in 2018 it was $165k annually. That was my latest salaried position. My annual revenue since then is more complex due to revenue sharing and bonuses. @@Itjeekiwkwwjwjwjwjwkwkk
Everyone has an opinion. But to all those saying it's easy, maybe that's true. If not you'll have a great excuse when you're on of those who drop out or switch to education or another field of study.
I'm an IE student and i kinda agree lol. Tho I guess we kinda need more initiatives to become especially good at something, since we study a lil bit of everything to become a generalist. being only a generalist in job seeking nowadays doesn't really cut it :")
yep I think it's bcs it's not too focus on engineering side only but business as well unlike other engineering majors, they're very specific to what they do. But I'd argue IE has the highest potential for students to become business owners, ceo's, and leaders in their industries bcs it's literally about the whole business operation.
@@oriowatson2968 yep I think it's bcs it's not too focus on engineering side only but business as well unlike other engineering majors, they're very specific to what they do. But I'd argue IE has the highest potential for students to become business owners, ceo's, and leaders in their industries bcs it's literally about the whole business operation.
Idk what Georgia Tech offers but at my school it's definitely Construction Engineering. It's a project management degree that requires you to only take the first 2 calc classes, and a few (see statics and strengths) civil engineering classes. That's it. One of my roommates was CE and would laugh at me doing thermo HW like I was an idiot bc my homework was tough.
Industrial engineering is actually super hard, at my school they make us go all the way up to calc 3 and in other engr major it’s only calc 2😂 most of these people probably don’t even know nada
I am going to be majoring as I.E. this fall at university. I want to be a Data Scientist and I have already taken all the core engineering courses at community college needed. Works for me
I.E. is basically a fancy business degree, however, there is statistics which is viewed highly as a data scientist. Been learning to code in python i.e. NumPy, Pandas, Matplotlib, Seaborn, what data types, lists, dictionaries, OOP , looping, lambda etc. I viewed "jr data scientist" on indeed and I.E. and ISE were engineering branch the post listed. I plan to create an online portfolio and learn Sql and go from there and hopefully snag an internship when in undergraduate@@2009gradcu
@@tarcisiomiguel955 we also have differential equations,probability,numerical analysis,work system analysis,production and inventory systems,facility planning and layout design,statistical quality control...
@@byronrogers4489 my point is, professors should be there to guide the students. One professor of mine didn't showed up. He's supposed to be teaching 3 courses: Operations Research 1 & 2, and Supply Chain Management. All of those 3 are major subjects of IE. And now we have to rely on UA-cam and library 100% mainly self taught. The tuition fee we paid on those courses were useless. And now I'm nearly graduating without proper knowledge of it, who loses? The professor, or the student? Of course it's the student. We need it to increase our skills for the job that we want to apply for. Let's say nearly 100% self taught is good and you wouldn't need to study in the University. Would the company trust you that you mastered those skills without having a degree? In the Philippine setting, NO. You must be a degree holder. It sucks.
Pro: You're an engineer right away after graduating. Con: it doesn't have a board exam. Note: But you can take CIE examination while working (Certified Industrial Engineering). It's recommended. And yes it's still worth it. Unless you have a professor who doesn't teach
I have an IE degree and I agree. It has definitely paid off in my career though.
How much is your salary ?
in 2018 it was $165k annually. That was my latest salaried position. My annual revenue since then is more complex due to revenue sharing and bonuses. @@Itjeekiwkwwjwjwjwjwkwkk
How did you get the Job and what position?that will hel me a lot if you answer please
@@Itjeekiwkwwjwjwjwjwkwkk $165k annually
@@JEL-ug1eb current or right out of college? I applied to an online job posting.
It is not easy, we always say that engineers Build things industrial engineers make them better!
As an Industrial Engineering graduate, I feel sad.
Why ?
Why? Money is good
@@kevinw4267 Maybe he don't now how to make money LOL
I thought of pursuing IE. And I had a guy saying instead of pursuing IE just drop ur studies. Is it so worse? Is it worth in India?
@@nda2o228 in india?nah bro
IE is easier wow😮😮?...I am a 3rd year IE student and I find it Super Hard😪🎉
Yeah its hard, but if you compare with other engineering major, its not gonna be that hard
Everyone has an opinion. But to all those saying it's easy, maybe that's true. If not you'll have a great excuse when you're on of those who drop out or switch to education or another field of study.
woahh.. IE major, I feel bad for you...
My first choice is ME but I picked IE, am I cooked?
help what can course in industrial engineering i focus before college
IE is defo not the easiest.
era morsor
I'm an IE student and i kinda agree lol. Tho I guess we kinda need more initiatives to become especially good at something, since we study a lil bit of everything to become a generalist. being only a generalist in job seeking nowadays doesn't really cut it :")
Would you recommend studying it?
I want to pursue Industrial engineering but have different undergraduation major...will it be easier for me
@@talakaissi7216no do mechanical, electrical, or software.
