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Feature Article |
Professional Career
Time Line
By Stu Levy & Ed Podell
Co-Chairmen, IEEE Philadelphia Section
Today is the first day of the rest of
your career! Are you drifting along, letting random events or others determine your
career path? Are you bored, stagnating? Do you feel ill-prepared to compete in our
changing world?
YES? Then it's time today to take charge of your
career...because how you plan and manage your career will determine whether it is
exciting, challenging, and growing -- or dull, routine, and uncertain.
To help you set your goals, the American Institute of
Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) Career Enhancement Committee created this
Professional Career Time Line. It supplies a checklist of helpful actions for assuring
greater success during every phase of your career.
The Time Line begins two years prior to your college
graduation and continues through your retirement. It suggests measures you should take
through each phase of your career to keep it vibrant. Please reflect on each phase, set
your goals, and frequently re-evaluate yourself to keep your career plan current.
Throughout Your Career
- Assess yourself to define specific goals. Periodically
check, reassess, extend, or modify goals.
- Keep your resume current.
- Remain active in a professional society that represents
your discipline, such as the IEEE
- Establish and maintain professional contacts.
- Write, publish, and present your own work at technical
meetings.
- Stay abreast of new developments in your field by
subscribing to appropriate periodicals, attending workshops and seminars, and traveling to
international and national conferences when feasible.
- Pursue additional formal education and on-the-job training
to remain competitive in an increasingly complex work world.
- Maintain an appropriate balance among family, career,
community, and recreation.
- Manage money wisely and make intelligent purchases.
Periodically seek professional advice about financial planning matters.
- Sustain good physical and mental fitness.
- Enhance organizational and interpersonal skills, including
communication, interviewing, and networking.
- Remain adaptable to all changes (technological, social,
etc.) implemented in the world of work.
Six stages in your career time line follow.
Start wherever you are: student to retiree.
1.
COMPLETING COLLEGE
College Junior to Graduation
Career Phase: Student
Typical Age: 2022
- Take advantage of co-op opportunities and internships.
Work while in school in a career-related field.
- Participate in an IEEE Student Paper Competition to learn
how to prepare and present technical papers.
- Decide on graduate school, or seek employment after
graduation.
- Prepare your resume.
- Research potential employers in your chosen field.
- Develop tentative goals. Make career-path decisions (e.g.
industry vs. government vs. R&D vs. design vs. manufacturing vs. teaching, etc.).
- Prepare for the FE (EIT) Exam. Take it during your senior
year.
- Make a realistic and valid first-job choice based upon
your career interests.
2.
FIRST JOB
Grad. to 3 Yrs in Work Force
Career Phase: New Engineer/Scientist in Training
Typical Age: 2225
- Upgrade from IEEE Student Member to Member.
- Adjust to routines of the work environment.
- Apply textbook knowledge to real life situations.
- Learn the company ropes. Become an effective contributor
to the team.
- Learn to perform under pressure. Accomplish tasks
effectively and on time.
- Obtain advanced degree (technical discipline or MBA).
- Start preparing for the state professional engineering
license, if available, in your field of discipline.
- Develop a mentor or sponsor relationship.
- Enhance your technical competency. Subscribe to
periodicals, technical journals, etc.
- Present papers on your work (participate in local
mini-symposia, national young professional paper sessions, etc.)
3.
EARLY CAREER
3 Yrs to 10 Yrs in Work Force
Career Phase: Young Professional
Typical Age: 2532
- Focus on your technical specialty, or move toward being a
generalist.
- Continue developing technical skills and credentials.
- Gain exposure to management and other disciplines.
- Review your options. Consider changing your career, job,
employer, etc. Make enhancements to your progress.
- Seek out and accept higher levels of responsibility. Learn
to make effective decisions.
- Keep up-to-date on advancements in your discipline.
- Obtain state engineering license.
- Assume a leadership role at the local, regional, or
national level of the IEEE.
- Apply for membership on an IEEE technical committee.
- Begin preparing for a senior leadership role.
- Transition from being reactive to proactive in your career
decisions.
- Continue upgrading your leadership role in the IEEE.
- Consider after-hours graduate programs in your specialty.
4.
MID-CAREER
10 Yrs to 22 Yrs in Work Force
Career Phase: Senior Professional (Technical or Supervisory)
Typical Age: 3252
- Make career path decision: remain in a technical area or
move into management.
- Stay technically up-to-date in your chosen specialty.
- If moving into management, hone your management and human
resources skills.
- Apply for full leadership role on an IEEE technical
committee.
- Continue to take on additional areas of responsibility or
assignments.
- Apply for Senior Member status in the IEEE.
- Become a mentor or sponsor.
- Achieve national recognition. Assume professional
leadership roles.
- Continue upgrading your leadership role in the IEEE.
- Begin retirement planning.
5.
LATE CAREER
22 Yrs to 40 Yrs in Work Force
Career Phase: Recognized Expert
Typical Age: 52Retirement
- Continue professional leadership progression by obtaining
assignments (or jobs) with increasing responsibility and authority.
- Stay technically up-to-date.
- Continue mentoring and providing guidance to younger
professionals.
- Represent your organization outside the workplace. Achieve
national or international recognition.
- Diversify your skills or develop hobbies that could lead
to a second career or added income upon retirement.
- Teach at a college or university, or start your own
consulting practice.
- Continue retirement planning.
6.
RETIREMENT
40+ Yrs
in Work Force
Career Phase: Expert Emeritus
Typical Age: 60+
- Implement your retirement plans.
- Replace required compulsory activity with desired leisure
wants.
- Consider opportunities for part-time work, consulting, or
a second career.
- Use accumulated experience and wisdom on behalf of others
in various senior roles.
- Make meaningful use of your time.
- Find new sources of professional and personal
satisfaction.
- Remain active in the IEEE: maintain professional contacts.
- Tutor precollege students in math, science, or
engineering.
The Career Time Line is a product of the AIAA
Career Enhancement Committee as adapted by IEEE-USA with AIAA permission. It is the
compilation of information and experiences of individual members. The information is
intended as general guidelines for technical professionals, and should be tailored to
individual situations. The opinions expressed do not necessarily represent those of the
AIAA or the IEEE.
[ IEEE-USA
]
Last Updated: June 27, 2000 |