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fundamentals

3/11/2011 5:26 PM EST

Very well put Mr Watkins.

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RWatkins

3/11/2011 4:44 PM EST

I take issue with the statement "The emergence of the nomadic engineer is a ...

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2010 EE Times Global Salary and Opinion Survey

George Leopold

11/28/2010 4:13 AM EST

It’s still a tough job market for engineers, but the worst may be over for a profession buffeted by the economic crisis.

 

According to the results of the EE Times 2010 Salary & Opinion Survey, conducted in September, more than half of the responding engineers in North America and China and three-quarters of the respondents in India received a pay increase during the past year. Further, better than half of the more than 5,000 respondents to our global survey said they continued to earn bonuses. Rising compensation packages were unheard of as recently as a year ago—a period when many engineers were hanging on by their fingernails.

 

In North America, more than half of the three age groups surveyed (under 35, 35-49 and 50 and over) told us they had earned a bonus in the past year. At the high end, nearly 59 percent of North American respondents between the ages 35 and 49 said they had earned bonus pay. The percentage dropped to 50.6 percent for older engineers.

 

Annual bonuses in North America averaged between $1,000 and $10,000, with a surprisingly large percentage—around 21 percent—in all three age groups reporting figures at the higher end of that range.

 

The average base salary among the North American engineers surveyed totaled just over $100,000; annual compensation, including bonuses and overtime pay, averaged $107,300, according to our findings. North American engineers also reported the highest job satisfaction (64 percent) among the respondents.

 

Bonus totals for European engineers were similar, the survey found, with more than 50 percent of the respondents having received bonuses in the past year that were bunched between $1,000 and $10,000.

 

In China and India (where base salaries for engineers in most cases remain far lower than in the other surveyed regions), bonus figures for Chinese engineers tracked those in North America and Europe, but India failed to keep pace. Only more experienced Indian engineers reported a greater percentage of bonus payments during the past year.

 

On the other hand, 72 percent of the Indian respondents saw their base salary increase over the past year, translating to a 7.8 percent average pay raise.

 

At the other end of the pay spectrum, 46 percent of the Japanese engineers surveyed reported a pay cut in the past year. That total surpassed the percentages so reporting in other regions, including Europe and China, by a whopping 40 percentage points.

 

While rising bonuses alone don’t prove that engineering salaries have either stabilized or are on their way up, this year’s survey marks the first time in several years that engineers in most of the regions studied received a bump in their annual compensation.

 





fundamentals

11/29/2010 4:32 PM EST

I would like to comment on the maxim “the principal function of a business is to make money for its owners and stockholders, and the people who find this objectionable are against capitalism.”

I fully agree with this maxim, but a clarification is in order: the purpose should be to make the most amount of money in the next ten years (or depending on the product type you can substitute 10 years by X years, where X is larger than 3.) The sad fact is that most CEOs and CFOs are not at all interested in maximizing the total delivered value to the stockholders in a period of 10 years or so. They are interested in maximizing the profits in the next six months, or maybe a year. They are happy to do that even if they know they are running the business to the ground in the long term. In the short term, they collect huge stock awards and bonuses. In the long term, when things get sour, they blame our government and all other governments, they blame cheap foreign competition, and so on, and move on to another position. Then the vicious cycle repeats.

I sincerely believe that the fundamental problem is not the globalization. The detrimental problem is the very narrow short term focus in terms of results. Today, many CEOs prefer to acquire successful small start-up companies by spending hundreds of millions of Dollars, instead of having taken the long term view several years back and having done the work in house for a tenth of the price. The financial markets reward this behavior.

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george.leopold

11/30/2010 5:28 PM EST

I tend to agree with "fundamentals" about myopic CEOs focusing only on short-term gain at the expense of long-term stability. While interviewing a semiconductor CEO several years ago, he checked his company's stock price at least twice in an hour. I quickly realized he was more interested in tracking the value of his stock options than discussing his company's strategies for growth and innovation. This is no way to run a railroad.

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Charles.Desassure

11/30/2010 6:46 PM EST

Thanks for your article. Baseon the information in this article, and talking to engineers in my area, this report is about right…(take or give a few points). The job market is improving and many businesses will start hiring engineers. That is good news for everyone.

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Frank Eory

11/30/2010 8:20 PM EST

I wonder if EE Times readers perceive a difference in short-term vs. long-term focus in CEO and senior management focus in private companies vs. public companies?

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Neo1

12/2/2010 12:07 AM EST

So all this recession did come up with a something bright in the end, the Nobel in economics for those profs.

Knock, Knock, who's hiring?

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GREAT-Terry

12/2/2010 10:47 AM EST

Long article but good information and nice analysis.

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wn

12/5/2010 9:26 PM EST

Andy Grove almost said it last month. The US economy was big enough during the past 50 years to permit Japan, Korea, Taiwan, and Singapore to develop huge balance of trade in their favor. NAFTA was basically an extension of the same thing apparently. The US is no longer big enough to survive in tech if we continue doing business the same old way.
The demize of US high tech actually was clear during the past 10 years, but the free wheeling easy money of the past decade blindfolded us as to the problem.
As Intel and others can now see, if we are going to compete directly against the Chinese government party PLA, the US Congress must wake up to the fact that some clearcut national high policies are not only important, but indeed critical for the survival of the US as a first world nation.
Somehow it was ok to let the Pacific rim nations under strong government leadership develop the huge trade surpluses existing today. But not with China playing the same game except even more overtly and covertly, our government cannot continue to simply sit by and say "let IBM and Texas Instruments fight it out with the Pacific Rim". We are failing miserably and will continue to do so unless the US government gets into the act with some clear high tech policies that are based on wisdom and concern for tomorrow.
Respectfully submitted,
William

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Yamaha

12/13/2010 11:09 AM EST

"We often hear from readers who are engineers that they try to dissuade sons and daughters from entering the profession."

I agree and feel the same. If I could do it again I would stay far away from this field. Engineering is hard, thankless work. The pay scale is just not worth the burden of long nights, personal responsibility, stress and meeting demanding expectations from management. I've met personal trainers and strippers who make more than I do, and they're not designing components for the latest greatest jet engines. Problem solving is fun and challenges the mind - but in this field, it means dealing with problems every minute of every workday.

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RWatkins

3/11/2011 4:44 PM EST

I take issue with the statement "The emergence of the nomadic engineer is a likely consequence of accelerating globalization, rising interconnectedness and the diffusion of advanced technologies." In fact the nomadic engineer is the consequence of the severely diminished mutual respect and value between the middle to upper management of companies and the engineering staff. A large portion of this change has occurred during the last 50 years, accelerated since the mid 1990's. A portion of engineers' readiness to move on is due to the elimination of the lifetime career expectation at a single company, that has been caused by severe layoffs of skilled technical personnel done comparably to layoffs of non-skilled and non-technical personnel. Time was when the people who were retained at all costs were the engineers, even to the point of temporarily using engineers as secretaries and non-technical staff in needed positions during economic down-turns. The change to equality in layoffs has cost short-sighted businesses, who even now "off-shore" their design projects only to get poor quality results that damage corporate bottom lines and quality reputations.

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fundamentals

3/11/2011 5:26 PM EST

Very well put Mr Watkins.

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