I am an Industrial Engineer, this is a very good video. A friend of mine worked for Disney for a few years, did most of the exact things you mentioned. It’s a great field, very fun work, and the routes are endless. I’ve gotten to work for Tesla, Volkswagen, and now I work in the metal casting industry. 10/10 would recommend.
I don’t know why this video got me so excited. You basically described my life and my thought process in a nut shell. This is totally me! I strive every day to make things more effecient and get things done faster than the day before. I analyze everything and judge their efficiency. And what’s more freaky is that I’m a Disney freak and I was facinated with how incredibly efficient Disney World was. I could of just sat there and studied the Disney lines all day! I think I finally found what I should go to school for!
Thank you for clarifying IE because it is one of the hardest majors to explain and many people don't understand it or get it wrong by explicate only one aspect of it .
More aspects of IE:: Project Management Cost accounting Manufacturing and production planning Capacity Planning R&D Entrepreneurship Labour, safety and environmental law Industrial psychology Quality techniques and analysis Logistics and packaging design and planning 😎
My university has a great industrial engineering program (Montana State University), I'm mechanical engineering myself. IE's are fairly often our bosses. Now here, IE's _do_ study some engineering design, just not very much. They basically learn just enough so they speak engineer. They can tell us in our own lingo how to make our machines more efficient. They gave a few good examples in the video, but mechanical and electrical engineers are famously bad communicators, and IE's are often people that have enough tech background to understand our prattling and see the value in it, but at the same time they can _explain_ our prattling to non-engineers in simple English. Something a lot of us find strangely difficult.
@@krishalgupta8616 Well, both are great career paths and with a little extra training, both IE's and ME's can work in almost any industry. The ME path has harder math, physics, etc. Mechanics, the physics discipline, is basically the technical term for classical physics. Unless you specialize in micro-mechanical engineering you won't study things like relativity or quantum mechanics, but you study engines, boilers, mechanical things like bearings, cranks and such. As an ME you can design car parts, airplane parts, cooling systems, you name it. IE's are experts in efficiency, you wouldn't design the machines themselves like an ME or EE, but you might give the ME's or EE's rules to follow, like, 'make it this shape so it can be attached to this other machine'. While you wouldn't study quite as much math and physics as an ME, you would have to study management, economics, marketing, and a fair amount of law. Yes, law, as the person who would be asked to design the layout of a factory, you need to know things like, what are the laws on fire exits, will we be using processes that require hardhats, hearing and/or eye protection? You need to know OSHA standards like the back of your hand. One other benefit of being an IE is you are more likely to be the boss of your team. ME's are promoted to management sometimes but you are specifically trained to manage engineers and engineering projects. Both paths are difficult, but ultimately would you rather design the machines themselves or what is done with those machines afterwards. Would you rather design gadgets and robots or processes, and how those gadgets and robots are used. Look up videos on both, both paths can be exciting and its up to you in the end.
As much as I've heard how IE's make systems more efficient, I just like the fact of how diversely they can fit into any industry. This is a very interesting ability because it makes one wonder exactly what the world would be if people weren't making things more efficient. In the health and safety sectors, we would experience more deaths due to delayed responses from ambulances and emergency services. There is room for improvement, but all in all, Industrial Engineering is responsible for everyday life.
@@Idk-xi1tr yeah, IE is a good base qualification that compliments any other field, business is perfect because you get to invent and innovate existing systems. I'm left with one more year of study and I'll be fully committed to entrepreneurship.
Wow, interesting! Currently starting undergrad civil engineering but for a while was under the impression that industrial engineering was like mechanical engineering but applied to industry and production. Now I see it’s a lot of analysis, statistics, and processing that are at the core.
I just want to add that we don't merely analyse a process and simply say let's do this and that to improve it. While this video is useful simplifying things to get a basic idea, most real life systems are too big and complicated to do that. So we usually use IE techniques like Operations Research (which is developing and solving deterministic and probabilistic mathematical models to represent a system to reach an optimal solution for the plant or organization), Production Planning And Inventory Control (including different sub-techniques like ERP, MRP, DRP to figure out what, how, when, how many to produce from all of the parts at with which equipment on what machine), Work Study (to find out ways to produce more with less cost and same quality) and Simulation (used to figure out faults in a process to later work on to improve them).
Emre Bilge and that’s pretty much what we mostly do in our every day business lives. I agree on the fact that most problems are way more complicated than controlling a single parameter. Systematic approach and OR help a lot though.
