Log in
Follow us
Events
-
ICOSSE 2013
August 11-15, 2013
Kingsgate Marriott
Cincinnati, Ohio -
58th Annual Safety in Ammonia Plants and Related Facilities Symposium
August 25-29, 2013
Marriott Frankfurt Hotel
Frankfurt, Germany
-
ICOSSE 2013
-
ChEnected Series
- 2011 Chem-E-Car Nationals (5)
- 2012 Chem-E-Car (7)
- AIChE Election Candidates Q&A (5)
- Chemical Engineering in the Kitchen (3)
- Excelling With Excel (4)
- Fukushima Update (3)
- How ChE Prepared Me for Business (and How It Didn’t) (8)
- How to Interpret Piping and Instrumentation Diagrams (5)
- Interviews with Leading Engineers (3)
- Landing the Job (2)
- Management Case Studies (4)
- Nuclear Q&A (5)
- Path to Sustainability (4)
- Prominent Chemical Engineers' First Job (4)
- Salaries & Benefits for Chemical Engineers 2013 (4)
- Salaries and Benefits for Chemical Engineers 2011 (5)
- Talking to Your Bo$$—The Economics of Engineering (8)
- Tools and Tips for Successful Management and Leadership (7)
- We Are ChE: Entering a Golden Age (12)
- Women in Chemical Technology (5)
- Young Professionals Point of View (4)
Other posts belonging to this series
Donate
Find a Grant!
See and Download our most up-to-date listings of grants from Grants.gov, including those from the National Science Foundation.-
Authors
ChemE On Demand
More
Archives
- June 2013 (14)
- May 2013 (31)
- April 2013 (29)
- March 2013 (30)
- February 2013 (22)
- January 2013 (25)
- December 2012 (31)
- November 2012 (34)
- October 2012 (42)
- September 2012 (28)
- August 2012 (24)
- July 2012 (23)
- June 2012 (23)
- May 2012 (42)
- April 2012 (37)
- March 2012 (34)
- February 2012 (39)
- January 2012 (30)
- December 2011 (30)
- November 2011 (40)
- October 2011 (72)
- September 2011 (34)
- August 2011 (32)
- July 2011 (30)
- June 2011 (40)
- May 2011 (29)
- April 2011 (34)
- March 2011 (51)
- February 2011 (34)
- January 2011 (39)
- December 2010 (29)
- November 2010 (59)
- October 2010 (46)
- September 2010 (26)
- August 2010 (34)
- July 2010 (39)
- June 2010 (38)
- May 2010 (29)
- April 2010 (35)
- March 2010 (46)
- February 2010 (7)
-
ChEtube™
Since 2007, startup Opower has quickly become a leader in energy efficiency - growing from offering simple paper-based energy reports into a full-spectrum, SAAS (software as a service) residential efficiency player, according to greentechmedia.
With mobile apps, a big data business and a thermostat partnership with Honeywell, Opower's got the residential energy landscape covered. How has the company persuaded consumers to reduce their energy use and save $250 million since 2007?
Alex Laskey, Opower's co-founder, explains the simple idea: behavioral science used to created peer pressure. In this TED2013 talk, he explains that “For the last five years, we’ve been running the largest behavioral science experiment in the world.” It's worked. In January, the company achieved a milestone: achieving two terawatt hours of energy savings — enough to take all the homes in a city the size of Sacramento off the electric grid for a year.
Is energy efficiency as disruptive to utilities as residential solar?
Images: Alex Laskey At TED2013, James Duncan Davidson
Contribute!
Looking For Exposure?
Fancy Yourself a Writer? We're looking for authors for The Reactor and contributors of video, humor, book reviews, challenges/brain teasers, and polls for ChEnected pages. You'll be credited in the post. Find out more at Chenected.aiche.org/contribute
ChEnect With Us
- Chenected on Facebook
Categories
Twitter Feed
Join Now | Member Center | ChemE on Demand | Conferences | Publications | Career Resources
Copyright © 2013 American Institute of Chemical Engineers | All rights reserved | Privacy & Security Policy
Copyright © 2013 American Institute of Chemical Engineers | All rights reserved | Privacy & Security Policy



My first job after graduation was grit blasting, degreasing, and painting Sidewinder rocket motor chambers on an automated painting line. McCabe and Smith does not cover painting as a unit operation in their book, and we never had a painting lecture in college, so needless to say I was starting my job from scratch. Common sense and hard work served me well and we turned out some very fine looking missiles despite my lack of formal academic training in this area.
Thanks for sharing your first job. I kind of think hearing about peoples' very first job is more interesting than hearing about their first engineering jobs (though that's interesting too). The first money I earned came from a position as substitute church organist for three churches, but my first real all-day and Mon-Fri job came shortly after, as part of the crew at a natural gas company over summer vacation. I think anyone who knows me could imagine the organist job, but not so much the hardhat, boots, and shovel job!
Doug,
That actually was my first engineering job. I was a process engineer at the chamber preparation line. We had a distillation column to clean up the degreasing solvent, but that was all the chem eng I did there. The rest was a hodgepodge of manufacturing eng, industrial eng, mechnical eng and just common sense. It was a fun job for a kid right out of school.
Oh…oops! Now I see that you said it was your first job after graduation. Well, in any case, it was certainly a particularly interesting first engineering job!
My first job was delivery newspapers in Youngstown Ohio. I created all sorts of interesting methods for collecting people's bills, which was the way it was done back then. Amazing how things have changed.
My very first job was an assistant coach position for my summer swim team – I worked with the group that was 8 years old and younger. I also gave private lessons. It was sometimes difficult to organize 30+ 8 year olds to sit and walk in their correct order for their heats at the swim meets. They sure were cute though! And now I read about them winning races for their high school teams!
My very first "job" was as the piano accompanist for some of the folks in the Choir. It also opened up opportunity for me to play piano at folks' weddings. But most of the time, I refuse accepting payments. It was quite fun. As unrelated to Chemical Engineering as those "jobs" can be, it really taught me to really understand and anticipate the needs of my customers/stakeholders, which has served me well even today.