What Jobs Can You Do With An Electronic Engineering Degree
What Jobs Can You Do With An Electronic Engineering Degree
What Jobs Can You Do With An Electronic Engineering Degree
degree?
Careers for electronic engineering graduates can be found in a whole host of
industries, from automotive to utilities.
An electronic engineering degree appears to lead in some fairly obvious directions to the
electronics industry, for example. However, the options are much broader than this, both
within the engineering industry and outside it.
Engineering industries that accept electronic engineering graduates
Electronic engineering graduates are typically accepted into the following industries.
However, different employers will have different requirements, so do check out companies
individually.
Aerospace industry
Automotive industry
Construction industry
Defence industry
Electronics industry
Marine industry
Pharmaceuticals industry
Rail industry
Telecoms
Utilities industry
In a related vein, electronic engineers are often welcome to apply to technical roles in the
IT industry dont assume that only computer scientists or software engineers are sought.
Non-engineering jobs for electronic engineering graduates
Professor Patrick McNally from the School of Electronic Engineering, Dublin City University,
is keen to encourage electronic engineering students to think beyond the obvious career
options.
He comments: Graduates are well positioned to gain employment in a range of fields that
rely on their analytical and solutions-orientated training. Over the past years we have seen
our graduates gain employment in companies involved in consulting, legal practice
(especially patent related), finance, logistics and education.
If youre keen to explore career paths outside engineering, start by reading What can I do
with an engineering degree, apart from being an engineer? for ideas of non-engineering
careers that relate to the engineering sector. You can then explore your options further at
targetjobs.co.uk.
In particular, you might like to consider options such as consulting, law (eg intellectual
property law), financial services, sales and pre-sales, IT and education, which are areas in
which you can put your analytical skills and high levels of numeracy to good use.
Chartered engineers (CEng) have the greatest level of responsibility for complete engineering
projects. They develop solutions to problems using new or existing technologies in a strategic role.
Incorporated engineers (IEng) take responsibility for specific aspects of a project and day to
day operations. They maintain and manage applications of current and developing technology.