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Construction Management Engineer Career Paths | Roles, Responsibilities, Salaries, and More
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- Опубликовано: 16 авг 2024
- Ever wondered what your construction management career would look like as a general contractor? From field to project engineer, to project management, I'll go through these jobs, how long you can expect to be in each position, and expected construction engineering and construction management salaries. Feel free to add me on instagram @kikoga.
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Intern:
This to me is the best place to start in construction. You get a crash course and if you work for a good company, you can get a real taste of what life as a general contractor will really be like. The construction and engineering industry is not for everyone, so doing an internship is a great way to see if this is the lifestyle you want.
Entry Level Engineer:
So usually you will need a college degree to become an entry level engineer, and usually you will start in the field. This is the best place to start because you have to learn how things get built. All your theoretical knowledge from college will pale in comparison to what you will learn from being on site for a construction project. You will do things here like QC, taking measurements, reading the drawings, quantity takeoffs and hopefully familiarizing yourself with the steps of construction. My advice to all engineers is to try and learn things as if you are going to be told to build it yourself. The salaries I've seen in Hawaii range from ($55k-$85k) and it depends how big the company is and how they hire their employees.
Mid Level Engineer (Project Engineer)
Here is where you make the decision whether you want to go into project management and manage more of the office side of construction or the field side as a project superintendent. But at this stage you should be coming proficient at construction means and methods, understanding cost, managing changes, scheduling, and becoming a mini-superintendent or mini project manager trying to prep yourself to take the next step. At this level you should be able to speak intelligently about all different scopes of work for the project and understand how to review their documents or at least be able to ask the right questions. The salaries I've seen in Hawaii range from ($70k-$100k+).
Project Manager
Here is where you are truly responsible for a team of people and managing cost and risk. It really helps to have that solid foundation from your years as an engineer to prepare yourself to be a true decision maker for the project. You will need to understand your contract, help with the schedule and be able to forecast your cost for the project and identify major risk and opportunities to make money. The salaries I've seen in Hawaii are usually above six figures for Project Managers.
Superintendent
Here is where you are responsible for the field. You need to understand building and managing crews and subtrades. To me, this is the most important position on the project as you have the biggest influence on how the job is executed. Usually to be a superintendent you will need to have around 10 years of experience; I find that the best superintendents are those who grew up in the field actually working and breathing the life of a worker.
High Level Management
As with any corporate company there's a ladder to climb and its the same in general contracting. Above the project managers you have higher level managers that may be in charge of multiple small jobs or one big job. Above them you may have a district, or area manager who oversee the entire state or region.
0:00 Intro
1:02 Intern
2:07 Entry Level Engineer (With Salary)
3:27 Project Engineer-Mid Level Engineer (With Salary)
5:24 Project Manager (With Salary)
7:18 Superintendent
8:30 High Level Management
10:00 Other Jobs Within General Contracting
11:13 Why Starting In General Contracting Is The Best
Song: MBB - Hawaii
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Video Link: • MBB - Hawaii (Vlog No ...
Great vids, man. I got into construction out of necessity after working in banks for 5 years as an assistant branch manager. Was offered a job as a laborer making wage scale which was way more than I made in retail banking. Indescribably huge learning curve, but 3 years later I'm an APM at a medium sized specialized civil construction company. Luckily my company didn't care that I didn't have a degree. My advice to people is get your degree, develop good people skills, and don't be afraid to take on new responsibilities/ take advantage of opportunities you see.
So awesome to hear Rudy. Thanks for sharing your story. Glad to hear the industry helped progress your career! There's no one right path!
What do u mean by good people skills specifically? As in charisma?
Hi Rudy: What's do u mean by APM? So your first 3 years working at construction industry, you worked as a laborer?
@@augustiner8425 assistant project manager
@@senedvigano1068 sorry, never realized that there were responses. Construction management/project management is really a job of communication and managing different peoples expectations and realities. You have to be comfortable expressing yourself and delivering good news, bad news, saying what people may not want to hear, listening to what you may not want to hear. You will have to be outgoing and talkative to gain peoples trust and be able to negotiate not necessarily money, but mostly negotiate for other's time and commitments. Time really does equal money. I've always been great at interacting with people bit had a hard time with the unpleasant conversations, and was sent to a communication workshop where I learned really great tips. I think it's definitely worth it to do something like that.