This is exactly the engineering I was meant for!!! I'm so happy that I found the one for me! 😃😃😃 Ohh I'm so excited, how do I even express my satisfaction right now
Best video on Industrial Engineering. In my own experience as an IE, we manage and integrate the 4M's of any System (Manpower, Materials, Methods and Machinery) we are also know as Systems Engineers, thus we analyze and improve current systems to meet its Goal. Or we just design a Brand new System.
I looked at this on a whim and frankly this is a perfect video for anybody who takes sudden interest. You explained everything in simple and relevant language, spoke slowly, and left pauses between the sentences so people could absorb the information. Also this stuff about efficiency is seriously how I think a lot.
Industrial engineering is about increase productivity...eliminate waste & non value added activities... And improving effective utilization of resources. The different between industrial engineering with another engineer is we have to find and optimizing constraints in a system especially in industry An industrial engineer, must be able to specifying , predicting, and evaluating to optimizing their(another engineer) products
@@humanspider9421 It is not hard at all! you need to be little smart, have an open mind for new ideas and just study. Industrial Engineering is a kind of art and everyone sees it from a different angle.
I’m already in my 2nd year in electrical engineering and I absolutely hate it now because the major’s professors couldn’t teach and the 2nd lab course called fundamentals of electronics was extremely difficult for me. I’m thinking of switching to Industrial since most of the credits will be considered. I’ve seen some of the labs of industrial engineering students and they look fun and interesting such as the materials science lab part.
right now im in the exact position you were im in my 2nd year in electrical engineering and i really hate it and im about to switch to industrial did you change your major? and if you did were you satisfied?
That's EXACTLY what I've been saying about IEs. Can't tell me my job nor suggest improvements when I know you quit another engineering program, can't do the math, or failed any undergrad class multiple times.
curently studying in electrical engineering and i honestly hate it. i personnally dont really like designing circuits as i prefer to optimise and look for the most efficient solution to a problem so this video convinced me to move to IE. thank you so much for this video zach!
My mother was/is an industrial engineer, and I’ve always wanted to be one. I soecificllay would love to be able to find a job somewhere managing a car manufacturer, so I can get do both the things I love: management and cars (Ik it sounds stupid). Anyways your video really makes me excited (and for those of you wondering ofc my mother has explained everything she does, and sometimes has shown me but it’s different seeing other ppl explain it Yk). Anyways thanks!!!
Thank you!! This is what I've been waiting to find. I knew i want to be an engineer but couldn't quite figure out what type. THIS is what my brain does all the time- finds better ways. Thank you for giving me my "A-Ha" moments ❤️❤️❤️
Thanks a lot for this information. I was given IE instead of CS and I was very worried but after watching this, I'm really glad and grateful for what I've been given🎉
One of the best books on Industrial Engineering and Management is written by Dr. OPKhanna and published by Dhanpat Rai Publications ,Delhi. This book is available for purchase from Amazon.
Españoles, nota informativa. El equivalente a Industrial Engineer de EEUU es el ingeniero en organización industrial en España, no el ingeniero industrial que no tiene una equivalente como tal en EEUU . Por si estáis buscando info sobre la carrera y esto os confunde. Salu2
bleras1998 Super importante. Es más, es una de las poquitas cosas que hacen que los industriales españoles destaquen. Nos entrenan para tener visiones bastante más amplias.
I'm currently studying mechanical engineering, but I'm trying to decide if I want to stick with it or go for industrial and systems engineering instead. Thank you for this video!
I'm studying industrial engineering and the field is all about calculating stuff like tensions in materials, designing electrical circuits, improve existing units,...Yes, when designing stuff we need to reduce cost as much as possibe and increase effiency AMAP but that's not the main thing we need.
Solid Chrome I disagree. I am an industrial engineer. Yes, we learned all those things in our classes. But I’m not sure how you can argue that efficiency isn’t our main goal. Efficiency and optimization is the whole point of industrial engineering!
thank you this topic is very important for industrial engineering subject its really very helpful video and it really helps me a lot to understand about industrial engineering topic.
I am majoring in Engineering Management which is basically just this. Actually, both my capstone projects are Industrial Engineering projects so it is this.
Had to temporarily stop my Civil Engineering degree (still intending to finish it) and renewed my studies in Business & Supply Chain without knowing it was even a career option to combine my passions both at once.
While watching this video, it literally explains a lot of my though processes. But im a bit lazy. So i try to time everything so that i'm not late. But also not early. Without sacrificing my sleep.
At least in Spain that´s called Industrial Organization Engineering. I know that because right now I´m stuying a Master Course in Industrial Engineering and its a mixture of Chemical, Mechanical and Electrical Engineering
At 8:20 what do you suppose is more of the design and testing of products engineering? Mechanical engineering? Industrial sounds interesting, but I'd like more of the design side.
