Profile of the Machine Control Professional
Besides a degree in electrical or mechanical engineering, the typical machne control professional has approximately 18 years experience in machine control and automation. He (95%) or she works about 45 hours a week, has worked for three different companies during their career, and has been with their present employer for the past 12 years.
Most of the respondents to this year’s survey (64%) work at companies with more than 100 employees, and nearly half of all people answering the survey work for companies with more than 200 employees.
The clear majority of respondents (58%) report engineering and design to be the category that best describes their job, with the remainder divided between categories that include machine assembly, research and development, company management, procurement and tech support.
Those working in machine controls engineering and design also reported salaries closest to the average of all engineers working in the machine builder industry, with average annual incomes up 4.2% over last year to $74,906. The largest group of survey respondents (23%) works in engineering and system integration services, followed by metalworking machinery and machine tools industries.
What Irks You?
Some respondents say it’s higher education and rookies fresh out of school. One respondent says, “Students today seem to be getting theory, but no application of theory, and no understanding of how theory pertains to real automation situations.” Another adds, “Just because someone can program a PLC doesn’t mean they can design a control system. Today’s controls engineers lack the knowledge of those before them.”