Title :
Engineering management in our modern age
Author_Institution :
Coll. of Eng., Florida Inst. of Technol., Melbourne, FL, USA
Abstract :
The theory and practice of engineering management has developed rapidly in the last forty years to yield a discipline with considerable scope and focus. Educational institutions around the world report significant student interest in this field of study and enrollments are steadily growing as engineers and scientists focus their efforts on developing products and services that produce a business result. The concept of managing engineering and technology has emerged as an area of professional practice that is clearly a career path for many engineers. In this paper a definition of engineering management is presented that links what engineering managers do, how they do it, and for what purpose. Fundamentally, engineering management is the process of envisioning, designing, developing, and supporting new products and services to a set of requirements, within budget, and to a schedule with acceptable levels of risk. The concepts of product and process complexity, systems analysis, risk management, and requirements engineering are used to distinguish the unique features of engineering management that make it a very real discipline of research, study, and practice.
Keywords :
engineering; project management; risk management; technology management; educational institutions; engineering management; process complexity; product complexity; professional practice; project management; requirements engineering; risk management; systems analysis; technology management; Educational institutions; Engineering management; Engineering profession; Industrial engineering; Innovation management; Microwave integrated circuits; Process design; Research and development management; Technological innovation; Technology management;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering Management Conference, 2002. IEMC '02. 2002 IEEE International
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7385-5
DOI :
10.1109/IEMC.2002.1038486