As a self employed general contractor / project manager with 24 years experience, I must say, this is a very good and informative video. I would definitely recommend it to anyone looking to get into the construction field.....Great job.
As a student in construction management looking to get into the field love the videos of what is expected in the real world. Keep it up🙌
Thanks so much Ali! Appreciate you watching!
hello, how is your course going on ? I'm also thinking about pursuing a CM degree !
@@aarjangiri107 it's going well man I just graduated and getting a job in the field soon, I'd recommend getting a job early on to learn the ropes n gain experience while studying.
I already feel excited !!@@aliadnan6577
@@aliadnan6577Hi planning to take Cm in college . Does this course involve advance math when studied in college?thanks
As someone just starting out in the construction engineering industry, I found this video so helpful! This was so helpful to see the different possibilities. Keep the construction videos coming!
Hahaa good to hear!
Awesome video. I’m a civil engineering student graduating next year. I watched this video a while back not knowing any of the terms you used. But once I started my internship for a general contracting company on Oahu and watched this video again I knew almost all the terms you mentioned. Its exciting. Thanks for sharing your knowledge!
Love the content! You gave a very thorough overview of the different career paths a construction background can lead to. Very informative!
Thanks Curtis! Appreciate you taking the time to watch!
Can you talk about residential vs commercial vs heavy civil? Great videos man I feel like our degree will be booming for decades to come and this is a great resource.
I have been struggle lately, im a BCE in Civil from Vietnam, all company I intended to apply required ABET program which my previous school isnt, so harsh bc I just moved to USA for 2 months
I’ve been in commercial. I do want to experience residential because I want to flip houses. I want to experience both
This video gave me hope that there’s something I can find out there that will make me happy
Great video Kienen! I have a BA (Bus. Admn) degree and an Assoc of Construction Supervision degree, and I have to tell you! You did a better job in this video of explaining the many construction career paths available, than my college professor did when I was earning my degree. Keep your videos coming and thank you for sharing your knowledge of careers in the construction industry.
I’ve been in the industry for 20 years . You explain this industry perfectly . Great work man
Thank you for your vids!! I found these at the perfect time as im a senior in hs looking to major in either construction management or construction engineering!!
Awesome Caleb! I appreciate you watching man
Love learning more about the field! I’m going into construction engineering technology and interning with an engineering company
Awesome!
Hi brother, I'm QA/QC engineer from UAE I feel proud whenever I watch your blogs about civil engineer.
Awesome to hear!
I love youtube, I'm on it all the time researching anything I have questions about. As a current Construction management student with a lot of anxiety about entering the field, this video was one of the most valuable videos I have ever watched on any subject! You have a real skill for teaching and your passion shines through your videos! Thanks a lot, and I wish you more success in the future!
I appreciate it Andy!your support means a lot 🤙
Enjoying the videos. There’s definitely a good amount of money in construction but it can be hard on the body.
Another great perk is there will always be work available for folks in construction. No real concern for lay offs or furloughs in most places.
Appreciate it! And yes there’s always construction going on somewhere...
It's hard on the body when you're in the trades doing the building, even at the lowest rungs of the CM towers (field/project engineer) you're really not doing much physical work at all. The damage can come from poor stress management.
10 years max for project manger is way longer than on the mainland but that’s very interesting. People usually are project managers within 2-4 years for a lot of companies over here. I even was offered a superintendent role with a company after I graduate if I interned with them for 3 summers.
That depends are they functionally a project manager or actually understand risk. That is the issue I'm seeing. In chicago they don't just hand out pm roles. Functionally I think they can fake it but whether they are actually good and knowledgeable leaves me not impressed with my classmates that got the pm title right out.
Thank you, man!
You just helped me choose my next step. In a year a finish my degree. Can't wait!
Your Videos are bringing back my Interests in Civil Engineering
Great stuff
With really nice small puns
I hope your channel Grows too ❤️
thank you for watching!!
Wonderful video sir! You really helped me narrow down what I want to do when I complete my Bachelors in CM hopefully in May of 2025!
