Sup /Biz/. I'm studying electrical engineering at the moment and I've realized there's a million things they don't teach us in college that are really important to know. What are some skills/ good practices that are important for any student going into business to know?
Bump because not sure how slow Biz normally is.
sucking dick
>>1315487
Nice meme feget.
>>1315471
Engineer here,
What seems to be the problem?
>>1315524
I'm just looking for some extra advice as to things I can do that will make me more employable that they might not teach us in college.
>>1315539
I wouldn't stress about it too much.
They'll teach you thermodynamics and circuits,
then when you come into whichever job you want,
they'll retrain you.
Same was for me leaving school.
I knew the formulas and knew nothing about
architectural symbols or designing plumbing systems.
They had to teach me 75% of the job.
Working with people. It's really cheesy but be a leader in whatever you do. The technical knowledge will come with time, but you'll stand out from the crowd if you led/started a student group and did tangible, quantifiable things. A good question to ask yourself: "is what I'm doing making an impact on the life of my peers?" Writing a resume will come really easy if you focus on making an impact rather than amassing random skills. I was an EE undergrad and wish I got this advice sooner.