Most other engineering disciplines deal with design, industrial is kind of the outlier. Mechanical and electrical are probably two of the most broad disciplines to design and test different projects. But aerospace, chemical, materials, and so on also can be involved as well.
I share your concern... that's why excellent career guidance is very important at high school. But I'm sure you have found out what your passion is after this posting... right???
@@tickedoffsheikh8587 yeah! wouldn't exactly call it my passion since I'm still looking for that as i grow up but ultimately I've decided on industrial engineering because of its versatility and adaptability
Also we get to study a bit of every other career. CAD design? Yeah, marketing? Sure, electronic engineering? Also had it. Although it's not nearly as deep as studying the other careers, it makes you more knowledgeable than the average person in those areas, so you can comunicate with the people who specialize on them.
Your point that IE doesn’t require high level Math is unfair. Most IE programs requires up to Calc 3. That’s high level math. Statistics is a decision-making Math that can be confusing for many people. SPC( statistical process control) requires lots of mathematical formulas to analyze different systems. Math is a big requirement for most engineering programs and IE is of no exception.
I took Calc1,2,3 Linear Algebra, Differential Equations, now taking another advanced Linear Algebra Course, 2 Physics Courses, Statics, Statistics, Materials Science, Now taking Manufacturing Process which is really known in MechE, Operations Research which is applied Mathematics, also lots of other courses like Human Factors Engineering, Quality Control, Automation Control and so on how is this not advanced in Maths or Physics, or even Chemistry, we take lots of things that MechE’s have and OR and Statistics students have, then we also have a big part in Operations Management like he mostly explained Capacity and Bottleneck’s Analysis and Supply Chain Management, we really do understand high level scientific subjects, but the value that comes from many of the graduates is that they know a lot of everything and that they can make things a lot better and smoother with all of their background studies with their OM and Supply Chain knowledge.
He was refering to field of IE. the college required you to take those classes, every engineering degree does. However most math used in statistics is algebra. DifEQ and linear certainly was useful in any of my IE classes or job application
Im from Argentina and at least in some big supermarkets theres a single line, and at the end of it theres a display that says what cashier is free and it works pretty well.
The Industrial Engineer is a professional with high competencies in the design and optimization of production systems for goods and services with added value. He himself receives a solid training in mathematics, science and technologies applied to the design, planning, direction, administration, implementation and evaluation of continuous improvement processes, which lead to the sustainability and sustainability of the production chains, ensuring the well-being of the social environment and competitive development of industries. - Skills and Competencies: As an Industrial Engineer you are capable of: designing and optimizing production systems for goods and services with added value. You will apply science and technologies in the design, implementation and evaluation of continuous improvement processes of the productive chains for the development of industries. --Specializations: Processes Quality Automation and Industrial Control Industrial Security Information systems Investigation of operations (High degree of difficulty in mathematics and calculus) Integrated logistics and Supply Chain
Thanks for the informative video! This is certainly one of the careers I'm interested in. I'm interested in the combination of electricity, general engineering, efficiency, product engineering, and robotic engineering. I feel like this career is a good mix of the interests.
The queueing section at the beginning isn't quite right. A single multi server queue (the bank) will always be more efficient than multiple single server queues (grocery store) if they have the same arrival rate and service times. You almost got at this with the bank customer taking a long time but the important metric of that is service time variability. When the variability is low, multiple single server queues can approach the efficiency of a single multi server queue but the real reason grocery stores are set up the way that they are is to give us the illusion of choice even if it is less efficient overall. -source: I'm an industrial engineer
I recall him saying that the long single line at a Costco would present a negative image to potential customers, turning some away and resulting in lower net sales.
Would there be a long queue? As long as the arrival rates are somewhat stable so that they plan for enough cashiers the queue would move quickly, resulting in similar wait times. Customers just like the illusion of waiting in a shorter (in length) queue
Evan Breen the bank line also depends on the customer's reason for standing in line. The video explained how in a bank line, one teller might take longer than the other tellers. I only wish they used the same philosophy with ATM machines. Putting one is just not enough.
your answer makes no sense. A single row causes a bottleneck. if costs are not taken into account only operational efficiency, having more cashiers and more operators will always be more "effective". after all, let's imagine a gigantic queue with a single cashier and a single operator. obviously it will take a long time. several boxes and several operators will share the load.
@@iaia5368 google queueing theory and dive into the math of it. A if service rate is held constant mm4 queue with an arrival rate of 4a will be more efficient than 4 mm1 queues with arrival rate a.
