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i have a new job ( a coordination engineer ) but i really dont knoe my responcibilities , i graduated as a civil engineer and i worked for a while in a consultancy firm after that i became wn excutive manager of this firm's branch in one small city .. so i have some managment experience ... i dont know how to use of it in my new job .....................please help me

2007-05-04 05:40:33 · 3 answers · asked by ismaielnewman 1 in Science & Mathematics Engineering

3 answers

Look, working process in any company or institution is build of multi particular activities. For successful work of company or institution all of this activities must to be synchronize during the realisation of global activity. Care about synchronisation of activities is YOUR JOB! Simply, you have to coordinate all particular activities ( activities must be realised right in time on right place) and you must to supervise every particular activity and make intervention in activity where it is necessary. I wish you successful work because it is very hard duty. But don't give up! Best Regards and veradisca! Neven.

2007-05-04 05:53:36 · answer #1 · answered by NEVEN , 4 · 0 0

I've been a project engineer in the aerospace industry for 30 years and have not come across the term Coordination Engineer. I'll bet that means about the same thing as a project engineer, meaning that as a project engineer you are responsible for coordinating the activities of the entire program.

We follow the integrated product development cycle, which is to say that there are 6 phases to a program. Proposal, Concept, preliminary desing, detail design, test and validation and production readiness review.

As a coordination engineer, whether for an aerospace product or a new construction project, you will be responsible for coordinating all the activites to meet cost and schedule and performance. This will entail working with other engineers and non-engineers alike to ensure that they are all working together.
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2007-05-04 14:08:52 · answer #2 · answered by SWH 6 · 0 0

You don't need help, but the dude who hired you needs a whole lot of help. There should be a job description outlining what your responsibilities will be. This should have been discussed in full prior to the offering of a position to you and the accepting of that position by you.
For all we know, you may be their new "Gym Instructor".

2007-05-04 18:07:45 · answer #3 · answered by Bomba 7 · 0 0

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