@A.Hisham86

Well, in my country Algeria, civil engineer is the best domain someone can engage to make a career, a good payment, a lot of projects.

@buddhiesharma2843

Every field has pro and cons. But be proud that you are structural engineers đź’Ş

@Tom-qo7ry

Once you get 10+ years of experience and become professionally qualified, you can start your own firm. Most employers pay quite low compared to what you could get working for yourself

@ammarwaraich3356

Great video. As someone in consulting within the Civil Engineering realm - I agree with all your points. Have to have a genuine passion for it in order to succeed long term. Certainly in consulting time management is the biggest skill that is utilised. Have to be a pro at managing multiple projects whilst being technically competent and efficient. Could be very challenging for a grad in the beginning but very rewarding once you get used to it. Although the learning never stops and there would be always new challenges, you just get more comfortable dealing with it and working under pressure as you get more experienced.

@nicolasnepo9243

Thank you for your videos. I’m a civil engineering student, and still deciding which path I’m going into. I really like structural, the challenging projects and the constant and necessary learning in the industry.

@svoids

Structural engineering is by far the most beautiful spec in my opinion. Everything you do has practical implications and real world consequences. You the same liability for human life as do doctors, and in many cases a strcutral  failure is much more catastrophic. I am actually proud to bear so much responsibility wtih my designs because that tells me I'm making a positive impact on society. Not to mention, the theoretical complexity and elegance of the theory we are taught, how everything ends up fitting together like a jigsaw puzzle from connection design to seismic and gravity just amazes me. Our specialisation is as old as time and will continue to be indespinsable to humanity. Proud start working soon.

@kurtdietrich5421

You are spot on. It is exactly like this in my 47 year career.  Tough to balance all those changes into your work schedule and not get stressed. I own my own small consulting firm and I work long hours. But I love what I do.

@JanIncognito

My wife’s a registered architect and every item that you pointed out applies to her field as welll: deadlines, constant problem solving, endless liaising with builders and low pay compared to effort. A lot of her peers simply go to project management to earn double the pay for a fraction of the accountability that architects and engineers deal with. Cruel world out there…

@amazingchittesh

Feels like I am kinda late to know this

@miggygaluza9234

Me as a current 4th year Structural Civil Engineering student, I say I agree with everything engineer Hielscher mentioned hahahahhaa

@industrialarts3921

I think a lot of this applies to more commodity type engineering services. Ie: Basic structural engineering of standard buildings. You can make more money if you work for a more specialized company. I work for a company that designs and builds custom marine heavy lift equipment. We get payed a lot more than what a conventional engineering company would offer. It's also a lot more interesting because every project is different. 
Honestly, as an engineer, I wouldn't recommend working for an engineering firm.

@neprhicarrot9283

It's nice to see people actually show their honest life experiences. I've been one year in my course and I'm beginning to reconsider. I've went through a slight phase of depression where everything was just disappointment after disappointment. We needed to pass a drawing plate, while at the exact same time that time could've been used to study in things like calculus. I know some people can manage that, but I really am not really fit for a deadline driven life.

@istrukturatv2936

Structural engineering is undeniably demanding - high responsibility, long hours, and years of experience before reaching senior roles. The stress of ensuring safety is real, and the financial rewards may not always match the effort, especially early on. But at the end of the day, it’s one of the most fulfilling careers because it directly impacts people’s lives, creating safe and reliable structures that stand the test of time.

@MrNoBrainsYT

You would have saved my life if you posted this like a 4 years back. Now I just graduated in civil eng and my whole life has become a mess!

@DeepakKrishna11

very well put together video mate. Keep going.

@engrxtn

We civil engineers should join together and stop designing/working until we get better salaries.  The world runs on civil engineers…without us…society wouldn’t be able to continue as is.  We are way underpaid…

@joaquinfabrega

I am a registered civil engineer with 35 years in the field, solving problems is part of the trade. Payment is a matter of free market, experience and knowledge, by the way not every country is equal.

@leoads

I am a Civil Structural Engineer with 24 years of experience. Long story short, it does not worth it! Not even close to it.
The amount of responsibility that you care is huge, and the market does not give the right value for that. 
Usually a Structural project is around 2% to 3% of the total cost of a construction, and you are responsible for the safety of that construction for the rest of your life.
Realtors make 6% of the total sales price of a construction ever time they sell it (no matter how many times they sell the same construction), and their responsibility is zero. Not even care to know if everything is ok.

A computer programmer or somebody that works in the high tech industry does not have something even close to our responsibility. Even though, they are paid more and have more market value.
If you are a young student trying to decide if it worth, don't even bother, learn AI, or work for the high tech industry.

@CivilTechSource

I personally disagree with many points. The majority of the jobs out there are deadline based as you agree a timeframe with the client. If the company has not allowed for site inspection within their fee then its on them. Now, If there is a design change you can always go back to the client and request additional fees if done correctly and the original fee proposal sets it out clearly.
The only reason I would advice someone not to do civil engineering is that if they have aspirations for a 6 figure salary (at least in uk), it is almost not achievable unless they reach director level. Keep up the good content.

@prantikhuq578

You're a hero, bless you .