According to Astute Analytics, the aggregate revenue of engineering services outsourced worldwide is likely to skyrocket from $1.5 trillion to $6.8 trillion by 2031
With the digital revolution now in full swing, new products are being constantly launched, developed and upgraded especially in the automotive, consumer electronics, medical devices, and telecom industries. These developments have opened up vast business opportunities for engineering services companies which play a critical role as partners of tech companies to enable them to meet their goals of incorporating quality, safety and reliability into the design and manufacture of their products.
With the demand for engineering services also coming in from abroad, creating an outsourced services industry, working in the newly emergent product engineering services industry is an attractive option for graduates of engineering and technology colleges
According to Astute Analytics, the aggregate revenue of engineering services outsourced worldwide is likely to skyrocket from $1.5 trillion to $6.8 trillion by 2031. This boom is expected to benefit Indian engineering firms in a big way with India emerging as the most preferred destination for engineering services outsourcing, followed by the US and China.
The basic academic qualification required for entry into this newly emergent service industry is a degree in any of the primary engineering disciplines depending on choice of industry segment. For example, for developing diagnostic or therapeutic medical devices, degrees in biomedical engineering or biotechnology are needed; for developing heavy industrial machinery, a degree in mechanical engineering or control systems engineering is useful and for designing and developing consumer electronics products, an electronics engineering background is critical. Additionally, specialised education in areas such as industrial design or human factors engineering is always valuable. Essentially, a product engineer’s job is to design and develop new products, new applications and improve and upgrade already successful products. This requires understanding customers’ needs, evaluating engineering blue-prints, testing and finishing new products
An electrical engineering and computer science postgrad of IIT-Bombay, Joshi began his career as a scientific officer at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research in 1980. In 1983, he signed up as senior software engineer at Patni Computer Systems which has morphed into iGATE Patni after it was acquired by iGATE in January, 2010.
According to Joshi, 12 percent of the global population of qualified engineers is hosted by India and the PES industry is expected to generate an estimated 250,000 jobs in the next few years. This number could swell to 1 million by 2020. “In iGATE Patni, we are keen to strengthen our PES capabilities for which we are planning to hire a significant number of engineering graduates in the near future. Currently our PES division has 3,200 highly educated and innovative engineers on its rolls, servicing several Fortune 500 companies in the products engineering industry through our 30 international offices in the Americas, Europe, Middle East, Africa and Asia-Pacific,” says Joshi.
The good news for India’s engineers is that the country’s automotive engineering services outsourcing industry is growing at breakneck speed. “The PES industry, proclaimed as the last frontier of business process outsourcing, is headed for a spectacular take-off. The strategic advantage that we possess is a rich talent pool, R&D facilities, innovative business models, and market dynamics,” says Joshi.
Despite — or because of — recessionary winds sweeping the US and Europe, suddenly the future of India’s engineering graduates looks bright.
An estimated 12 percent of the global population of qualified engineers is hosted by India and the PES industry is expected to generate an estimated 250,000 jobs in the next few years
(Excerpted and adapted from 101 Great Careers for the 21st Century by Indra Gidwani)