miscer said:
Hello guys, I am majoring in EE and looking to work in semiconductor industry.
Looks really fun
Questions;
0. What is the best career path to 6 figures and more, I like engineering but I want to make quite big sum of money right of college, because i am trying to start up a business?
1. What is the name of job position that deals with semiconductors ?
2. What would your advice be for a fresh EE student
I will think of more questions based on the replies.
I am an EE and I work in the Semiconductor industry.
0. If you're wanting to make 6 figures right out of school with a BS it isn't going to happen. Salaries have been flat in the semiconductor industry in the United States for the last 10 or 15 years. A lot of the work is going overseas and lots of H1B workers are holding salaries down. If you're not in the United States I do know that salaries are going up fast in India and in the Far East, but they are still significantly below salaries in the United States. I don't know specifics about Europe but typically European engineers get a somewhat lower base salary than engineers in the US, but they have better vacation and benefits and the like.
You'll need to be really good to get a six figure salary with a BS. If you're a good engineer with an MS or a Ph.D. you should get up there pretty quick if you're in California. It will take longer elsewhere (but cost of living is lower elsewhere...).
The best career path for making a good salary is probably IC designer. Analog designers get a bit more than digital designers because they are somewhat harder to find. It's a tough job to get, though. For the most part the entry-level degree is an MS and a Ph.D. is preferred for a lot of the leading edge work. You'll also need an internship or a thesis in the area. The days where companies are prepared to train young engineers are long gone.
1. All kinds of jobs deal with semiconductors. If you want to work for a manufacturer or a fabless design house the jobs are: IC Designer, Logic Designer, Verification Engineer, Product Engineer, Test Engineer, Application Engineer, Process Engineer, Sales Engineer, Software Engineer, CAD Engineer and so on.
2. Best advice is to follow your technical passions, not money. IC Design (and most other jobs associated with semiconductors) is very challenging, and the industry is very fast-paced with a lot of pressure. If you're going after cash there are probably better ways to get it. The people in finance and marketing typically get more money than engineers after a few years away. If you aren't excited about the work, you probably won't be able to push yourself to be the best you can be, and then you may end up washing out of the industry (happens all the time).
That said, IC Design is the most exciting, fascinating thing I have ever done. I love it. I jump out of bed every morning to solve interesting technical problems and I get so much satisfaction from building real, physical objects that have been used by millions of people. It's a great life if you enjoy that type of thing. My salary hasn't get pace with inflation over the past 10 years, but I don't care. The work is the juice. As Steve Jobs said, "The journey is the reward".