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Some 30 years ago, engineers
had a very simple role. One just had to follow
instructions and keep the factories running.
Our training allowed us to understand these instructions,
take actions and communicate information relatively
accurately. We were the middle men for our counterparts
thousands of miles away.
Today,
our role is very different. We have shown
that we are able to run our factories as
effectively as anybody else in the world.
We have become much more technologically
sophisticated and established a much wider
bandwidth of capabilities. We have the capabilities
to manage GLOBAL factories that produce the
highest technology products.
But
the world is also rapidly changing. Other
countries such as China are also developing
very rapidly. They are catching up. In many
areas, they are already ahead. Being GLOBAL
at managing factories is just not enough.
We have to move up the technology value chain
and do it fast.
We
are being forced to face our most difficult
technology challenge. Win, we thrive, lose,
we perish. Our future is not only to have
to out produce our competing countries. We
have to out design them. Better still, out
create them.
Design
and creation are two competencies that engineers
here in Asia are still very much in the gestation
stages. We can be GLOBAL at maintaining and
improving existing products, but still hard
pressed to create new solutions and markets.
But, this is what we must do. So, how do
we get there? What must we do as a country,
as a company and as an individual in order
to succeed?
Our vision as engineers should not be just holding down a nine to five
job that we enjoy very much. Of course, we would like to play with our
toys. This is good, but not enough. Engineers should strive to become
globally competitive technologists. What this means is that each of us
should be hungry enough to want to make a difference in leading edge
technologies. To strive to be leaders in the world and not just within
the four walls of our respective companies. We should look for the toughest
problems, collaborate with others and find the solutions. From these
solutions, we will create opportunities for businesses to thrive. Inculcate
the spirit of technoprenuership into our engineering profession.
The
question is whether we have what it takes
to achieve this lofty vision. Our engineers
are strong enough and more importantly, have
the will to succeed. What we need is a prescription
on areas that we must focus on as a team.
A prescription to show us how to get there
as quickly as we can before our competitors
catches us. In my mind, there are four key
areas that we must deliver for quick success.
These are a strong foundation, a "hands
on" attitude", specialization and
finally the passion to achieve them.
Foundation
is very important. Our training at universities
is part of this. However, we must not forget
that our foundations must be continually
expanded. Theories and tools must continually
be upgraded, renewed and learnt. Your four
year in a college, are important parts of
this foundation building. You forget that
the degree is less important than the process
of getting it. It is in this learning process
that real foundation is built. The message
here is - "Do not compromise your formal
training opportunities"
A "hands
on" attitude is absolutely necessary
to help us bring theory into the real world.
Realizing the potential of technology is
an engineer's dream. Too many of us are experts
in theory and can analyze and describe in
detail what should or should not happen.
We like to play with mind experiments, not
real ones. The right "prescription" here
is that each and every engineer should have
a sandbox to play in. If I look under your
desk, or in your drawers, I should find all
kinds of constructions, prototypes, components
- working or non-working. You should be able
to show to any visitor, things that you have
built, finished or otherwise, and what they
are for and what problem they are capable
of solving.
Specialization can occur gradually, but it must happen. All engineers
should be able to stand up and declare what kind of engineer we are and
what are our fields of specializations. Our interest should span a few
areas. However, we must strive not be a "jack of all trades".
This formula worked in the past, but not any more. A second point is
that with specialization comes the critical need to collaborate. To develop
a winning product or technology, we will need to integrate knowledge
and skills from fields that we may not be experts in. We will need to
have the skills to collaborate with our peers and outside resources,
such as universities and commercial technology providers to optimize
our inventions.
If you are choosing engineering profession just for the money, you will
not succeed. In a knowledge industry, money is just not enough. You can
be good, but not great. Each one of us must dig deep within ourselves
to find out if we have what it takes to become a great engineer. The
heart must be there. The sequence should be such that when you invent
with all your energy and passion, you will come up with great inventions.
Through these inventions, you create value. The value you create will
cause new opportunities. New opportunities means business success. Business
success means you get rewarded. The truth is, by looking at the world
this way and not wholly driven by money, you actually end up making more.
Here
it is then, the four key prescriptions to
become a great engineer of the future. we
see big success in many of us, but not all
will make it. Success and failure has never
been more in your own hands than now. All
of us just have to make that choice.
The
changing expectations of engineers over the
last 30 years.
The
key challenges
- From
skill provider to creation
- Technology
to business driven
- Individual
to collaboration
- Learning
to knowledge management.
- Theory
to hands-on
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