQ’s you will not be called for a screening much less an interview. Do not apply. There is no chance for you to get an interview and explain why you would be a great candidate for the job based on things you did not put in your resume or think you COULD do. Let me show you why.
The recruiter designs a Boolean search telling a computer to see who out of the 100 people that applied to the req meet the BQ’s. This drops the people who are qualified vs the people who applied number in half at a minimum. Around 52% of all job applicants apply to jobs they are not qualified for.
So now assume that there are 48 people qualified to do the job left after this search. How do I find the best athlete? I add another search term into the Boolean string. I add the very first DESIRED SKILL to the search.
So under the BQ’s section you will find another section titled DESIRED SKILLS. This where the cream rises. So I add in that 1st desired skill and now I have 20 people that meet all the BQ’s and the 1st Desired Skill. Now a recruiter begins calling and screening people until he gets to a # that he feels will solve for the job. (For most engineering jobs this adding in of the desired skill is not necessary. Do a search for a plasma propulsion engineer with a TS Clearance and tell me how many you find? It won’t be more that 10)
After the screening of the 20, he now knows that these 10 are the best fit. So he sends them to the hiring manager. The hiring manager says I want to interview these 4. He hires one.
The problem is communicating to the other 99 that they did not get the job and doing that well. On the average the company I work for says “NO” to over 1 million people a year and we hire less that 16,000. On the average we and 90% of all companies do their hiring this way and we like the other 90% are still trying to figure out how to say no to the 99% of all applicants and improve the candidate experience.
Sologig is a service that companies pay to post to on CareerBuilder. It gets an employer more coverage, more media points to the job. As far as it being better than regular CareerBuilder, it isn’t. The exact same job is most likely posted on CareerBuilder and Monster and it it is on any COMPANY website like Boeing or Northrop it is already scraped and published daily to Indeed.com.
I have trouble believe “a”, “an” and “the” from him.
Da, comrade. Is good.
The author is a Moron. He quotes from a Lockheed executive who cannot employ H1B’s. Who can’t use anyone but U.S. citizens. Then he implies that the answer is Odesk implying that all work can be done remotely and not in a cleared secure environment approved by the govt. What a rube.
If I had it to do all over again I would have become a cyber security engineer. We can’t make them fast enough or good enough and everyone wants them and there is a war for them. Most of the good ones work for banks and insurance companies. Just lost a senior director level guy because another company offered him over 50K more than I could counter.
What do you do for a living? What is your skill set?
Thanks for the tip.. I was close with electrician. He is working on being a paramedic... Loves people. With the medical field plummeting to hades, I am trying to re- track him. I will have his Grandpa talk to him about it. I am thinking he could be an electrician and a volunteer with the rescue squad or something.. A reliable good paying job and get his people fix in.
An engineer with people skills? He would be a rare bird indeed.
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