Due to my inability to ignore bad processes and my wanting to get paid more, over the last couple years I've been moving from a 100% design role to a part-design, part staffing manager. I now assign fellow designers in my engineering sub-department to the projects our company is hired for. I have very little input in what projects we take on, but from my position I can read their budgets and expected hours for various client submissions, I then take this info and try to balance the work between my coworkers. In the past 6 months we've been completely overwhelmed with work, too many hours of work to do for our team. Thankfully, our project managers and clients have had project deadlines slip but the projections always show a ton of work upcoming and many coworkers are working unpaid overtime. I've been advocating for hiring more designers, and in the last month have become very explicit in voicing this need, but, I think, worry about economic recession has kept management from posting a job opportunity online.

Does anyone have an idea or opinion that can help me? Am I selling out by leaving my design only role?

I am considering looking for a new job, I'm very in demand as there are few electrical engineers in my field. I'm also considering applying to grad schools in Europe, cheaper and more relevant to my specific goals, but my undergrad GPA was pretty bad. I worry that I'm running from my life though, and I could have an opportunity here to positively change my firm's culture?

  • TreadOnMe [none/use name]
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Also engineers will always be paid well in the U.S. and in short supply because the highest correlation with success at mathematics is home stability, which is most correlated with income. For normal people, math takes time, patience, and practice because it is not a skill you use everyday. Until we decide to actually start funding the everyday lives of people to encourage stability, we will never see a large number of engineers, which ironically enough protects their place in the employment hierarchy.

    Engineers unionize all the time, it's just that their unions are generally reactionary and do not show solidarity with others.