• The First Step Into Engineering: From University to Industry | Live Podcast | University of Glasgow
    Apr 21 2026

    Josh takes Engineer a Career to the University of Glasgow for a live podcast, bringing together a panel of engineers at different stages of their careers to share how they got started.


    From discovering engineering later than expected, to changing paths at university, to landing that first role in industry, this episode explores the real journeys behind the job titles. The panel share what sparked their interest, the decisions that shaped their careers, and the lessons they’ve learned along the way.


    This isn’t a one-path story. It’s an honest look at the different routes into engineering, the challenges along the way, and what keeps them passionate about what they do.


    If you’re a student, graduate, or just figuring out your next step, this episode shows you what that first step into engineering can really look like.

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    1 hr and 2 mins
  • From University to Engineering Careers: What Students Need to Know | Live Podcast | University of Edinburgh
    Apr 14 2026

    Josh sat down with Ivona and Ondrej at the University of Edinburgh to break down what an engineering career actually looks like after university.From their first interest in engineering to where they are now in industry, they share the real journey, the decisions, the challenges, and the moments that shaped their careers.They talk about placements, mentors, career changes, and why your degree doesn’t define where you’ll end up. There’s honest advice in here for students on building your network, managing your time, and staying open to opportunities as they come.If you’re studying engineering or thinking about your next step, this episode gives you a real insight into what happens after universitym and what it takes to build a career in engineering.

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    44 mins
  • The Reality of Becoming an Engineer | Live Podcast | University of Dundee
    Apr 7 2026

    Josh sat down at the University of Dundee for a live podcast in front of students to hear Reese’s story and it’s not the typical engineering path.


    From leaving school with no qualifications, working at McDonald’s, and going through college, to eventually breaking into university and now working as a Project Engineer in subsea engineering, this conversation is about what it really takes when things don’t go to plan.


    We talk about failing exams, repeating years, paying for extra support just to get through university, and what it actually feels like to see others progress while you’re still trying to catch up.


    Reese also shares honest advice on internships, breaking into industry, dealing with rejection, and why university doesn’t always prepare you for the real world of engineering.


    If you’re a student who feels behind, unsure of your path, or questioning whether you’ll “make it”, this episode is for you.

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    34 mins
  • Building Services Engineering: From Apprentice to Engineer
    Mar 31 2026

    Josh sat down with Ryan to talk through his journey into building services engineering and how he ended up working at the University of Glasgow.


    What stands out about Ryan’s story is that it isn’t a straight line. He didn’t think engineering was for him at school, spent time working in an admin job, and only found his way into the industry after being given an opportunity to apply for an apprenticeship. From there, it became a process of learning, grafting, and figuring things out step by step through college, university and on the job experience.


    This conversation challenges the idea that there is one route into engineering. Ryan talks openly about not being naturally academic, having to work at subjects like maths, and realising that engineering is just as much about communication, problem solving and mindset as it is about technical ability.


    They also explore what building services engineering actually is, using a simple way of thinking about it. If architecture is the body and structure is the bones, then building services are the arteries that keep everything running. It is the side of engineering most people do not see, but it is fundamental to how buildings operate and how we move towards a more sustainable future.


    If you are unsure where you fit, questioning your next step, or think engineering is not for you, this episode offers a different perspective on what a career in engineering can look like.


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    55 mins
  • Doughnut Economics for Engineers
    Mar 24 2026

    John Kraus joins The Engineer a Career Podcast to explore what engineering needs to become if it is going to meet the challenges of the future.

    John is the CEO of Engineers Without Borders UK and has built a career across policy, climate and the built environment.

    Although not an engineer by background, his work is focused on one clear mission: helping engineering create better outcomes for people and the planet.

    In this episode, we explore what global responsibility means for engineers, why more students are looking for purposeful careers, how engineering education needs to evolve and why individual engineers have the power to challenge how things are done.