Currently an intern and wow, this video was so helpful. Personally started training jiu jitsu not too long ago on evenings and i honestly fell in love with the sport and don’t see myself being happy if i was ever forced to stop. I know the construction industry requires long hours so i don’t see myself staying out in the field side of it for too long. It was very relieving to hear that i have more options of a career path with my degree.
This RUclips channel is a pot of gold !
Great video. I'm new to construction and to watch and hear from someone like yourself is great. You give insights on what's to come and I believe you give it in truth. Thanks
I think this video should be mandatory to watch at school.. what a well organized video
Great videos! I'm from Chile, working as a superintendent right now, things here work very similarly in the AEC industry.
I'm going to the IBS 2023 in Las Vegas on the last days of January. I was looking for this kind of videos to learn more English technical vocabulary, related to engineering and construction. Your videos are very good for this purpose, thank you!
awesome! thanks from Hawaii!
Thank you! Great informative content.
Keep it up please, the industry needs people like you.
Currently interviewed for an apprentice superintendent position, I wanted to do more research on the position thank you for breaking it down, I’ve been watching your channel for the past 2 days. Im grateful for your content and it motivates me to purse a career in this field.
This video is fantastic educational quality. You’ve explained everything as I would have. Both of my parents are in construction. My mom is in preconstruction as a lead estimator for a sub and my dad works on site with a GC as a superintendent of sorts. He’s just got a little bit of a unique role, so he does a lot of what a superintendent does, but he also does a lot that they wouldn’t. the first time I was in school, I was studying construction engineering and I had the opportunity to intern with my mom’s company one summer and my dad’s company twice, once in estimating and once on site. The estimating internship was what I like to refer to as “my boujee summer” because we met with the owners, attended design meetings with the architect in a high rise in downtown Houston, had a $40 steak more than once, and was usually required to dress a step or two above business casual(just for those meetings). The next summer I was on the same project as my dad, literally our desks were right next to Each other, and coincidentally was a project my mom personally estimated and wrote the bid for. So all three of us got to work on one project together! I actually ended up dropping out and went to work for a different interior finishes sub in estimating and then eventually a paving/concrete sub as an assistant PM. So I’ve seen all sides of this industry. I only left because my last company was so toxic that I wanted nothing to do with the industry. Come to find out, they were just terrible people and lost a massive lawsuit 2 years after my departure. 😌 After about 5 years of bumping around from retail to healthcare, I’m finally resuming my education. Still kinda thinking construction, though I’m on the fence. Might go with industrial engineering bc I can still use it in construction, but it’s useful in other applications as well.
Anyways, all that to say, your channel is fantastic and I think it will really help a lot of people interested in construction. You’ve certainly rekindled my love for construction and really got me reconsidering which path I hope to take. Keep up the great videos!!
Oh also I forgot to mention, depending on the size of the company and how many interns per project, some companies will actually tailor your internship around whether you see yourself on the superintendent side or the PM side. My on site internship was like this, so my mentor was the PM, while the other intern was mentored by the superintendent. In the last week of our internships, we swapped places and it was crazy how similar, yet different, the roles are.
Thank you so much for sharing and for commenting! I appreciate the time you took to watch the video! Glad I could be relatable! haha
I just want to thank you for that great video brother, you explained everything in details.
Your video just popped out in youtube suggestions, loved the video and subscribed it 👍
Thanks so much Sridhar!
I'm currently studying master 1 in urban and architectural project management, I feel motivated and I can't wait to get into the industry, thank you bro
Super informative, well-organized video. Also thanks for the timestamps.
No problem, glad you enjoyed it!
It is very helpful for a civil engineering student like me. Thanks a lot!
Great stuff. Thank you for doing some videos like this.
I'd love to hear more of your thoughts on the owners side of the industry. Owners reps are a part of projects earlier then GCs and therefore can topically influence the project more and younger professionals can get seats at the decision making table earlier than with the GC path. I'm a senior CM major who's done everything from labor for a sub, interned with OPM and currently interning with a commercial GC. The construction curriculum pushes most students into the world of general contracting with out even mentioning the entire other side of the industry that ownership provides. I'm curious as to why you aren't a big fan of that ownership path, thank you for mentioning it though, great video!
