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Finding and Training the Next Design Engineers
March 6, 2025 | Andy Shaughnessy, Design007 MagazineEstimated reading time: 1 minute

There are a lot of job openings for PCB design engineers, and not enough young people in the pipeline to fill these jobs. How are we going to attract this next generation of design engineers to this industry, and what’s the best course of action for continuous training of these EEs?
I asked Bill Hargin, founder and “director of everything” at Z-zero, to share his thoughts continuous training and what the future may hold for design engineers of the future. As a signal integrity engineer and founder of his stackup software company, Bill has a fairly circumspect view of the industry, and he’s done his share of hiring. He’s also slightly off-grid, which often comes in handy in this evolving field.
Andy Shaughnessy: What advice regarding training and education would you give a young electrical engineer right out of college who wants to start a career as a PCB design engineer?
Bill Hargin: I think most companies have required and optional training opportunities, so leaning into that is a good start. My first job out of college was at Boeing, and we had tons of training options. I was almost always taking some sort of after-work course. Beyond that, I think everyone working in electronic hardware design should be working through books specific to hardware design. If it’s important, someone has written a book about it.
Shaughnessy: What topics and disciplines would you recommend for them to study: SI, PI, RF, EMC, etc.?
Hargin: I don’t like to generalize by saying, “Everyone should do XYZ.” But if I had to make a firm recommendation, I’d start by developing a firm foundation in basic signal integrity. From there, you can branch off into any or all the other three you mentioned.
To read this entire conversation, which appeared in the February 2025 issue of Design007 Magazine, click here.
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Standards: The Roadmap for Your Ideal Data Package
05/29/2025 | Andy Shaughnessy, Design007 MagazineIn this interview, IPC design instructor Kris Moyer explains how standards can help you ensure that your data package has all the information your fabricator and assembler need to build your board the way you designed it, allowing them to use their expertise. As Kris says, even with IPC standards, there’s still an art to conveying the right information in your documentation.
High-frequency EMC Noise in DC Circuits
05/29/2025 | Karen Burnham, EMC UnitedEMC isn’t black magic, but it’s easy to understand why it seems that way. When looking at a schematic like that in Figure 1, it looks like you’re only dealing with DC signals all across the board. There’s a 28 VDC input that goes through an EMI filter, then gets converted to 12 VDC power. Except in extremely rare circumstances involving equipment sensitive to magnetostatic fields, DC electricity will never be part of an EMC problem.