<p>@jack63</p>
<p>In order to get hired with tenure from industry at any university, you need to have an extensive track record of delivering new technologies to the market (generating $$$), numerous awards (reconigiton by your peers) from external groups (AIChE, IEEE, ACS, etc.), as well as, an extensive publication record in peer reviewed journals (the higher the impact, the better). The problem with the latter is that all publications that come from industry must be approved by upper management and legal. That is why most people in industry don’t/can’t publish, especially if they can’t make a convincing case to upper management that publishing a paper in subject X is a business priority. And if you don’t publish you can’t get the external recognition needed to win those awards. I know from experience the headache of having bosses shoot down request to publish work that wasn’t close to being proprietary.</p>
<p>Nobody ever said that you were going to be able to find a job with a PhD in Chicano Studies, or Medieval Literature. You decided that you were going to do that. You should have considered your future empolyment prospects before you embarked on that PhD program.</p>
<p>Just the same as someone with a PhD in Chemical Engineering, who expects to get a job handed to you after you graduate with a PhD. You have to apply yourself, and be proactive in your job search. Your job search begins even before you take one graduate lecture course. How many conferences are you attending? How many talks are you giving? How much visibility do you have in your department? These are all critical questions, that frankly, you should be asking youself. And these same questions apply to any job you may get. Going to work everyday by 9, doing only what you are told, and going home at 5 will get you nowhere in the “real world,” and surely end with you getting the **** work nobody else wants to do, and maybe even a pink slip. You have to constantly network, have several mentors, seek out high visibility/impact work you could be doing, and execute your work with excellence. You have to seek advocacy and strive for excellence. This is what makes you a superstar at work, and in school. That is what gets you a job. Most of the people who end up with tenure track jobs in pretty much all fields, get their jobs because of relationships that their post-doc has with someone who is looking to fill a position. If you did these things, more than likely people will be willing to help you with whatever they can give you. </p>
<p>Unfortunately, we don’t live in a meritocracy. In order for you to get many of the things you want in the working world, someone else has to want you to have it. I saw it many times at my former company. In fact, that is the way you got promoted to the managerial level. For me, a PhD is a tool that I am using to make more money than I was making as a BS chemist, with limited career prospects. Sure, I made a good deal of money (>$50K), but for 4-6 more years of school, I could be making $90K/yr as a PhD. I could be promoted to a managerial position (something that BS chemist were not permitted to do at my old company), and assume various leadership roles in the R&D organization (again, something that BS chemist weren’t permitted to do).</p>