Super awesome question Matthew! For me, there’s nothing worse than an owners rep that doesn’t understand the basics of construction. They tend to make irrational decisions and honestly lose respect because they just can’t grasp how things are done from a contractors perspective. Being in the weeds and details of a construction project as the contractor to me gives you the valuable knowledge of what it actually takes to get it done.
@@KienenKoga Interesting, I'm sure that is definitely an issue and is the case more often then not. My experience involved working with major owners rep firm who had experience with some of the most impressive projects in the industry. The OPMs at this particular company were definitely knowledgeable about the building process, many of them former GC PMs themselves. As for smaller firms and freelance owners reps I'm sure this is a more prominent issue.
Yea OPM is where it’s at it’s much easier to ride to higher positions and more lucrative. I’m currently interning for an OPM now and most likely will be offered a job upon graduation as an APM and within a few years will be an PM. 15 years to get where you want in your career is a really long time. Most people who want to be vp of companies are at that level by year 10-15.
@@christian-gu5oq been working full time as an APM for an owners rep firm for a year now and im beyond happy with my decision. World class team, extremely knowledgeable and working on the most prominent developments across the country.
Definitely agree that construction experience is invaluable as a design engineer. Would love to hear you share lessons learned or discuss how designers can improve from a contractor’s point of view in a future video.
thanks Shane! Great idea! Forthcoming....maybe I'll interview a design engineer....lol
Although I am an electrical engineer. I appreciate your channel.
This explanation is what we all needed! Thank you Kienen!!!!!!!
I appreciate it William!
Amazing video of the construction industry! You're one of the only channels that simplifies and provides an overview of construction management in a clear and concise way.
I'm currently a project engineer in California and this video has helped a ton.
THanks so much Kenneth! Best of luck to you!
Thanks for the vid! Very informative!
Great video 🎉
Wow, that is very broad range of career opportunities and pathways.
Love your videos man
I definitely lack the field engineer experience. How can someone like me still get the knowledge and build the foundation needed to be a good project manager? Right now as a project coordinator, I do a lot of the roles you described as a PE, although I do rely a lot on the decisions of our PM and Superintendent. I try to go to the field as much as possible, but I still feel like it’s not enough.
I'm about to graduate and this really helped, thanks dude! Also, I heard Surveillance could be part of our career too.
I was so confused before watching this video because I thought that Construction Management was a Jack of all and master of none kind of thing. But this video definitely cleared the air. Still would like to know how can we land a general contractor role, either with Ms degrees or the career ladder shown in the video. At what exact stage we can move to general contractor role with the experience. Many thanks
Does a supervisor and foreman fall into the field engineer area? Are those two under the control of the superintendent. That’s how I see it.
Great video!
I'm a freshman. Returning adult student. I've always wanted to do this and I'm glad I'm going for it. Thanks for all of your invaluable information.
Good for you Sandi! Glad to hear it was helpful haha I appreciate it!
This video is very awesome!
Awesome bro thank you I will share your good ideas to my son who is into the construction 🔨 stuff
Thanks Victoria!
Thank you so much 💞
Thanks Kinen your videos really helpful and you are highly skille.
I love construction 👌
Awesome to hear Hayder! Thanks for watching!
What company do you work in? Want to see if there is one around me!
It feels like forever since your last post idk why lol, great video !
Hahahaha thanks bro, I missed yesterday! Had exporting issues lol I appreciate you checking in 🤙
Hey, great Video! I have one addition to make. I think you should emphasise, what kind of specialisation is optimal for these pathways. In my opinion, it is kind of a wise choice to specialise in law and economics. Than you may be able to climb the ladder faster and higher . Often people without a specific specialisation may get stuck. (German viewpoint)
Also I would mention, that you always can switch to the solar, wind or other industries.
Very good point. Having a law and econ background will for sure help especially the more you move up! But also ultimately, you need to have that strong foundation of building knowledge to truly be excellent in my opinion. BUT, you are absolutely right.
This is interesting ig Hawaii is a little different. My friend graduated last year and already has a project engineer job with a firm in Chicago.
