From Aerospace to Tech, what i learned...
02-07-2025
Career Move: From Aerospace to Tech (4 Years Ago)
I'm going to speak very frankly here, without hiding behind corporate fluff—and I hope whoever reads this
appreciates that. In today's world of AI, LinkedIn, and Instagram, very few people speak their minds anymore. Too
many just play it safe.
I've always been part of the aviation world. After finishing my studies, I joined Rolls-Royce Civil Aerospace,
starting in New Manufacture (producing new parts for aero engines). Later, I moved to Singapore for a few
years—one of the best decisions of my life. I was working in MRO Repair Tech and I loved it. That experience
deserves its own post someday, especially to compare the UK and Singapore work cultures.
But today, I want to write about something different: my career shift from engineering and manufacturing to tech.
Why the Change?
I was feeling stuck. Progression at Rolls-Royce was painfully slow—snail's pace. It had nothing to do with my
performance and everything to do with the company culture. No matter how productive or technically advanced I
became, meaningful promotions only seemed to come to those who were willing to “kiss ass”—and that's something I
just couldn't do.
This was about 4-5 years ago, and honestly, I don't think that kind of culture is something you fix by swapping out
the CEO or CTO. It's systemic. I saw people getting promoted based on a skill I didn't have: the ability to talk
nonsense with a straight face.
Just before COVID hit, I decided it was time to move on. I transitioned into the tech sector—specifically helping
SMEs adopt digital technologies.
The Tech Shock
Within three months, I realized that Tech sector had its own flavour of nonsense—maybe even more than engineering
and manufacturing. There was a lot of brown-nosing going on.
With a lot of manufacturing experience behind, Outside of my current job, I contributed to a manufacturing strategy
document and it got completely ignored, and the text completely changed by people who had no experience in
manufacturing, but more experience in Business and Marketing. Thus I just kept my head down and did my job.
Meanwhile, I was watching product managers and owners—many of whom had never written a single line of code—talking
about “developing products” and “launching to market” with absolutely no clue about structured development. TRL
levels? Nobody even knew what they were. They were selling half-baked products at TRL 3 or 4, making promises they
couldn't possibly keep. It was chaos.
So Why Am I Still in Tech 4 Years Later?
Two reasons: salary and freedom.
Salary
Let's be blunt — manufacturing salaries in the UK are embarrassingly low. Put “manufacturing” , even "advanced
manufacturing" in your job title and it's practically a pay cut. Why? I have no idea.
Example: an Engineering Manager at AMRC near Manchester or at MTC in Coventry earns around £45k-£52k. You're
expected to know cutting-edge technologies, machining tools, lead engineers, and manage complex projects—all for
what maxes out at £52k. Don't belevie me ? contact an Engineer on Linkedin and see for yourself.
Now contrast that with being a project manager in tech in London. You don't need deep technical knowledge, yet you
make £52k-£62k. I genuinely can't wrap my head around that disparity.
Freedom
Tech does offer more flexibility—especially during the early COVID years. It's less now, but still more than I ever
had in manufacturing.
Do I Miss Real Engineering and Manufacturing?
Absolutely, Hell Yeah !! I miss it a lot. I miss seeing components I helped repair or develop flying in the skies.
I'm proud of the work I did. I have airplanes flying in the sky !!! But pride doesn't pay the bills.
Let's see what the future holds.