r/ChemicalEngineering Sep 21 '23

Salary What’s the most profitable career path?

I’m a freshmen Engineering major that is taking gen Ed’s. I am thinking of switching to chemical engineering next year. I really like ChE but but want to pick a profitable career path, which is why I’m on the fence between it and Computer science. I did research and found that petroleum engineering is very profitable, and ChE can pick it pretty quickly. However with the way the world is going(more green energy), are renewable energy jobs such as nuclear power plants going to experience a boom in demand and become more profitable?

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u/[deleted] Sep 21 '23 edited Oct 17 '23
  1. Pick a career you’re interested in first. No point in spending 8+ hours a day doing something you hate.

  2. ChemEs are far from poor. That said, even after all that schooling and debt, doctors come out ahead. The average ChemE and CS major are around the same, but top SWEs make far more than ChemEs.

  3. Within ChemE, O&G is the most lucrative but it usually comes with sacrifices (usually poor location, hours, and work environment). But I know people in Pharma and Semiconductors who start out at or near $100k. I’m 23 in Pharma, make $42/hr, and get time-and-a-half above 40h. If I did the 60-hour workweeks that many in O&G do, I’d make $150k.

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u/Victorski98 Sep 22 '23

What was your path to get into pharma?

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u/[deleted] Sep 22 '23

Internships in Pharma. Technical clubs and undergrad research to have stuff on my resume. Got my resume looked over by upperclassmen so it looks readable. Then, career fairs and company info sessions so that my resume actual reached hiring managers (all 3 of my internships and my first (and current) job were through connections), so I get the internships.

3 internships were a major boost. It also helped I met some people at my current company (Pharma services) as an intern for a big Pharma company, one who was willing to refer me.