You, as an engineer, are presented by your coworker/mentor with a proposal for training on an engineering subject and asks you if you think it would be worthwhile. You look over the training material and notice that it is quite expensive and not something you should be throwing money at and this economy and that the content may be a little to narrow to really do you any good. So, you say that, and the coworker replies with "oh, I was just wondering if you wanted to be an engineer still now that you are about to get your MBA. Most engineers who get their MBA do so because they don't want to be engineers."
You reply with, "Did I do something that would indicate I don't want to be an engineer or are you trying to convince me to do something else?"
To which they reply, "No, I just wanted to know what you want."
To which you reply, "regardless, if I need to know this material I should learn it, but as I see it the training isn't worthwhile." And the conversation ends, but you know your coworker is no dummy and will probably take skirtting the question as a negative to the question.
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So say that this happened to you, hypothetically, and that you really weren't sure if engineering would give you the ROI that you were hoping to get on your extended education. And your coworkers were really well connected in many industries. And the economy really sucked. And you had a wife and, say, two kids to support, plus a mortgage. You weren't tied to area, at least not after you get your extended degree. So, you kind of need the job even if you don't want it, but seeing as there are no alternatives...
What would you do? Hypothetically of course.
You reply with, "Did I do something that would indicate I don't want to be an engineer or are you trying to convince me to do something else?"
To which they reply, "No, I just wanted to know what you want."
To which you reply, "regardless, if I need to know this material I should learn it, but as I see it the training isn't worthwhile." And the conversation ends, but you know your coworker is no dummy and will probably take skirtting the question as a negative to the question.
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So say that this happened to you, hypothetically, and that you really weren't sure if engineering would give you the ROI that you were hoping to get on your extended education. And your coworkers were really well connected in many industries. And the economy really sucked. And you had a wife and, say, two kids to support, plus a mortgage. You weren't tied to area, at least not after you get your extended degree. So, you kind of need the job even if you don't want it, but seeing as there are no alternatives...
What would you do? Hypothetically of course.
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