I'm in my last year in Industrial engineering, in the field of industrial chemistry. Lately I have been watching Bio Engineers because I heard Bio Eghineering is a little, not much, but a little harder.
>starts this video
>sees a lot of industrial engineers work at Disneyland
>stops video
>applies for industrial engineering
😂😂😂😂😂true
Me too! It's making me so much more excited for this career
Sorry for the interruption. Can you please tell me what is Disney Land
@@ameenabdulla1082 big amusement park
You should've left out the >stops video stage and optimised time savings. I wouldn't apply if I were you. Maybe as Goofy the dawg idk.
I am an Industrial Engineer, this is a very good video. A friend of mine worked for Disney for a few years, did most of the exact things you mentioned. It’s a great field, very fun work, and the routes are endless. I’ve gotten to work for Tesla, Volkswagen, and now I work in the metal casting industry. 10/10 would recommend.
Hello.....I'm also planning to do Industrial training
Hi bro
hello im also pursuing this course. can i have some of your tips on this matter?
Hi. I'm taking Industrial Engineering course. Can you give me one cheer up advice ☺️?
Can you be an Industrial engineer afyee you undergraduate in Mechanical engineering?
I bet you 70% of the people who clicked on this video are already industrial engineers or on their way to being on...
Anjali Rawat
No
Lol true in my case
Yep.
Yes I am
I am, just graduated last April14, 2018.
I don’t know why this video got me so excited. You basically described my life and my thought process in a nut shell. This is totally me! I strive every day to make things more effecient and get things done faster than the day before. I analyze everything and judge their efficiency. And what’s more freaky is that I’m a Disney freak and I was facinated with how incredibly efficient Disney World was. I could of just sat there and studied the Disney lines all day! I think I finally found what I should go to school for!
Wow I'm so glad the video aligned with your goals so well!
I feel you!
Same Right Here! I finally found a branch of Engineering where I know I can be VERY good at! Thank You!
I could totally relate!
You are a Robot !
Thank you for clarifying IE because it is one of the hardest majors to explain and many people don't understand it or get it wrong by explicate only one aspect of it .
Glad it helped!
Thats true. Some people think its a management degree
THIS!!!
@@TheFouadjarouche in finland our degree is called industrial engineering and management (IEM). So they are closely related.
@@ellakai1 It's called the same in India too. I just got enrolled in it.
I have watched many videos about Industrial engineering. This one is the best. Thank you
Thanks!
Can you please share what you saw about industrial engineering videos link
Agreed, very well done
I agree
Pragadheesh babu th-cam.com/video/TPuFSocrx5g/w-d-xo.html industrial engineering
More aspects of IE::
Project Management
Cost accounting
Manufacturing and production planning
Capacity Planning
R&D
Entrepreneurship
Labour, safety and environmental law
Industrial psychology
Quality techniques and analysis
Logistics and packaging design and planning
😎
My university has a great industrial engineering program (Montana State University), I'm mechanical engineering myself. IE's are fairly often our bosses. Now here, IE's _do_ study some engineering design, just not very much. They basically learn just enough so they speak engineer. They can tell us in our own lingo how to make our machines more efficient. They gave a few good examples in the video, but mechanical and electrical engineers are famously bad communicators, and IE's are often people that have enough tech background to understand our prattling and see the value in it, but at the same time they can _explain_ our prattling to non-engineers in simple English. Something a lot of us find strangely difficult.
Stephan Ginther ahhh I’m an IE and this is such a perfect description of us!
Maria F, I'm glad you approve (-:
lol i want to pursue masters in IE
Then which would be better to pursue IE or ME?
@@krishalgupta8616 Well, both are great career paths and with a little extra training, both IE's and ME's can work in almost any industry. The ME path has harder math, physics, etc. Mechanics, the physics discipline, is basically the technical term for classical physics. Unless you specialize in micro-mechanical engineering you won't study things like relativity or quantum mechanics, but you study engines, boilers, mechanical things like bearings, cranks and such. As an ME you can design car parts, airplane parts, cooling systems, you name it.
IE's are experts in efficiency, you wouldn't design the machines themselves like an ME or EE, but you might give the ME's or EE's rules to follow, like, 'make it this shape so it can be attached to this other machine'. While you wouldn't study quite as much math and physics as an ME, you would have to study management, economics, marketing, and a fair amount of law. Yes, law, as the person who would be asked to design the layout of a factory, you need to know things like, what are the laws on fire exits, will we be using processes that require hardhats, hearing and/or eye protection? You need to know OSHA standards like the back of your hand.
