Terratek
Geotechnical
- Oct 17, 2014
- 269
I've been at this engineering thing for about 10 years. I work for one of the bigger companies doing what I do, and in one of the larger metro areas. Sometimes, I feel like I must know everyone in the business, considering the hundreds of jobs each year that my department chugs through (which I am involved in all of them as the dept manager). This is not correct, though. There are just oodles of people that have repeat work in the same metro that I've never heard of. I can easily identify 20 plus competitors that I know of that have regular work. All the work that gets done by everyone combined is hard for me to fathom. In my seat, it seems like I could throw a rock and hit a client. But at the same time, if one starts their own business, they might not be able to get any work and fail.
All this just to ask those self employed engineers about how their businesses were begun, what it looked like then and how it looks now. Kind of open ended, but I'm always inspired to hear these stories while I plot my own long term goals.
All this just to ask those self employed engineers about how their businesses were begun, what it looked like then and how it looks now. Kind of open ended, but I'm always inspired to hear these stories while I plot my own long term goals.