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Chapter 1 Engineering and Management

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Chapter 1. Engineering and Management. Advanced Organizer. Decision Making. Planning. Organizing. Leading. Controlling. Research. Design. Production. Quality ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 1 Engineering and Management


1
Chapter 1Engineering and Management
2
Advanced Organizer
3
Chapter Outline
  • Origins of Engineering
  • Engineering as a Profession
  • Roles of Engineers
  • Management Levels and Skills
  • Roles and Functions of Managers
  • Engineering Management

4
Learning Objectives
  • Describe the origins of engineering practice
  • Identify the functions of management
  • Define Engineering Management
  • Explain the need for engineers in management

5
Origin of Engineering
  • Engineer Ingenious stem from Latin word
    ingenium
  • Talent, natural capacity
  • Clever invention

6
Definition of Profession
  • a calling requiring specialized knowledge and
    often long and intensive preparation, including
    instruction in skills and methods as well as in
    the scientific, historical or scholarly
    principles underlying such skills and methods,
    maintaining by force of organization or concerted
    opinion high standards of achievement and conduct
    and committing its members to continued study and
    to a kind of work which has for its prime purpose
    the rendering of a public service.
  • --Websters 3rd International Dictionary

7
Definition of Engineering Profession
  • the art of directing the great sources of power
    in nature, for the use and convenience of man.
  • --The first issue (1866) of the English journal
    Engineering
  •  
  • the profession in which a knowledge of the
    mathematical and natural sciences gained by
    study, experience, and practice is applied with
    judgment to develop ways to utilize,
    economically, the materials and forces of nature
    for the benefit of mankind.
  • --Engineers' Council for Professional Development

8
What Engineers Do?
  • Engineers apply the theories and principles of
    science and mathematics to the economical
    solution of practical technical problems.
  • Engineers design machinery, products, systems,
    and processes for efficient and economical
    performance.
  • --U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

9
Types of Engineers
  • Civil Engineers
  • Agricultural Engineers
  • Mechanical Engineers
  • Electrical Engineers
  • Industrial Engineers
  • Chemical Engineers
  • Aerospace Engineers
  • Computer Engineers
  • Software Engineers
  • Biomedical Engineers

10
Engineers of Future
  • Teamwork
  • Flexibility
  • Interpersonal skills

11
Engineering Employment
12
Engineering Employment
13
Engineering Jobs
  • Manufacturing Industries (37)
  • Product Research, Design
  • Production, Quality
  • Plant, General
  • Service Industries (28)
  • Marketing, Purchasing, Recruiting
  • Logistics
  • Government (12)

14
Management
  • Manage to handle
  • Management the process for managing, training,
    or directing

15
Management Levels
  • First-line managers
  • Foreman, supervisor, section chief
  • Middle managers
  • Plant manger, division head, chief engineer,
    operations manager
  • Top managers
  • Chair of board, president, executive vice
    president, CEO, CFO

16
Managerial Skills
  • Technical skills
  • Interpersonal skills
  • Conceptual skills

Technical Skills
Interpersonal Skills
Conceptual Skills
17
Managerial Roles
  • Interpersonal
  • Figurehead, leader, liaison
  • Informational
  • Monitor, disseminator, spokesperson
  • Decisional
  • Entrepreneurial, Disturbance handler, Resource
    allocator, Negotiator

18
Functions of Managers
  • Planning
  • Organizing
  • Staffing
  • Leading
  • Controlling

19
Engineering ManagementA Synthesis
  • Engineering Management is the art and science of
    planning, organizing, allocating resources, and
    directing and controlling activities which have a
    technological component. -ASEM
  • Engineering management is a field that bridges
    the gap between engineering and management.
    Engineering management involves the overall
    management of organizations with an orientation
    to manufacturing, construction, engineering,
    technology or production. -- Wikipedia

20
Ordinary Managers vs.Engineering Managers
  • The engineering manager is distinguished from
    other managers because he/she possesses both an
    ability to apply engineering principles and a
    skill in organizing and directing people and
    projects.
  • He/she is uniquely qualified for two types of
    jobs the management of technical functions (such
    as design or production) in almost any
    enterprise, or the management of broader
    functions (such as marketing or top management)
    in a high-technology enterprise.

21
Engineering ManagersNature of the Work
  • Plan, coordinate, and direct research, design,
    and production activities.
  • Supervise engineers, scientists, and technicians,
    along with support personnel.
  • Apply knowledge of administrative procedures,
  • Use communication skills extensively.
  • --Bureau of Labor Statistics

22
Need for Engineering Managers
  • High-tech nature of business
  • Extensive planning
  • Uncertainties in products and processes
  • Recruitment and evaluation of technical personnel
  • Leadership and motivation of technical personnel

23
Management and Engineering Career
  • Engineering and sciences managers held about
    228,000 jobs in 2006.
  • Manufacturing industries employed 38 of
    engineering and sciences managers.
  • Another 31 worked in services industries.
  • Other large employers include Federal, State, and
    local government agencies.
  • Employment of engineering and sciences managers
    is expected to grow 8 percent over the 2006-16
    decade, about as fast as the average for all
    occupations.
  • --Bureau of Labor Statistics

24
Engineering Management Curriculum
25
Advanced Organizer
26
Discussion Questions
  • What is your background? (Major, Level of study,
    country of origin, job title)
  • Why do you take this course?
  • What is your expectation from this class?
  • Could you find out the trend in engineering
    enrollment (at college level) in U.S.?
  • Could you find out the trend in business
    enrollment (at college level) in U.S.?
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