Try LESS THAN $75K with 15 years experience. I've been designing lighting, power and fire alarm and draft my own designs (in AutoCAD MEP). I work in the Nashville area and I get plenty of contacts from recruiters asking me to interview with this firm or that firm. The feedback I'm getting is 2 major things are holding be back from getting hired by another firm:
1. Not having my PE license.
2. No Revit experience.
The first one I kind of understand. Hopefully I'll know in the next few weeks if I passed or not and it's good news. The second reason I really don't get. I had a reputable MEP firm interview me and spent 4 hours during the interview and it was a good one. However, they didn't hire me because I didn't know Revit (I took the course but none of my employers have ever used it). It wouldn't take that long to learn and get acclimated with it.
What I'm saying is, I'm basically seeing a LOT of engineering firms get all excited and want to hire people, but when it comes down to it they all want to nit-pick and find the ONE item on their long list of desired qualities and when they find that ONE thing, they use it as an excuse to either not make the hire, or make a low-ball offer saying "you need to have more experience before we can offer $85K, $95K, etc."
So yes I'm on the market and searching for another firm, but I'm VERY cautious at this point.
1. Not having my PE license.
2. No Revit experience.
The first one I kind of understand. Hopefully I'll know in the next few weeks if I passed or not and it's good news. The second reason I really don't get. I had a reputable MEP firm interview me and spent 4 hours during the interview and it was a good one. However, they didn't hire me because I didn't know Revit (I took the course but none of my employers have ever used it). It wouldn't take that long to learn and get acclimated with it.
What I'm saying is, I'm basically seeing a LOT of engineering firms get all excited and want to hire people, but when it comes down to it they all want to nit-pick and find the ONE item on their long list of desired qualities and when they find that ONE thing, they use it as an excuse to either not make the hire, or make a low-ball offer saying "you need to have more experience before we can offer $85K, $95K, etc."
So yes I'm on the market and searching for another firm, but I'm VERY cautious at this point.