@@Naomi-xu4hqwhy ?
yep I think it's bcs it's not too focus on engineering side only but business as well unlike other engineering majors, they're very specific to what they do. But I'd argue IE has the highest potential for students to become business owners, ceo's, and leaders in their industries bcs it's literally about the whole business operation.
It's get very difficult at PhD level particularly if your concentration is operations research
@@oriowatson2968 yep I think it's bcs it's not too focus on engineering side only but business as well unlike other engineering majors, they're very specific to what they do. But I'd argue IE has the highest potential for students to become business owners, ceo's, and leaders in their industries bcs it's literally about the whole business operation.
I’m a TA for GT industrial engineering. Am I hearing I need to make it harder?
eyy chill out trying to get in for IE this year
Lol
Just add a couple of constraints and some binary variables with some blending constraints as well and see if they still think its so easy
I thought of pursuing IE. And I had a guy saying instead of pursuing IE just drop ur studies. Is it so worse? Is it worth in India?
If those are the type of students getting degrees in Engineering. Def yeah.
Idk what Georgia Tech offers but at my school it's definitely Construction Engineering. It's a project management degree that requires you to only take the first 2 calc classes, and a few (see statics and strengths) civil engineering classes. That's it. One of my roommates was CE and would laugh at me doing thermo HW like I was an idiot bc my homework was tough.
I thought of pursuing IE. And I had a guy saying instead of pursuing IE just drop ur studies. Is it so worse? Is it worth in India?
@@nda2o228 in India,doing masters in iitb or btech in IIT kgp is worth it..not sure about other colleges where they offer ie.
@@biswaranjansamal6588 Okay thank you
i study industrial engineering but still got thermo and fluid mechanics
What school for construction engineering???????? Please I am really interested and that sounds awesome
Me who 1st time listen 👂 the word IE 😅😂
Industrial engineering is actually super hard, at my school they make us go all the way up to calc 3 and in other engr major it’s only calc 2😂 most of these people probably don’t even know nada
same here
Mechanical engineering commonly requires beyond calc 3; adding differential equations and linear algebra
@@stephenmathai6841 same here brotha for IE , all the way up to calc 3 then 2 more math classes like 190 or what you saud
@@stephenmathai6841i'm ISE and i have to take up to calc 3 diff eq linear and discrete
Same
I am going to be majoring as I.E. this fall at university. I want to be a Data Scientist and I have already taken all the core engineering courses at community college needed. Works for me
How do you plan on transitioning into data science?
@@entropeaceyes… I’m curious too
I.E. is basically a fancy business degree, however, there is statistics which is viewed highly as a data scientist. Been learning to code in python i.e. NumPy, Pandas, Matplotlib, Seaborn, what data types, lists, dictionaries, OOP , looping, lambda etc. I viewed "jr data scientist" on indeed and I.E. and ISE were engineering branch the post listed. I plan to create an online portfolio and learn Sql and go from there and hopefully snag an internship when in undergraduate@@2009gradcu
Why didn’t you major in computer science or statistics? I.E sets you up for supply chain, management manufacturing, business, and consulting roles
@@Naomi-xu4hq because I took the engineering core classes at community college and want to put them to use.
Isn't difficulty subjective to each person?
Me watching this as an IE GT grad 😮
So was it easy?
Oh fuck off u guys! I'm dying over here doing I. E. how the fuck is it is easy? 😭😭 HELPPP
Ha industrial have more math than other engineering courses
Yup. Statistics, Operations Research, Linear Programming, Supply Chain Management, Engineering Economics and even Game Theory
@@tarcisiomiguel955 we also have differential equations,probability,numerical analysis,work system analysis,production and inventory systems,facility planning and layout design,statistical quality control...
هههههه أنا مهندس صناعي كمان احبكم 😘😘😘
I.E.'s hard if your professor doesn't teach you
To be honest, if you aren't nearly 100 percent self-taught, you shouldn't be in engineering or math
@@byronrogers4489 my point is, professors should be there to guide the students. One professor of mine didn't showed up. He's supposed to be teaching 3 courses: Operations Research 1 & 2, and Supply Chain Management. All of those 3 are major subjects of IE. And now we have to rely on UA-cam and library 100% mainly self taught. The tuition fee we paid on those courses were useless. And now I'm nearly graduating without proper knowledge of it, who loses? The professor, or the student? Of course it's the student. We need it to increase our skills for the job that we want to apply for.
Let's say nearly 100% self taught is good and you wouldn't need to study in the University. Would the company trust you that you mastered those skills without having a degree? In the Philippine setting, NO. You must be a degree holder. It sucks.
Did IE in Germany
And I agree
is it worth it???
Pro: You're an engineer right away after graduating.
Con: it doesn't have a board exam.
Note: But you can take CIE examination while working (Certified Industrial Engineering). It's recommended.
And yes it's still worth it. Unless you have a professor who doesn't teach
@@floriannecaparanga1498 thnx
What's the IE
Industrial engineering
Do u even watch the video😂
industrial engineering is not real engineering
Noy for nerds
At my school we call them glorified business majors