Thank you
Hey Kienen i'm about to get my Red Seal in the electrical trade. I want to go for a degree in Construction Management but I also want to get a degree in Civil Engineering because I think it might help expand my opportunities.
Do you think it'll be worth it to go for the Engineering degree first or should I just go straight into Construction Management if I already have plenty of construction experience?
Finishing Masters in CEM this year, looking for internship style employment for this final 10 months of school now. Any tips for what positions to pursue as an intern i.e. who to shadow that will lead to better future skill set?
I’ve been working in the field for almost a year. And I’ve been wondering about the benefits of having an MBA within the industry
Im surprised how little private companies pay. I work for a gov lab and I only have an associates in construction management and make 75k a year. Ive seen people without a degree make 94k. The older folks make 140k without a degree. With a degree who knows how high but 150k for 20+ years in the industry is kinda low no?
Hi Kienen. I need advice for my circumstance. I am an HVAC technician. I decided to go back to college to become an engineer. I am in the first year of Mechanical engineering now. I know the lifestyle that I like that gets to the worksite(field) to go through every step of the process like what you are doing now. is it possible if an ME degree can get me a job as a construction engineer like you? Thank you for anyone gave me advice.
Hi Man, I’m thinking about applying to Construction management as full degree in NYC, Do you think I should go for it or go for Civil Engineer.
this is great channel
A part of my assignment for uni I am making a career plan (I'm studying construction management, masters). Got back to this video again for any ideas. I have steps like an intern, some particular software skills, and a PMP certificate (a lot later), but any more ideas what you can put on the list to become a Project/Construction manager? Great vids bro! =)
please do a video on the migration of civil engineers , leaving our industry and working in other sectors like IT
I am a 3rd yr civil engineering student from Nepal. I am interested in CM and found your channel. I think its going to help me out a lot
So awesome to hear!
I am also a 3rd year student from Haryana same thinking as you . 😁 When you found a way then inform me about that one more thing I want to do a internship but don't have a way . And want to do work in Canada if you have a idea suggest me mam.😉
Please make a video about the importance of getting an EIT and PE
Thanks
Hi Kienen - Can you do a video for International students who are planning to pursue their MS in Construction Eng. and Management ? and Job opportunities after the course for international graduates.
I’ll have to look into that; since i didnt experience that dont want to give you wrong info haha but I can definitely research and find out!
Can u do a videos that explain about the quantity surveyor? Maybe about the roles in construction and qs career
Can you discuss in a video the difference between a civil engineer in construction and management and a structural engineer?
Excelent my bro
thanks so much Richard!
Wow -- I didn't realize how many potential paths there are. This is really helpful! I know in a previous video you mentioned how long your days are. Staying on the path you're on, do you ever see the schedule becoming more manageable? Or as you go up are you also working even more?
Honestly I’ll probably always be this way haha just in my nature. But the industry is moving in a direction promoting work life balance more so we shall see how that shakes out
What about if your start out as an estimator? I recently got a job out of college as a Steel Estimator, I think this is a great opportunity for me, especially since my I have a degree in Civil with an emphasis in structures. My only fear is that I'll be pigeonhole into just being a steel estimator. Is is hard to transition into a project engineering from an estimator?
could I get into an intern in construction management in my freshman year.
It wouldn’t hurt to try! I know a few people that got one.
Very helpful since I’m new in construction industry. I also have a question. Do you think me working in a windows and doors manufacturing company as QC engineer help me gain experience in construction company? Thank you for posting and making parts of my life a bit easier.
So a bachelors in Construction Management won't be enough to become a Construction Manager I thought I would just practice on the field for about 2 years minimum but not 20
Great video
Thanks Jesus!
What category is an assistant/associate engineer (project management for CIP) for the city in your diagram?
Hello im a women majoring in construction management right now… any advice?
Please do a video on the dress code of all these different positions!
Haha interesting question! I only really know Hawaii but for the most part it’s collared shirt and jeans until you reach high upper management then its aloha shirts, slacks and dress shoes lol
If you get your master's degree is it possible to skip a few years on moving up.
Great question; I would say no. In my opinion, I learned way more in 3 months of working than I did for my entire degree. Work ethic and diligence on the job is what helps move you up.