    We also dive into topics like doughnut economics, regenerative thinking and how engineering can move beyond solving problems to shaping a better future.

    This is a thoughtful conversation for engineering students, graduates and professionals who care about where engineering is heading and the role they can play in it.

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    44 mins
  • University v Apprenticeships - Are we getting engineering careers wrong?
    Mar 17 2026

    Engineering careers are often framed as a simple question: apprenticeship or university?


    But what if that’s the wrong debate?


    In this solo episode of The Engineer a Career Podcast, Josh explores why engineering has never relied on a single pathway and why the real challenge facing the profession isn’t which route people choose, but how effectively we transfer knowledge to the next generation.


    From the strengths of apprenticeships and the value of university environments, to the growing demand from students for real world experience, this episode looks at how different learning styles shape engineering careers and why industry must think more seriously about internships, placements, and early exposure to real engineering work.


    Drawing on his own experience, family background in apprenticeships, and conversations with students across universities and colleges, Josh asks a simple question:


    Are we focusing too much on the route, and not enough on the system that connects education to industry?


    If you are a student considering engineering, an educator guiding the next generation, or an organisation thinking about early career talent, this episode explores why engineering needs every pathway.


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    15 mins
  • The Engineering Mindset: PhD, Systems Thinking and the Road to Consultancy
    Mar 10 2026

    What if the thing holding you back wasn't your grades, but your belief in what you were capable of?

    Abby joins Josh on The Engineer a Career Podcast for one of the most honest engineering career conversations we've had on the show. From leaving school with a B in English and a C in Chemistry, being rejected from art school twice and nearly not making it through third year at Strathclyde, to completing a PhD, researching with BAE Systems and founding her own engineering consultancy.

    This isn't a polished success story. It's a real one.

    Josh and Abby explore what it actually means to think like an engineer beyond the technical skills. Why being comfortable with ambiguity separates good engineers from great ones, how systems thinking becomes one of the most powerful tools across your entire career, and why building genuine connections matters more than any networking event ever will.

    Abby also opens up about imposter syndrome, a dissertation presentation so bad the head of department called her into his office, and what finally pushed her to back herself and start Defankle.

    If you've ever feel like you didn't quite fit the mould, this one's for you.


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    51 mins
  • Finding Your Tribe in Engineering
    Mar 2 2026

    Kate Barnard joins Josh on The Engineer a Career Podcast to share the unconventional path that took her from failing her A Levels to leading engineering teams at Rolls-Royce, and why mindset matters more than grades.


    From leaving school with just three UCAS points to discovering engineering by accident during a foundation year, Kate explains how giving it “a go” changed everything. Josh and Kate explore her time studying mechanical engineering at the University of Southampton, the power of applied learning in labs over lectures, and how getting involved with IMechE helped her build confidence, networks and leadership experience alongside her degree.


    The conversation then moves into her 20 plus year journey at Rolls-Royce, from climbing inside Apache helicopters as a service engineer, to writing build instructions for the F-35 lift fan in the United States, and later leading one of the company’s first electric engine programmes. Kate shares what it was like running multidisciplinary teams, why cost should be designed out rather than driven out, and how working across university and industry partnerships broadened her perspective beyond a single organisation.


    Since leaving corporate life, Kate has stepped into startups, explored climate and fintech ventures, and now operates at the intersection of engineering, strategy and emerging technologies. Along the way, she offers practical advice on staying open minded, identifying transferable skills, building a diverse mentor network, understanding risk early in your career, communicating beyond the engineering echo chamber, and why students should pay attention to those management lectures. The episode also touches on AI, technical grounding, and never losing sight of the “wow factor” of working in engineering.


    If you’re a student, graduate, career changer or experienced engineer reflecting on your next move, this episode is packed with honest insight, perspective and practical guidance.


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    LinkedIn: @engineeracareer

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    Website: www.engineeracareer.co.uk

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    30 mins