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Engineering Management combines engineering knowledge and management skills to keep projects running smoothly.

Because engineering projects are often complicated, they require a number of specialized staff members, which is why engineering management is so important.

Engineering managers are responsible for the overall development and completion of an engineering project. An engineering manager is expected to carry out tasks like planning, design, staff hiring, training, team supervision, gathering equipment, budgeting, scheduling, activity coordination, research, and checking technical accuracy.

But, in reality, the duties of an engineering manager will vary depending on the project’s goals and resources as well as the manager’s skill set. Ultimately, it is up to the engineering manager to plan, organize, and execute a project’s agenda. For many engineering projects, it takes careful planning, detail, and accuracy to successfully complete.

Engineering Managers should be well-prepared to blend technology talents with leadership, management, and financial acumen, whether it is enhancing engineering supply chains or managing big engineering projects and workflows.

Analysts point out another important aspect for those who specialize in engineering management: It is critical for engineering managers to have a thorough awareness of new and disruptive technology. This helps assist bridge the gap between technical and management abilities, paving the way for the next generation of engineers.

Because of skill sets needed in both management and engineering, an engineering manager averages a nice salary of about $137,720 yearly.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects growth of 6% within the next decade. This is due to an expanding engineering field that needs professionals who are able to take on both technical and managerial roles.

Not surprisingly, every project needs quality leadership and organization of some kind.

Want to learn more? Tonex offers Engineering Management Training courses where participants learn how to cover the gap between engineering and business management. This includes having a better understanding of  the combination of technical and economic decision-making with analytical skills, optimization capabilities, and technical product development.

Engineering Management courses include:

AI in Engineering and Systems Engineering of Complex System of Systems (SoS) Seminar

Creativity Hacks Workshop

Integrating Systems Engineering, Project Management and SOW

Proposal Engineering for Non-engineers Training Course

For more information, questions, comments, contact us.

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