Hindianapolis
Well-known member
- Joined
- May 25, 2017
- Messages
- 99
- Reaction score
- 48
lolBased on my friend who received her PE Results yesterday (and had multiple tabs open) the email is pretty instantaneous.
faster than your refresh
lolBased on my friend who received her PE Results yesterday (and had multiple tabs open) the email is pretty instantaneous.
This is quite accurate. A business has a purpose, and the purpose is to make a profit. Paying a worker a lot is not part of that equation. Either you bounce around and get a raise that way...or you find your own niche/role in your company like mikesltj23 said. I actually don't think that getting your SE would give a raise per se. What it does is make you more valuable on the open market if that market requires an SE to stamp structural designs.This may be the wrong thread for this, but since we're all just waiting for S.E. results I figure it couldn't hurt to ask...
Is it just me, or does it seem like the only way to move up in pay, responsibility, and title in the structural private design sector is to bounce around from company to company every 3-4 years? I would love to hear other's opinions especially if you work in other regions outside of Southern California if this is common everywhere?
In my own Experiences: Having a Ph.D. (especially if you're coming into industry at entry-level straight from academia), it may help you during the interview process when being compared to the other pool of applicants, but it certainly doesn't equate to higher pay (at least not here in California). Of course there are exceptions if you land some niche at a specific firm that does R&D or some sort of specialized services which requires a Ph.D., but I'm speaking specifically to your typical structural design firm. I work along side Ph.D.'s with the same amount of work experience as me (I stopped at Masters) and we make the same salary (plus or minus a $1/hr). I've talked to Professors, Principals, and Partners and have been told by all that while having your Ph.D. helps you technically, it certainly does not equate to higher pay, promotion, etc....in fact one principal even told me they have shy'd away in the past from hiring a Ph.D. because they tend to make some tasks way over complicated which isn't good when you need to stay under budget...(not sure if fully agreed with their logic, but I'm a small fish here..)
I interviewed recently with a professor here at a local university because I'm interested in heading back to academia, and he told me point blank "do not pursue this Ph.D. if you're wanting to be paid more if you return to industry, it wont happen".
I think you're correct. The grading workshop tends to happen the week after thanksgiving. Thanksgiving was late this year...which pushes back the workshop, which pushes back results. I'm shocked that the PE results were so late though.I blame Thanksgiving for pushing everything back a week.
PE results went through a cut score revision. That's why they were late.I think you're correct. The grading workshop tends to happen the week after thanksgiving. Thanksgiving was late this year...which pushes back the workshop, which pushes back results. I'm shocked that the PE results were so late though.
PhD means permanent head damagePhD means nothing if you are in wrong position/company I guess, which I have and I get way underpaid comparing with he got... My heart and wallet is broken now.
Underpaid or not depends less on your qualifications and more on the role/industry you are in. You will have to compare your salary with people with similar roles and experiences. In the industry PhD's on average earn only ~5% more than masters. This, IMO, is mainly because they are working in similar roles. Your salary does not depend on your qualifications, but depends on how much revenue you bring to your company. If you bring in the same revenue as Masters you get the same salary + a small bit more as a PhD looks good on paper for marketing services to clients.106 K
8 years
PhD, PE, PEng
WA
Not sure,
So, how much should be my salary after passing the exam?
Some salary information is being collected and shared in another EB forum.New Link, shouldn't show names..
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1fivnpeUtnHdXuVQ1IrDQRgUAFUk9ctFYMugef4MW2jo/edit?usp=sharing
Agree.In the industry PhD's on average earn only ~5% more than masters. This, IMO, is mainly because they are working in similar roles. Your salary does not depend on your qualifications, but depends on how much revenue you bring to your company.
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