One other benefit of being an IE is you are more likely to be the boss of your team. ME's are promoted to management sometimes but you are specifically trained to manage engineers and engineering projects. Both paths are difficult, but ultimately would you rather design the machines themselves or what is done with those machines afterwards. Would you rather design gadgets and robots or processes, and how those gadgets and robots are used. Look up videos on both, both paths can be exciting and its up to you in the end.
As much as I've heard how IE's make systems more efficient, I just like the fact of how diversely they can fit into any industry. This is a very interesting ability because it makes one wonder exactly what the world would be if people weren't making things more efficient.
In the health and safety sectors, we would experience more deaths due to delayed responses from ambulances and emergency services.
There is room for improvement, but all in all, Industrial Engineering is responsible for everyday life.
yes, imma go with it bc of that, wanna get into business but i dont want to do a generic business major
@@Idk-xi1tr yeah, IE is a good base qualification that compliments any other field, business is perfect because you get to invent and innovate existing systems. I'm left with one more year of study and I'll be fully committed to entrepreneurship.
Wow, interesting! Currently starting undergrad civil engineering but for a while was under the impression that industrial engineering was like mechanical engineering but applied to industry and production. Now I see it’s a lot of analysis, statistics, and processing that are at the core.
I just want to add that we don't merely analyse a process and simply say let's do this and that to improve it. While this video is useful simplifying things to get a basic idea, most real life systems are too big and complicated to do that. So we usually use IE techniques like Operations Research (which is developing and solving deterministic and probabilistic mathematical models to represent a system to reach an optimal solution for the plant or organization), Production Planning And Inventory Control (including different sub-techniques like ERP, MRP, DRP to figure out what, how, when, how many to produce from all of the parts at with which equipment on what machine), Work Study (to find out ways to produce more with less cost and same quality) and Simulation (used to figure out faults in a process to later work on to improve them).
Emre Bilge and that’s pretty much what we mostly do in our every day business lives. I agree on the fact that most problems are way more complicated than controlling a single parameter. Systematic approach and OR help a lot though.
Do you recommend a book or are you based in experience? Thanks
if you take a look..... a lot, A LOT of videos on youtube are simplified to make it easier for the people to wrap their heads around the concept
I am 13 years old and I already know this is going to be a good job for me!
Even the way you delivered this video was very efficient and effective. Kudos 🤙🏻
This is exactly the engineering I was meant for!!! I'm so happy that I found the one for me! 😃😃😃
Ohh I'm so excited, how do I even express my satisfaction right now
Thank you for this wonderful video. It actually helped me. And all the positive comments. It feels like someone is supporting me. THANK YOU VERY MUCH🙇
It's like a business degree on steroids.
i completely agree with you.i started studied business years ago, now i study this.
and sadly i think it is dying, as automation is going on lot of softwars can easily do what we do
Ibnziyad Tariq i know what youre saying but i dont think its going away. "end of work"-rifkin good book talks about this subject.
My algebra2/trig teacher said “Precalc is basically algebra2/trig on steroids” I love these types of sayings!
yea, it's like doing business, engineering and statistics degrees all together
Best video on Industrial Engineering.
In my own experience as an IE, we manage and integrate the 4M's of any System (Manpower, Materials, Methods and Machinery) we are also know as Systems Engineers, thus we analyze and improve current systems to meet its Goal. Or we just design a Brand new System.
As an industrial engineer, I must agree with you! I love my degree and I love my job :)
Can you contact me please, i have few questions batool.hijjawi@gmail.com
Hello....I'm also planning to do my MS in Industrial Engineering
Yups gotta love the jobs and degree that i paid loan in to.
@TheClarkfather what is your job like and what do you do there and what is your salary?
Which university would you recommend for MSc in IE?
Hi, I'm on my third year now, and when someone asks me what does an industrisl engineer, I don't know what to answer lol
hi
what is your opinion on Industrial Engineer after 4 years do you still like it ?
Thanks a lot for sharing us this! recently I started hesitated about my degree, but not anymore after watching this video.
Great video...very well explained. I loved how you illustrated examples with increasing complexity, made it much easier to comprehend
Forgot to mention healthcare/ergonomics and Quality. Those are big fields IE’s go into.
0:38 Brought clothes in shower with me. Now clothes are wet. Please help.
@@asmarali112 lol
Bring plastic bag
Step 1 Invent water proof clothes
Step 2 Is to not add anymore steps to keep the process simple.
I looked at this on a whim and frankly this is a perfect video for anybody who takes sudden interest. You explained everything in simple and relevant language, spoke slowly, and left pauses between the sentences so people could absorb the information.