What's your opinion on rebar detailer, is it good path for growth.
How much is rebar detailer annual salary ?
Im curious - which career path do you see yourself taking?
Likely project management. With a side of youtube lol
Mahalo, you are the best.
Haha I appreciate it! Thank you for watching 🤙
What is ICC in construction
Can you please clarify the difference between construction management and project management?
So from a contractors/my perspective, construction management is more oversight of the project but you work more for the owner and don't have a direct impact on how the project goes. Project management, you are in the details of the job, control the cost, and own the success of the project. I see the construction manager as more of a consultant to the owner than an actual builder of the job.
Nice video.
Thanks Mayank!
You are the best
I appreciate it! Hahaha
I’m in landscape construction. I work as an assistant but I’m involved in the bidding process right now and I have 5 years in landscaping. It’s a great company and I absolutely love it. I asked this already, but is there a online school that could improve me in that field? To be clear, in construction. I would love you hear your response. Thanks.
To me, you get a better ROI by just putting more time into your work than going and getting a degree if you're trying to get a better understanding of the industry. I am sure there are online programs out there, but, to me, your time is better spent honing your skills in the workforce
@@KienenKoga thanks kienen! I appreciate it.
Hey Kienen, Love your videos man, you are such a university : )
I am an Architect with a Bachelor's degree and have applied for Masters in Construction Management at TAMU. Being an Architect I would like to know from you what jobs can I look forward to upon graduating as a construction Manager ? And Is it possible to work as a Project engineer with a General Contractor with this degree ?
Hello I'm an architect too I will apply to FIU next year for construction management, do you like what you are working in, with the master, any advice will be helpful , thank you!.
Awesome video man. I finished my Graduation in Civil Engineering and planning to do my Masters in Construction Management any advice on that.
As long as you aren't going into debt to get your master's it should be good. I did my masters while working since I knew working would provide so much more knowledge value than a degree would, so if you can swing that, that'd be preferable in my opinion.
@@KienenKoga But doing masters in some reputed colleges will demand more time in doing the assignments and preparing for exams. So how can we balance both??
Be careful with the role of being a field engineer, or assistant superintendent. I have worked with several different general contractors and I can tell you right now, it’s a hit or miss. It’s a glorified position. Some companies have some that’s called “self work”. Which means you will be doing some kind of labor work (those companies won’t tell you until it comes down to doing this). It’s wrong to do this. When working in construction management, we should not be doing any kind of labor work. We should be focusing on the management side, not being a tradesmen or labor worker.
Just graduated constructed management. As an introvert, what skills do you think I would need to succeed?
congratulations! keeping an open mind and being willing to put in the work first and foremost. Then eventually as you get more comfortable with the concepts and procedures, you will need to open up a little bit; there's a lot of communication in this industry.
Find ways to exert your voice! Construction has a lot of egos, so make your voice heard!
Hi Kienen. I wonder how you start in the general contracting path. Can that be a starting field fresh from school, or is it better to climb some ladders in a construction company (as you explained in the first route) before diverting to general contracting?. Are you required to be a licensed P.E for general contracting?. Thank you!!!
To have your own company yes I believe you need to have your contractors license which is different from getting your PE. If you have no construction experience, yes I would suggest working for a company so you can see how the industry works and make some connections and mistakes without your own money on the line. Thanks for watching Alberto!
Do you think I could do college online for construction management?
Sir could you help me in finding a internship I am in 3 rd year , autocad and rivet knowledge and good grab on all the subject . My overall result is 80 %
So just to be clear, do you recommend your internship to be mentored by a superintendent on site or a project manager who also has some time on the field?
that's a great question actually. To me, a superintendent is better. Seems like the better engineers start out that way....
I started out with civil. How would you recommend switching to general contracting? Any suggestions to make myself more marketable without starting at the bottom again?
Its tough to say, theyre very different. Though it may suck, I think going through the entry level things in construction makes you a better manager in the end.
Do you have any advice for someone who's interested in virtual construction coming from a construction management student?
Understand that even though you will be more office based, your job is to support operations in the field. The more you can bridge the gap between the office and the field, the better