Engineering Advice resource

Fellow engineers - I'm looking to create a resource online that advises young engineers on 'soft skills' like Project Management, influence and persuasion, innovation and entrepreneurship. Would this be something you would find useful and potentially even pay money for?

>would this be something you would find useful
no

>pay money for?
fuck no

I wouldn't even pay for an employee.
If you are a socially inept engineer, then you sit in the back cubicle and do computational analysis all day.

Important social skill advice: realizing that social skills matter less than leverage in most situations. See also 'the position of fuck you'. Doesn't matter what kind of weird power games coworkers are playing if you have thousands in savings and standing job offers. In that case, you can just respond to drama and power plays by escalating as much as you want, riding it out, and leaving to make money elsewhere if things go south.

Useful: yes. You could potentially get lots of readers.

Pay for: I'd say no. But you could just put advertisements on your site

I don't think it could ever be a membership site unless I ran full on courses. To start out I was thinking along those lines, build up a reader base then try get advertisers or maybe even e-books?

What if you had an Engineer who wasn't socially inept and could actually bring in work though?

You can't teach soft skills with a book tho

>What if you had an Engineer who wasn't socially inept and could actually bring in work though?

What if you had a pet unicorn that cried tears of liquid gold?

Equally likely scenario.

>Engineer who wasn't socially inept

Then they should be able to learn grow their soft skills on the go. They will go to meetings with more senior project managers and pick it up from there.

kek. it does happen

You can teach the principals, you still need to go out an practice to get any better though. Some people aren't even aware they're doing anything wrong.

thats called an mba

>thought mba would be mostly finance type A
>top 10 mba program is 30% beta af engineers learning how to be socially acceptable
>mfw

I would even pay for such kinda info desu, if it's helpful

Honestly this sounds like the engineering equivalent of PUA type bullshit.

Yeh and how many millions got dropped on that?

Interesting. Did many of them say why they were doing an MBA, was it mostly to change careers or move up in their current one?

There's dozens of self help books on confidence and social skills you can download for free and if you're smart enough to do that then you're smart enough to be able to quickly filter out which parts are useful to you. If you have to pay for this shit you're not only socially inept, you're also clearly a simpleton.

After about 5-8 years of engineering there are essentially two paths to follow.

1) remain a technical number cruncher
You will never reach your maximum earning potential unless you get to lead a design team of younger engineers. In which case you will slowly get pushed into more awkward social situations that you will not like.
You will always have to deal with younger sharper engineers being smarter than you since you are aging and getting stupider by the second.

2)Management
This could be office management where you non-technically advise the technical team leaders, and choose when to buy new computers, etc. (this is ideal if you are a social fuck-tard, but there are very few positions available, and you need to be charismatic to get promoted)
Or it could be project administration where you are dealing with people from outside your company all day.

can't cure autism, sorry OP.

Most of the Project Managers at my company started out as technical Engineers.

I'd never pay money for that. Not in a million years

The lessons I have "learned" in soft skills are about shit that is extremely simple.

I say "learned" because I never really had to learn them, they just are obvious.

And the most important lesson among these is that soft "skills" are a MEME. While normies do normie shit like socialize, if you get in them fields and pick cotton you'll actually be productive

In the end, what's important is producing VALUE. not wanking your dick to cuck porn with your little professional tie on and your MBA on the wall

Finance type A can hang tight in finance. Why go get an MBA unless you're trying to work your way in there or want to do management at a big corporation?

Normies who are actually GOOD at socializing can make a huge income and be massively productive with that skill. Example: play politics right, work your way up at an IB, make 500k/yr while you're bringing in sales. Another: make 200-300k doing exceptionally well in enterprise b2b sales because you bring 10x that in revenue to your company. The normies who aren't actually good are the ones who get trapped in middle management forever and have a relatively useless career

> sales

That does not interest me

What sort of Engineering resource would you be willing to pay for then?

i wonder if anyone ITT other than me is an actual engineer with a real job

you can have soft skills and still be awkward

IEEE

CE and EE

OP here. I'm an Engineer working in the Oil & Gas industry. What I've found is that people can learn whatever technical skills you need them too pretty fast depending on the project. People who can actually communicate and not instantly piss others off when they express an opinion are rare. Also find that for distinct problems, Engineers are very good at finding the solution, for a large scope with lots of data to manage, they are miserably wasteful and retarded in a commercial sense.

> While normies do normie shit like socialize, if you get in them fields and pick cotton you'll actually be productive
>In the end, what's important is producing VALUE. not wanking your dick to cuck porn with your little professional tie on and your MBA on the wall

I spit my drink l, top kek

are you me

>

yes, it does happen, they dont stay engineers for long though, quickly go into management or sales, the ones left doing actual engineering are the misanthropes like me.

yep. the new movie 'The Founder' is an object lesson in the pros and cons of engineering tunnel vision