Also this stuff about efficiency is seriously how I think a lot.
Industrial engineering is about increase productivity...eliminate waste & non value added activities... And improving effective utilization of resources.
The different between industrial engineering with another engineer is we have to find and optimizing constraints in a system especially in industry
An industrial engineer, must be able to specifying , predicting, and evaluating to optimizing their(another engineer) products
I was studying when I watched this video
Now I'm an Industrial Engineer 😜👍🏻
hello im want to pursue masters in IE. hamam could u please tell me hows the course and is it really hard ?
@@humanspider9421 It is not hard at all! you need to be little smart, have an open mind for new ideas and just study. Industrial Engineering is a kind of art and everyone sees it from a different angle.
Haman Alawadhi thank you so much 😊. which is the best place to pursue it if u can suggest me please...and in which subjects i need to be good at..
Hello sir.....is there any scope outside india....also wht is the salary..pls reply ASAP
@@HamanFRD why are you lying
1:37 myth busters tested this and their test found that although it took longer people rated their experience line higher
I’m already in my 2nd year in electrical engineering and I absolutely hate it now because the major’s professors couldn’t teach and the 2nd lab course called fundamentals of electronics was extremely difficult for me. I’m thinking of switching to Industrial since most of the credits will be considered. I’ve seen some of the labs of industrial engineering students and they look fun and interesting such as the materials science lab part.
right now im in the exact position you were
im in my 2nd year in electrical engineering and i really hate it and im about to switch to industrial did you change your major? and if you did were you satisfied?
That's EXACTLY what I've been saying about IEs. Can't tell me my job nor suggest improvements when I know you quit another engineering program, can't do the math, or failed any undergrad class multiple times.
So they're kind of like Life Hackers?
Calorie saver captain
Ned noodlebob
curently studying in electrical engineering and i honestly hate it. i personnally dont really like designing circuits as i prefer to optimise and look for the most efficient solution to a problem so this video convinced me to move to IE. thank you so much for this video zach!
My mother was/is an industrial engineer, and I’ve always wanted to be one. I soecificllay would love to be able to find a job somewhere managing a car manufacturer, so I can get do both the things I love: management and cars (Ik it sounds stupid). Anyways your video really makes me excited (and for those of you wondering ofc my mother has explained everything she does, and sometimes has shown me but it’s different seeing other ppl explain it Yk). Anyways thanks!!!
This video greatly helps me as to why I've chosen this career path. BSIE 1-5. Keep on moving forward beyond our limits.
Thank you for making this. I’m trying to think of why I should stay an Industrial Engineer and I think I remember why I chose it in the first place.
What made you want to quit?
Thank you!! This is what I've been waiting to find. I knew i want to be an engineer but couldn't quite figure out what type. THIS is what my brain does all the time- finds better ways. Thank you for giving me my "A-Ha" moments ❤️❤️❤️
Hmmmmm this just summarizes all the courses i wanted to take, i feel like evrything i want to do in the future is in IE 💖
It's basically applied mathematics with more emphasis on optimization and stochastic systems.
This is useful and informative for me. Thanks!
Thanks a lot for this information.
I was given IE instead of CS and I was very worried but after watching this, I'm really glad and grateful for what I've been given🎉
One of the best books on Industrial Engineering and Management is written by Dr. OPKhanna and published by Dhanpat Rai Publications ,Delhi. This book is available for purchase from Amazon.
Españoles, nota informativa. El equivalente a Industrial Engineer de EEUU es el ingeniero en organización industrial en España, no el ingeniero industrial que no tiene una equivalente como tal en EEUU . Por si estáis buscando info sobre la carrera y esto os confunde. Salu2
bleras1998 Super importante. Es más, es una de las poquitas cosas que hacen que los industriales españoles destaquen. Nos entrenan para tener visiones bastante más amplias.
I'm currently studying mechanical engineering, but I'm trying to decide if I want to stick with it or go for industrial and systems engineering instead. Thank you for this video!
ima a student thats is about to sign up for college stuff any engineering recommendations or things to not do?
I'm studying industrial engineering and the field is all about calculating stuff like tensions in materials, designing electrical circuits, improve existing units,...Yes, when designing stuff we need to reduce cost as much as possibe and increase effiency AMAP but that's not the main thing we need.
Solid Chrome I disagree. I am an industrial engineer. Yes, we learned all those things in our classes. But I’m not sure how you can argue that efficiency isn’t our main goal. Efficiency and optimization is the whole point of industrial engineering!
