Home / News, Views and Opinion / Engineering workers in career confidence crisis

Engineering workers in career confidence crisis

The latest research from the UK’s leading independent job board, CV-Library, reveals that even though 89.1% of engineering professionals feel confident about their appearance, less than half (48.2%) feel the same way about their career prospects.  

The study, which surveyed 2,000 British professionals, also found that while nearly a third (66.2%) of engineering workers felt confident about finding a job, a staggering 50% of them didn’t feel confident enough to apply for one. 

What’s more, the survey reveals that a lack of confidence has prevented professionals in the engineering industry from achieving the following:   

  • Asking for a pay rise (50%) 
  • Asking for a promotion (41.3%) 
  • Building relationships out of the workplace (15.2%) 
  • Building relationships in the workplace (15.2%) 

Lee Biggins, founder and CEO of CV-Library, comments: “Confidence is such an important asset in all areas of life, but particularly so in the workplace. After all, when employees feel there is no direction to their careers or don’t have clear goals to work towards, it can stifle productivity, diminish job satisfaction and ultimately, impact your bottom line as you struggle to retain experienced members of staff.”  

The survey went on to ask whether engineering workers felt a lack of confidence had held them back in other areas, with 17.4% of professionals stating that it had prevented them from taking part in an extra-curricular activity, such as joining a sports club. 

Biggins continues: “Seeing as work is such a huge part of people’s lives, it’s imperative that businesses find a way to address these issues. Perhaps start by formalising a mandatory annual or quarterly review process – this can open the lines of communication about employee career progression and get the ball rolling for bigger conversations such as a promotion or pay rise. 

“Alongside this, ensure that you mention career progression opportunities in your job adverts, as this can certainly help to attract more applicants to your roles. Either way, with the industry’s professionals in a career confidence crisis, employers need to make changes in order to stay ahead.”  

Check Also

Bio-based products drive industrial disruption

The principles of reduce, reuse, and recycle have turned the focus into exploring bio-based products …

UPDATE: UAE power mix will continue to be dominated by thermal power in next decade

Please note this story, originally published on 17th April 2024, has now been updated by …

Three layers of predictive maintenance

The key difference between preventive maintenance and predictive maintenance is that the latter means completing …