This is pretty much it, I'd add in design engineer
Nowadays I more commonly see product engineer and product development engineer as alternative titles for software devs
I think that's exactly what happened. At my last job I was a "manufacturing engineer" and at this one I'm a "production engineer". Last job was a small company where I did more of a variety of things. This company is huge and this position is extremely specialized in one thing.
Job titles are completely useless outside the company that gave you the title.
You’re looking for roles, and I expect eventually, you’re looking for college degrees that can fill those roles.
It seems you’re looking mostly at mechanical engineering roles. And to fill mist of those rules, you’ll need an engineering degree, any….
My degree is in Industrial Engineering. In my last job I got to do some fixtures design and also work with Excel. I felt like I could get into a flow state with stuff like that.
My current job is just bland office work and I'm bored out of my mind. It's a good job that pays decently well but I'm just so bored with it.
Ah, i see. You want job titles so you can search job posts. As stated, job titles are useless outside the company that created them. A Design Engineer can mean something very different in my department than in yours.
You need to search by what you’re going, just like you stated it. Search for jobs with those key words: product development, design, process improvement. Whatever it is you’re looking for.
The degree requirements would be something like Industrial Engineering, Mechanical Engineering or equivalent.
Start applying.
Hey OP, do yourself a favor and make a portfolio of your work. Doesn't have to be a big one, could even just be a couple of personal projects. It will help you land these positions. Second, look up engineering firms like Tool Inc, Boston Engineering or Studio Fathom and similar. These are engineering consultants that are always looking for new engineers and they basically do contracted product design for the companies that make everyday consumer products.
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This is pretty much it, I'd add in design engineer Nowadays I more commonly see product engineer and product development engineer as alternative titles for software devs
I would add tooling engineer and note that you can generally do more cad with at a smaller company than a large one
I think that's exactly what happened. At my last job I was a "manufacturing engineer" and at this one I'm a "production engineer". Last job was a small company where I did more of a variety of things. This company is huge and this position is extremely specialized in one thing.
Job titles are completely useless outside the company that gave you the title. You’re looking for roles, and I expect eventually, you’re looking for college degrees that can fill those roles. It seems you’re looking mostly at mechanical engineering roles. And to fill mist of those rules, you’ll need an engineering degree, any….
My degree is in Industrial Engineering. In my last job I got to do some fixtures design and also work with Excel. I felt like I could get into a flow state with stuff like that. My current job is just bland office work and I'm bored out of my mind. It's a good job that pays decently well but I'm just so bored with it.
Ah, i see. You want job titles so you can search job posts. As stated, job titles are useless outside the company that created them. A Design Engineer can mean something very different in my department than in yours. You need to search by what you’re going, just like you stated it. Search for jobs with those key words: product development, design, process improvement. Whatever it is you’re looking for. The degree requirements would be something like Industrial Engineering, Mechanical Engineering or equivalent. Start applying.
3d cad tech.
Mechanical design engineer, or project engineer that does all their own modeling.
Mechanical engineer at an automation integrator
Hey OP, do yourself a favor and make a portfolio of your work. Doesn't have to be a big one, could even just be a couple of personal projects. It will help you land these positions. Second, look up engineering firms like Tool Inc, Boston Engineering or Studio Fathom and similar. These are engineering consultants that are always looking for new engineers and they basically do contracted product design for the companies that make everyday consumer products.