I think you meant manufacturing engineering not industrial engineering because your description really fits to what a manufacturing engineer does
Im taking up BSIE this coming school year i jisq have small background knowledge about this course and im very much thankful for this!
Thank you brother for sharing very valuable information about this course.
Can you do a video like this for chemical engineering please and thank you
So to recap, industrial engineers improve the logistics and make processes more time efficient and more profitable.
thank you
this topic is very important for industrial engineering subject
its really very helpful video and it really helps me a lot to understand about industrial engineering topic.
the best introducing industrial engineer i ever watch, more clear, and can i get a permission to save mr?
Thank you so much! And yes of course you can!
That was a very great explanatory video!!!! Thanks a lot
The best explanation yet🥳🙏. Thank you
I am majoring in Engineering Management which is basically just this. Actually, both my capstone projects are Industrial Engineering projects so it is this.
amazing video 🙏 thank you so much!
Hardest part is dealing with the people! Lol.
you got to be sensitive and resilient at the same time. you have to care. n.n
I Agree !
EXACTLY!!!
That's most jobs
Had to temporarily stop my Civil Engineering degree (still intending to finish it) and renewed my studies in Business & Supply Chain without knowing it was even a career option to combine my passions both at once.
Absolutely love your videos.
You actually do a lot of estadistics and calculus clases.
I had no clue this is what they do. This sounds so intriguing.
While watching this video, it literally explains a lot of my though processes.
But im a bit lazy. So i try to time everything so that i'm not late. But also not early. Without sacrificing my sleep.
It's nice seeing the bank scenario that I studied in the 70s
At least in Spain that´s called Industrial Organization Engineering. I know that because right now I´m stuying a Master Course in Industrial Engineering and its a mixture of Chemical, Mechanical and Electrical Engineering
I can relate to that..but it is cool tbh I'm currently studying the IE and was willing to know more about it but now....I love it waaaaay more
At 8:20 what do you suppose is more of the design and testing of products engineering? Mechanical engineering? Industrial sounds interesting, but I'd like more of the design side.
Most other engineering disciplines deal with design, industrial is kind of the outlier. Mechanical and electrical are probably two of the most broad disciplines to design and test different projects. But aerospace, chemical, materials, and so on also can be involved as well.
Okay thanks for clarifying!
I’m gonna be a senior next year and I still can’t decide between Civil and Industrial Engineering …
I share your concern... that's why excellent career guidance is very important at high school. But I'm sure you have found out what your passion is after this posting... right???
@@tickedoffsheikh8587 yeah! wouldn't exactly call it my passion since I'm still looking for that as i grow up but ultimately I've decided on industrial engineering because of its versatility and adaptability
Currently in the same situation as you can you recommend any tips or advices ? ( because I’m lost)
my 11 weeks of Intro to IE course has been described here in under 10 minutes :3
Really true, i can relate lmao. They missed the ergonomics tho
Great overview, thanks for making this video.
I'm a first yr student of BSIE, thank u for this 🤍
Proud to be Industrial engineer 😍
My friend majored in IE & then did a double major in econ & law.
I think that I will follow in his footsteps.
I'll be taking industrial engineering in college, thank you for this 😊😊😊
Thank you so much for this video!
obrigado mano mudas-te a minha vida
God bless industrial engineers, we call them "conversion rate optimization experts" in my industry (digital marketer).
Also we get to study a bit of every other career. CAD design? Yeah, marketing? Sure, electronic engineering? Also had it. Although it's not nearly as deep as studying the other careers, it makes you more knowledgeable than the average person in those areas, so you can comunicate with the people who specialize on them.
The very beginning of the video is a perfect example of how I think dude
"The Pocket Guide To Making Stuff Better" is a great ebook on Industrial Engineering
I started in Operational research and Statistics and now I'm doing MSC in Industrial engineering...
This is why in just 2 years i got a 2times promotion comming from a freshgrad by improving production and maintenance efficiently and effectively..
Are maths hard in ie?
Well, Factorio in real life, but with money into account.
Your point that IE doesn’t require high level Math is unfair. Most IE programs requires up to Calc 3. That’s high level math. Statistics is a decision-making Math that can be confusing for many people. SPC( statistical process control) requires lots of mathematical formulas to analyze different systems. Math is a big requirement for most engineering programs and IE is of no exception.
I took Calc1,2,3 Linear Algebra, Differential Equations, now taking another advanced Linear Algebra Course, 2 Physics Courses, Statics, Statistics, Materials Science, Now taking Manufacturing Process which is really known in MechE, Operations Research which is applied Mathematics, also lots of other courses like Human Factors Engineering, Quality Control, Automation Control and so on how is this not advanced in Maths or Physics, or even Chemistry, we take lots of things that MechE’s have and OR and Statistics students have, then we also have a big part in Operations Management like he mostly explained Capacity and Bottleneck’s Analysis and Supply Chain Management, we really do understand high level scientific subjects, but the value that comes from many of the graduates is that they know a lot of everything and that they can make things a lot better and smoother with all of their background studies with their OM and Supply Chain knowledge.
He was refering to field of IE. the college required you to take those classes, every engineering degree does. However most math used in statistics is algebra. DifEQ and linear certainly was useful in any of my IE classes or job application
So basically, what industrial engineers does is find ways so that different processes become more effective and efficient?
Im about getting my industrial engineering master degree, but I'm still not productive because you can't never beat ur laziness
Thanks for the info.Now I start to plan to take an industrial engineering course .
Keep up the good work Industrial Engineers!
Everything about industrial engineering matches my interest. But what can I say, I already enrolled as mechanical engineering student...
Then switch to Industrial
What is the difference between industrial and mechanical engineering
Yes what's the difference
Thanks this really helped me a lot!
My university actually linked this video to students who were stuck between IE and Business
This sounds like the kind of engineer that I could take. Thanks for clarifying 👍👍👍
next year i should change to this, hence i passed business studies with A, so i think i will love this course, what do you think good people?
You should
I just graduated from Industrial Engineering. DISNEYWORLD , LET ME IN!
Did you get in?
@@retardbuster1498 haha no of course i could not get in.
Wow great informative video! 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Very informative, thank you!
Im from Argentina and at least in some big supermarkets theres a single line, and at the end of it theres a display that says what cashier is free and it works pretty well.
men i like your videos !!! i m from mexico i ll recomend your videos! thks
Thank you!
The Industrial Engineer is a professional with high competencies in the design and optimization of production systems for goods and services with added value.
He himself receives a solid training in mathematics, science and technologies applied to the design, planning, direction, administration, implementation and evaluation of continuous improvement processes, which lead to the sustainability and sustainability of the production chains, ensuring the well-being of the social environment and competitive development of industries.
- Skills and Competencies:
As an Industrial Engineer you are capable of: designing and optimizing production systems for goods and services with added value. You will apply science and technologies in the design, implementation and evaluation of continuous improvement processes of the productive chains for the development of industries.
--Specializations:
Processes
Quality
Automation and Industrial Control
Industrial Security
Information systems
Investigation of operations (High degree of difficulty in mathematics and calculus)
Integrated logistics and Supply Chain
i hope you make more video about industrial engineering. i think it just a beginning, and we want to know more.
Thanks for the informative video! This is certainly one of the careers I'm interested in. I'm interested in the combination of electricity, general engineering, efficiency, product engineering, and robotic engineering. I feel like this career is a good mix of the interests.
IE is not often high level math, prof be like teaching high end derivatives, me still w8ing for retaking calculus 5 units
The queueing section at the beginning isn't quite right. A single multi server queue (the bank) will always be more efficient than multiple single server queues (grocery store) if they have the same arrival rate and service times. You almost got at this with the bank customer taking a long time but the important metric of that is service time variability. When the variability is low, multiple single server queues can approach the efficiency of a single multi server queue but the real reason grocery stores are set up the way that they are is to give us the illusion of choice even if it is less efficient overall.
-source: I'm an industrial engineer
I recall him saying that the long single line at a Costco would present a negative image to potential customers, turning some away and resulting in lower net sales.
Would there be a long queue? As long as the arrival rates are somewhat stable so that they plan for enough cashiers the queue would move quickly, resulting in similar wait times. Customers just like the illusion of waiting in a shorter (in length) queue
Evan Breen the bank line also depends on the customer's reason for standing in line. The video explained how in a bank line, one teller might take longer than the other tellers.
I only wish they used the same philosophy with ATM machines. Putting one is just not enough.
your answer makes no sense. A single row causes a bottleneck. if costs are not taken into account only operational efficiency, having more cashiers and more operators will always be more "effective". after all, let's imagine a gigantic queue with a single cashier and a single operator. obviously it will take a long time. several boxes and several operators will share the load.
@@iaia5368 google queueing theory and dive into the math of it. A if service rate is held constant mm4 queue with an arrival rate of 4a will be more efficient than 4 mm1 queues with arrival rate a.
Excellent video.
I'm in my last year in Industrial engineering, in the field of industrial chemistry.
Lately I have been watching Bio Engineers because I heard Bio Eghineering is a little, not much, but a little harder.
What type of industrial engineering specialty deals with situations like the ones mentioned in this video?